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template tag for highlighting currently active page

This module defines a template tag `{% ifactive %}` that lets you determine which page is currently active. A common use case is for highlighting the current page in a navigation menu. It uses the same syntax for specifying views as the `{% url %}` tag, and determines whether a particular page is active by checking if the same view is called with the same arguments, instead of just comparing URLs. As a result, it can handle cases where different URLs map to the same view. Example usage: <a {% ifactive request page1 %}class='active'{% endifactive %} href='{% url page1 %}'>Page 1</a> <a {% ifactive request page2 %}class='active'{% endifactive %} href='{% url page2 %}'>Page 2</a> ... <a {% ifactive request pageN %}class='active'{% endifactive %} href='{% url pageN %}'>Page N</a> It also can be extended to further reduce the amount of repetitive code. For instance, you could write a template tag that has class='active' as the block contents, and always gets the variable from context['request']: def do_activeif(parser, token): "e.g. <a {% activeif page1 %} href='{% url page1 %}'>Page 1</a>" tag_args = token.contents.split(' ') view_name = tag_args[1] args, kwargs = _parse_url_args(parser, tag_args[2:]) return ActiveNode('request', view_name, args, kwargs, NodeList(TextNode('class="active"'))) register.tag('activeif', do_activeif) Note that you will have to add the ActiveViewMiddleware to your settings.py: MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = ( ..., 'path.to.this.module.ActiveViewMiddleware' ) You may also want to add this template tag as a built-in, so you don't have to call `{% load %}`. In somewhere that's imported by default (e.g. where you define your views), add: from django import template template.add_to_builtins('path.to.this.module')

  • template
  • tag
  • page
  • active
  • ifactive
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