# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Built-in template filters used with the ``|`` operator."""
import math
import random
import re
import warnings
from collections import namedtuple
from itertools import chain
from itertools import groupby
from markupsafe import escape
from markupsafe import Markup
from markupsafe import soft_unicode
from ._compat import abc
from ._compat import imap
from ._compat import iteritems
from ._compat import string_types
from ._compat import text_type
from .exceptions import FilterArgumentError
from .runtime import Undefined
from .utils import htmlsafe_json_dumps
from .utils import pformat
from .utils import unicode_urlencode
from .utils import urlize
_word_re = re.compile(r"\w+", re.UNICODE)
_word_beginning_split_re = re.compile(r"([-\s\(\{\[\<]+)", re.UNICODE)
def contextfilter(f):
"""Decorator for marking context dependent filters. The current
:class:`Context` will be passed as first argument.
"""
f.contextfilter = True
return f
def evalcontextfilter(f):
"""Decorator for marking eval-context dependent filters. An eval
context object is passed as first argument. For more information
about the eval context, see :ref:`eval-context`.
.. versionadded:: 2.4
"""
f.evalcontextfilter = True
return f
def environmentfilter(f):
"""Decorator for marking environment dependent filters. The current
:class:`Environment` is passed to the filter as first argument.
"""
f.environmentfilter = True
return f
def ignore_case(value):
"""For use as a postprocessor for :func:`make_attrgetter`. Converts strings
to lowercase and returns other types as-is."""
return value.lower() if isinstance(value, string_types) else value
def make_attrgetter(environment, attribute, postprocess=None, default=None):
"""Returns a callable that looks up the given attribute from a
passed object with the rules of the environment. Dots are allowed
to access attributes of attributes. Integer parts in paths are
looked up as integers.
"""
attribute = _prepare_attribute_parts(attribute)
def attrgetter(item):
for part in attribute:
item = environment.getitem(item, part)
if default and isinstance(item, Undefined):
item = default
if postprocess is not None:
item = postprocess(item)
return item
return attrgetter
def make_multi_attrgetter(environment, attribute, postprocess=None):
"""Returns a callable that looks up the given comma separated
attributes from a passed object with the rules of the environment.
Dots are allowed to access attributes of each attribute. Integer
parts in paths are looked up as integers.
The value returned by the returned callable is a list of extracted
attribute values.
Examples of attribute: "attr1,attr2", "attr1.inner1.0,attr2.inner2.0", etc.
"""
attribute_parts = (
attribute.split(",") if isinstance(attribute, string_types) else [attribute]
)
attribute = [
_prepare_attribute_parts(attribute_part) for attribute_part in attribute_parts
]
def attrgetter(item):
items = [None] * len(attribute)
for i, attribute_part in enumerate(attribute):
item_i = item
for part in attribute_part:
item_i = environment.getitem(item_i, part)
if postprocess is not None:
item_i = postprocess(item_i)
items[i] = item_i
return items
return attrgetter
def _prepare_attribute_parts(attr):
if attr is None:
return []
elif isinstance(attr, string_types):
return [int(x) if x.isdigit() else x for x in attr.split(".")]
else:
return [attr]
def do_forceescape(value):
"""Enforce HTML escaping. This will probably double escape variables."""
if hasattr(value, "__html__"):
value = value.__html__()
return escape(text_type(value))
def do_urlencode(value):
"""Quote data for use in a URL path or query using UTF-8.
Basic wrapper around :func:`urllib.parse.quote` when given a
string, or :func:`urllib.parse.urlencode` for a dict or iterable.
:param value: Data to quote. A string will be quoted directly. A
dict or iterable of ``(key, value)`` pairs will be joined as a
query string.
When given a string, "/" is not quoted. HTTP servers treat "/" and
"%2F" equivalently in paths. If you need quoted slashes, use the
``|replace("/", "%2F")`` filter.
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
if isinstance(value, string_types) or not isinstance(value, abc.Iterable):
return unicode_urlencode(value)
if isinstance(value, dict):
items = iteritems(value)
else:
items = iter(value)
return u"&".join(
"%s=%s" % (unicode_urlencode(k, for_qs=True), unicode_urlencode(v, for_qs=True))
for k, v in items
)
@evalcontextfilter
def do_replace(eval_ctx, s, old, new, count=None):
"""Return a copy of the value with all occurrences of a substring
replaced with a new one. The first argument is the substring
that should be replaced, the second is the replacement string.
If the optional third argument ``count`` is given, only the first
``count`` occurrences are replaced:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ "Hello World"|replace("Hello", "Goodbye") }}
-> Goodbye World
{{ "aaaaargh"|replace("a", "d'oh, ", 2) }}
-> d'oh, d'oh, aaargh
"""
if count is None:
count = -1
if not eval_ctx.autoescape:
return text_type(s).replace(text_type(old), text_type(new), count)
if (
hasattr(old, "__html__")
or hasattr(new, "__html__")
and not hasattr(s, "__html__")
):
s = escape(s)
else:
s = soft_unicode(s)
return s.replace(soft_unicode(old), soft_unicode(new), count)
def do_upper(s):
"""Convert a value to uppercase."""
return soft_unicode(s).upper()
def do_lower(s):
"""Convert a value to lowercase."""
return soft_unicode(s).lower()
@evalcontextfilter
def do_xmlattr(_eval_ctx, d, autospace=True):
"""Create an SGML/XML attribute string based on the items in a dict.
All values that are neither `none` nor `undefined` are automatically
escaped:
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
Results in something like this:
.. sourcecode:: html
As you can see it automatically prepends a space in front of the item
if the filter returned something unless the second parameter is false.
"""
rv = u" ".join(
u'%s="%s"' % (escape(key), escape(value))
for key, value in iteritems(d)
if value is not None and not isinstance(value, Undefined)
)
if autospace and rv:
rv = u" " + rv
if _eval_ctx.autoescape:
rv = Markup(rv)
return rv
def do_capitalize(s):
"""Capitalize a value. The first character will be uppercase, all others
lowercase.
"""
return soft_unicode(s).capitalize()
def do_title(s):
"""Return a titlecased version of the value. I.e. words will start with
uppercase letters, all remaining characters are lowercase.
"""
return "".join(
[
item[0].upper() + item[1:].lower()
for item in _word_beginning_split_re.split(soft_unicode(s))
if item
]
)
def do_dictsort(value, case_sensitive=False, by="key", reverse=False):
"""Sort a dict and yield (key, value) pairs. Because python dicts are
unsorted you may want to use this function to order them by either
key or value:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{% for item in mydict|dictsort %}
sort the dict by key, case insensitive
{% for item in mydict|dictsort(reverse=true) %}
sort the dict by key, case insensitive, reverse order
{% for item in mydict|dictsort(true) %}
sort the dict by key, case sensitive
{% for item in mydict|dictsort(false, 'value') %}
sort the dict by value, case insensitive
"""
if by == "key":
pos = 0
elif by == "value":
pos = 1
else:
raise FilterArgumentError('You can only sort by either "key" or "value"')
def sort_func(item):
value = item[pos]
if not case_sensitive:
value = ignore_case(value)
return value
return sorted(value.items(), key=sort_func, reverse=reverse)
@environmentfilter
def do_sort(environment, value, reverse=False, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None):
"""Sort an iterable using Python's :func:`sorted`.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{% for city in cities|sort %}
...
{% endfor %}
:param reverse: Sort descending instead of ascending.
:param case_sensitive: When sorting strings, sort upper and lower
case separately.
:param attribute: When sorting objects or dicts, an attribute or
key to sort by. Can use dot notation like ``"address.city"``.
Can be a list of attributes like ``"age,name"``.
The sort is stable, it does not change the relative order of
elements that compare equal. This makes it is possible to chain
sorts on different attributes and ordering.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{% for user in users|sort(attribute="name")
|sort(reverse=true, attribute="age") %}
...
{% endfor %}
As a shortcut to chaining when the direction is the same for all
attributes, pass a comma separate list of attributes.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{% for user users|sort(attribute="age,name") %}
...
{% endfor %}
.. versionchanged:: 2.11.0
The ``attribute`` parameter can be a comma separated list of
attributes, e.g. ``"age,name"``.
.. versionchanged:: 2.6
The ``attribute`` parameter was added.
"""
key_func = make_multi_attrgetter(
environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None
)
return sorted(value, key=key_func, reverse=reverse)
@environmentfilter
def do_unique(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None):
"""Returns a list of unique items from the given iterable.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ ['foo', 'bar', 'foobar', 'FooBar']|unique|list }}
-> ['foo', 'bar', 'foobar']
The unique items are yielded in the same order as their first occurrence in
the iterable passed to the filter.
:param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct.
:param attribute: Filter objects with unique values for this attribute.
"""
getter = make_attrgetter(
environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None
)
seen = set()
for item in value:
key = getter(item)
if key not in seen:
seen.add(key)
yield item
def _min_or_max(environment, value, func, case_sensitive, attribute):
it = iter(value)
try:
first = next(it)
except StopIteration:
return environment.undefined("No aggregated item, sequence was empty.")
key_func = make_attrgetter(
environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None
)
return func(chain([first], it), key=key_func)
@environmentfilter
def do_min(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None):
"""Return the smallest item from the sequence.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ [1, 2, 3]|min }}
-> 1
:param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct.
:param attribute: Get the object with the min value of this attribute.
"""
return _min_or_max(environment, value, min, case_sensitive, attribute)
@environmentfilter
def do_max(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None):
"""Return the largest item from the sequence.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ [1, 2, 3]|max }}
-> 3
:param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct.
:param attribute: Get the object with the max value of this attribute.
"""
return _min_or_max(environment, value, max, case_sensitive, attribute)
def do_default(value, default_value=u"", boolean=False):
"""If the value is undefined it will return the passed default value,
otherwise the value of the variable:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ my_variable|default('my_variable is not defined') }}
This will output the value of ``my_variable`` if the variable was
defined, otherwise ``'my_variable is not defined'``. If you want
to use default with variables that evaluate to false you have to
set the second parameter to `true`:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ ''|default('the string was empty', true) }}
.. versionchanged:: 2.11
It's now possible to configure the :class:`~jinja2.Environment` with
:class:`~jinja2.ChainableUndefined` to make the `default` filter work
on nested elements and attributes that may contain undefined values
in the chain without getting an :exc:`~jinja2.UndefinedError`.
"""
if isinstance(value, Undefined) or (boolean and not value):
return default_value
return value
@evalcontextfilter
def do_join(eval_ctx, value, d=u"", attribute=None):
"""Return a string which is the concatenation of the strings in the
sequence. The separator between elements is an empty string per
default, you can define it with the optional parameter:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ [1, 2, 3]|join('|') }}
-> 1|2|3
{{ [1, 2, 3]|join }}
-> 123
It is also possible to join certain attributes of an object:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ users|join(', ', attribute='username') }}
.. versionadded:: 2.6
The `attribute` parameter was added.
"""
if attribute is not None:
value = imap(make_attrgetter(eval_ctx.environment, attribute), value)
# no automatic escaping? joining is a lot easier then
if not eval_ctx.autoescape:
return text_type(d).join(imap(text_type, value))
# if the delimiter doesn't have an html representation we check
# if any of the items has. If yes we do a coercion to Markup
if not hasattr(d, "__html__"):
value = list(value)
do_escape = False
for idx, item in enumerate(value):
if hasattr(item, "__html__"):
do_escape = True
else:
value[idx] = text_type(item)
if do_escape:
d = escape(d)
else:
d = text_type(d)
return d.join(value)
# no html involved, to normal joining
return soft_unicode(d).join(imap(soft_unicode, value))
def do_center(value, width=80):
"""Centers the value in a field of a given width."""
return text_type(value).center(width)
@environmentfilter
def do_first(environment, seq):
"""Return the first item of a sequence."""
try:
return next(iter(seq))
except StopIteration:
return environment.undefined("No first item, sequence was empty.")
@environmentfilter
def do_last(environment, seq):
"""
Return the last item of a sequence.
Note: Does not work with generators. You may want to explicitly
convert it to a list:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ data | selectattr('name', '==', 'Jinja') | list | last }}
"""
try:
return next(iter(reversed(seq)))
except StopIteration:
return environment.undefined("No last item, sequence was empty.")
@contextfilter
def do_random(context, seq):
"""Return a random item from the sequence."""
try:
return random.choice(seq)
except IndexError:
return context.environment.undefined("No random item, sequence was empty.")
def do_filesizeformat(value, binary=False):
"""Format the value like a 'human-readable' file size (i.e. 13 kB,
4.1 MB, 102 Bytes, etc). Per default decimal prefixes are used (Mega,
Giga, etc.), if the second parameter is set to `True` the binary
prefixes are used (Mebi, Gibi).
"""
bytes = float(value)
base = binary and 1024 or 1000
prefixes = [
(binary and "KiB" or "kB"),
(binary and "MiB" or "MB"),
(binary and "GiB" or "GB"),
(binary and "TiB" or "TB"),
(binary and "PiB" or "PB"),
(binary and "EiB" or "EB"),
(binary and "ZiB" or "ZB"),
(binary and "YiB" or "YB"),
]
if bytes == 1:
return "1 Byte"
elif bytes < base:
return "%d Bytes" % bytes
else:
for i, prefix in enumerate(prefixes):
unit = base ** (i + 2)
if bytes < unit:
return "%.1f %s" % ((base * bytes / unit), prefix)
return "%.1f %s" % ((base * bytes / unit), prefix)
def do_pprint(value, verbose=False):
"""Pretty print a variable. Useful for debugging.
With Jinja 1.2 onwards you can pass it a parameter. If this parameter
is truthy the output will be more verbose (this requires `pretty`)
"""
return pformat(value, verbose=verbose)
@evalcontextfilter
def do_urlize(
eval_ctx, value, trim_url_limit=None, nofollow=False, target=None, rel=None
):
"""Converts URLs in plain text into clickable links.
If you pass the filter an additional integer it will shorten the urls
to that number. Also a third argument exists that makes the urls
"nofollow":
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ mytext|urlize(40, true) }}
links are shortened to 40 chars and defined with rel="nofollow"
If *target* is specified, the ``target`` attribute will be added to the
```` tag:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ mytext|urlize(40, target='_blank') }}
.. versionchanged:: 2.8+
The *target* parameter was added.
"""
policies = eval_ctx.environment.policies
rel = set((rel or "").split() or [])
if nofollow:
rel.add("nofollow")
rel.update((policies["urlize.rel"] or "").split())
if target is None:
target = policies["urlize.target"]
rel = " ".join(sorted(rel)) or None
rv = urlize(value, trim_url_limit, rel=rel, target=target)
if eval_ctx.autoescape:
rv = Markup(rv)
return rv
def do_indent(s, width=4, first=False, blank=False, indentfirst=None):
"""Return a copy of the string with each line indented by 4 spaces. The
first line and blank lines are not indented by default.
:param width: Number of spaces to indent by.
:param first: Don't skip indenting the first line.
:param blank: Don't skip indenting empty lines.
.. versionchanged:: 2.10
Blank lines are not indented by default.
Rename the ``indentfirst`` argument to ``first``.
"""
if indentfirst is not None:
warnings.warn(
"The 'indentfirst' argument is renamed to 'first' and will"
" be removed in version 3.0.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
first = indentfirst
indention = u" " * width
newline = u"\n"
if isinstance(s, Markup):
indention = Markup(indention)
newline = Markup(newline)
s += newline # this quirk is necessary for splitlines method
if blank:
rv = (newline + indention).join(s.splitlines())
else:
lines = s.splitlines()
rv = lines.pop(0)
if lines:
rv += newline + newline.join(
indention + line if line else line for line in lines
)
if first:
rv = indention + rv
return rv
@environmentfilter
def do_truncate(env, s, length=255, killwords=False, end="...", leeway=None):
"""Return a truncated copy of the string. The length is specified
with the first parameter which defaults to ``255``. If the second
parameter is ``true`` the filter will cut the text at length. Otherwise
it will discard the last word. If the text was in fact
truncated it will append an ellipsis sign (``"..."``). If you want a
different ellipsis sign than ``"..."`` you can specify it using the
third parameter. Strings that only exceed the length by the tolerance
margin given in the fourth parameter will not be truncated.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(9) }}
-> "foo..."
{{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(9, True) }}
-> "foo ba..."
{{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(11) }}
-> "foo bar baz qux"
{{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(11, False, '...', 0) }}
-> "foo bar..."
The default leeway on newer Jinja versions is 5 and was 0 before but
can be reconfigured globally.
"""
if leeway is None:
leeway = env.policies["truncate.leeway"]
assert length >= len(end), "expected length >= %s, got %s" % (len(end), length)
assert leeway >= 0, "expected leeway >= 0, got %s" % leeway
if len(s) <= length + leeway:
return s
if killwords:
return s[: length - len(end)] + end
result = s[: length - len(end)].rsplit(" ", 1)[0]
return result + end
@environmentfilter
def do_wordwrap(
environment,
s,
width=79,
break_long_words=True,
wrapstring=None,
break_on_hyphens=True,
):
"""Wrap a string to the given width. Existing newlines are treated
as paragraphs to be wrapped separately.
:param s: Original text to wrap.
:param width: Maximum length of wrapped lines.
:param break_long_words: If a word is longer than ``width``, break
it across lines.
:param break_on_hyphens: If a word contains hyphens, it may be split
across lines.
:param wrapstring: String to join each wrapped line. Defaults to
:attr:`Environment.newline_sequence`.
.. versionchanged:: 2.11
Existing newlines are treated as paragraphs wrapped separately.
.. versionchanged:: 2.11
Added the ``break_on_hyphens`` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 2.7
Added the ``wrapstring`` parameter.
"""
import textwrap
if not wrapstring:
wrapstring = environment.newline_sequence
# textwrap.wrap doesn't consider existing newlines when wrapping.
# If the string has a newline before width, wrap will still insert
# a newline at width, resulting in a short line. Instead, split and
# wrap each paragraph individually.
return wrapstring.join(
[
wrapstring.join(
textwrap.wrap(
line,
width=width,
expand_tabs=False,
replace_whitespace=False,
break_long_words=break_long_words,
break_on_hyphens=break_on_hyphens,
)
)
for line in s.splitlines()
]
)
def do_wordcount(s):
"""Count the words in that string."""
return len(_word_re.findall(soft_unicode(s)))
def do_int(value, default=0, base=10):
"""Convert the value into an integer. If the
conversion doesn't work it will return ``0``. You can
override this default using the first parameter. You
can also override the default base (10) in the second
parameter, which handles input with prefixes such as
0b, 0o and 0x for bases 2, 8 and 16 respectively.
The base is ignored for decimal numbers and non-string values.
"""
try:
if isinstance(value, string_types):
return int(value, base)
return int(value)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
# this quirk is necessary so that "42.23"|int gives 42.
try:
return int(float(value))
except (TypeError, ValueError):
return default
def do_float(value, default=0.0):
"""Convert the value into a floating point number. If the
conversion doesn't work it will return ``0.0``. You can
override this default using the first parameter.
"""
try:
return float(value)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
return default
def do_format(value, *args, **kwargs):
"""Apply the given values to a `printf-style`_ format string, like
``string % values``.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ "%s, %s!"|format(greeting, name) }}
Hello, World!
In most cases it should be more convenient and efficient to use the
``%`` operator or :meth:`str.format`.
.. code-block:: text
{{ "%s, %s!" % (greeting, name) }}
{{ "{}, {}!".format(greeting, name) }}
.. _printf-style: https://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html
#printf-style-string-formatting
"""
if args and kwargs:
raise FilterArgumentError(
"can't handle positional and keyword arguments at the same time"
)
return soft_unicode(value) % (kwargs or args)
def do_trim(value, chars=None):
"""Strip leading and trailing characters, by default whitespace."""
return soft_unicode(value).strip(chars)
def do_striptags(value):
"""Strip SGML/XML tags and replace adjacent whitespace by one space."""
if hasattr(value, "__html__"):
value = value.__html__()
return Markup(text_type(value)).striptags()
def do_slice(value, slices, fill_with=None):
"""Slice an iterator and return a list of lists containing
those items. Useful if you want to create a div containing
three ul tags that represent columns:
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
{%- for column in items|slice(3) %}
{%- for item in column %}
- {{ item }}
{%- endfor %}
{%- endfor %}
If you pass it a second argument it's used to fill missing
values on the last iteration.
"""
seq = list(value)
length = len(seq)
items_per_slice = length // slices
slices_with_extra = length % slices
offset = 0
for slice_number in range(slices):
start = offset + slice_number * items_per_slice
if slice_number < slices_with_extra:
offset += 1
end = offset + (slice_number + 1) * items_per_slice
tmp = seq[start:end]
if fill_with is not None and slice_number >= slices_with_extra:
tmp.append(fill_with)
yield tmp
def do_batch(value, linecount, fill_with=None):
"""
A filter that batches items. It works pretty much like `slice`
just the other way round. It returns a list of lists with the
given number of items. If you provide a second parameter this
is used to fill up missing items. See this example:
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
{%- for row in items|batch(3, ' ') %}
{%- for column in row %}
{{ column }} |
{%- endfor %}
{%- endfor %}
"""
tmp = []
for item in value:
if len(tmp) == linecount:
yield tmp
tmp = []
tmp.append(item)
if tmp:
if fill_with is not None and len(tmp) < linecount:
tmp += [fill_with] * (linecount - len(tmp))
yield tmp
def do_round(value, precision=0, method="common"):
"""Round the number to a given precision. The first
parameter specifies the precision (default is ``0``), the
second the rounding method:
- ``'common'`` rounds either up or down
- ``'ceil'`` always rounds up
- ``'floor'`` always rounds down
If you don't specify a method ``'common'`` is used.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ 42.55|round }}
-> 43.0
{{ 42.55|round(1, 'floor') }}
-> 42.5
Note that even if rounded to 0 precision, a float is returned. If
you need a real integer, pipe it through `int`:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ 42.55|round|int }}
-> 43
"""
if method not in {"common", "ceil", "floor"}:
raise FilterArgumentError("method must be common, ceil or floor")
if method == "common":
return round(value, precision)
func = getattr(math, method)
return func(value * (10 ** precision)) / (10 ** precision)
# Use a regular tuple repr here. This is what we did in the past and we
# really want to hide this custom type as much as possible. In particular
# we do not want to accidentally expose an auto generated repr in case
# people start to print this out in comments or something similar for
# debugging.
_GroupTuple = namedtuple("_GroupTuple", ["grouper", "list"])
_GroupTuple.__repr__ = tuple.__repr__
_GroupTuple.__str__ = tuple.__str__
@environmentfilter
def do_groupby(environment, value, attribute):
"""Group a sequence of objects by an attribute using Python's
:func:`itertools.groupby`. The attribute can use dot notation for
nested access, like ``"address.city"``. Unlike Python's ``groupby``,
the values are sorted first so only one group is returned for each
unique value.
For example, a list of ``User`` objects with a ``city`` attribute
can be rendered in groups. In this example, ``grouper`` refers to
the ``city`` value of the group.
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
{% for city, items in users|groupby("city") %}
- {{ city }}
{% for user in items %}
- {{ user.name }}
{% endfor %}
{% endfor %}
``groupby`` yields namedtuples of ``(grouper, list)``, which
can be used instead of the tuple unpacking above. ``grouper`` is the
value of the attribute, and ``list`` is the items with that value.
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
{% for group in users|groupby("city") %}
- {{ group.grouper }}: {{ group.list|join(", ") }}
{% endfor %}
.. versionchanged:: 2.6
The attribute supports dot notation for nested access.
"""
expr = make_attrgetter(environment, attribute)
return [
_GroupTuple(key, list(values))
for key, values in groupby(sorted(value, key=expr), expr)
]
@environmentfilter
def do_sum(environment, iterable, attribute=None, start=0):
"""Returns the sum of a sequence of numbers plus the value of parameter
'start' (which defaults to 0). When the sequence is empty it returns
start.
It is also possible to sum up only certain attributes:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
Total: {{ items|sum(attribute='price') }}
.. versionchanged:: 2.6
The `attribute` parameter was added to allow suming up over
attributes. Also the `start` parameter was moved on to the right.
"""
if attribute is not None:
iterable = imap(make_attrgetter(environment, attribute), iterable)
return sum(iterable, start)
def do_list(value):
"""Convert the value into a list. If it was a string the returned list
will be a list of characters.
"""
return list(value)
def do_mark_safe(value):
"""Mark the value as safe which means that in an environment with automatic
escaping enabled this variable will not be escaped.
"""
return Markup(value)
def do_mark_unsafe(value):
"""Mark a value as unsafe. This is the reverse operation for :func:`safe`."""
return text_type(value)
def do_reverse(value):
"""Reverse the object or return an iterator that iterates over it the other
way round.
"""
if isinstance(value, string_types):
return value[::-1]
try:
return reversed(value)
except TypeError:
try:
rv = list(value)
rv.reverse()
return rv
except TypeError:
raise FilterArgumentError("argument must be iterable")
@environmentfilter
def do_attr(environment, obj, name):
"""Get an attribute of an object. ``foo|attr("bar")`` works like
``foo.bar`` just that always an attribute is returned and items are not
looked up.
See :ref:`Notes on subscriptions ` for more details.
"""
try:
name = str(name)
except UnicodeError:
pass
else:
try:
value = getattr(obj, name)
except AttributeError:
pass
else:
if environment.sandboxed and not environment.is_safe_attribute(
obj, name, value
):
return environment.unsafe_undefined(obj, name)
return value
return environment.undefined(obj=obj, name=name)
@contextfilter
def do_map(*args, **kwargs):
"""Applies a filter on a sequence of objects or looks up an attribute.
This is useful when dealing with lists of objects but you are really
only interested in a certain value of it.
The basic usage is mapping on an attribute. Imagine you have a list
of users but you are only interested in a list of usernames:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
Users on this page: {{ users|map(attribute='username')|join(', ') }}
You can specify a ``default`` value to use if an object in the list
does not have the given attribute.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ users|map(attribute="username", default="Anonymous")|join(", ") }}
Alternatively you can let it invoke a filter by passing the name of the
filter and the arguments afterwards. A good example would be applying a
text conversion filter on a sequence:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
Users on this page: {{ titles|map('lower')|join(', ') }}
Similar to a generator comprehension such as:
.. code-block:: python
(u.username for u in users)
(u.username or "Anonymous" for u in users)
(do_lower(x) for x in titles)
.. versionchanged:: 2.11.0
Added the ``default`` parameter.
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
seq, func = prepare_map(args, kwargs)
if seq:
for item in seq:
yield func(item)
@contextfilter
def do_select(*args, **kwargs):
"""Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to each object,
and only selecting the objects with the test succeeding.
If no test is specified, each object will be evaluated as a boolean.
Example usage:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ numbers|select("odd") }}
{{ numbers|select("odd") }}
{{ numbers|select("divisibleby", 3) }}
{{ numbers|select("lessthan", 42) }}
{{ strings|select("equalto", "mystring") }}
Similar to a generator comprehension such as:
.. code-block:: python
(n for n in numbers if test_odd(n))
(n for n in numbers if test_divisibleby(n, 3))
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: x, False)
@contextfilter
def do_reject(*args, **kwargs):
"""Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to each object,
and rejecting the objects with the test succeeding.
If no test is specified, each object will be evaluated as a boolean.
Example usage:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ numbers|reject("odd") }}
Similar to a generator comprehension such as:
.. code-block:: python
(n for n in numbers if not test_odd(n))
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: not x, False)
@contextfilter
def do_selectattr(*args, **kwargs):
"""Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to the specified
attribute of each object, and only selecting the objects with the
test succeeding.
If no test is specified, the attribute's value will be evaluated as
a boolean.
Example usage:
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ users|selectattr("is_active") }}
{{ users|selectattr("email", "none") }}
Similar to a generator comprehension such as:
.. code-block:: python
(u for user in users if user.is_active)
(u for user in users if test_none(user.email))
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: x, True)
@contextfilter
def do_rejectattr(*args, **kwargs):
"""Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to the specified
attribute of each object, and rejecting the objects with the test
succeeding.
If no test is specified, the attribute's value will be evaluated as
a boolean.
.. sourcecode:: jinja
{{ users|rejectattr("is_active") }}
{{ users|rejectattr("email", "none") }}
Similar to a generator comprehension such as:
.. code-block:: python
(u for user in users if not user.is_active)
(u for user in users if not test_none(user.email))
.. versionadded:: 2.7
"""
return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: not x, True)
@evalcontextfilter
def do_tojson(eval_ctx, value, indent=None):
"""Dumps a structure to JSON so that it's safe to use in ``