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Render Jinja2 template block as HTML page fragments on Python web frameworks.

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Jinja2 fragments

Jinja2 Fragments allows rendering individual blocks from Jinja2 templates. This library was created to enable the pattern of Template Fragments with Jinja2. It's a great pattern if you are using HTMX or some other library that leverages fetching partial HTML.

With jinja2, if you have a template block that you want to render by itself and as part of another page, you are forced to put that block on a separate file and then use the include tag (or Jinja Partials) on the wrapping template.

With Jinja2 Fragments, following the Locality of Behavior design principle, you have a single file for both cases. See below for examples.

Install

It's just pip install jinja2-fragments and you're all set. It's a pure Python package that only needs jinja2 (for obvious reasons!).

Usage

This is an example of how to use the library with vanilla Jinja2. Given the template page.html.jinja2:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8">
    <title>This is the title</title>
</head>
<body>
    <h1>This is a header</h1>
    {% block content %}
    <p>This is the magic number: {{ magic_number }}.</p>
    {% endblock %}
</body>
</html>

If you want to render only the content block, do:

from jinja2 import Environment, FileSystemLoader, select_autoescape
from jinja2_fragments import render_block

environment = Environment(
    loader=FileSystemLoader("my_templates"),
    autoescape=select_autoescape(("html", "jinja2"))
)
rendered_html = render_block(
    environment, "page.html.jinja2", "content", magic_number=42
)

And this will only render:

<p>This is the magic number: 42.</p>

Rendering multiple blocks

With the variant render_blocks (notice the plural) it is also possible to render multiple blocks from the same template and concatenate them all to return them in a single response. This enables easier out-of-band updates when using HTMX.

Usage with Flask

If you want to use Jinja2 Fragments with Flask, assuming the same template as the example above, do:

from flask import Flask, render_template
from jinja2_fragments.flask import render_block

app = Flask(__name__)

@app.get("/full_page")
def full_page():
    return render_template("page.html.jinja2", magic_number=42)


@app.get("/only_content")
def only_content():
    return render_block("page.html.jinja2", "content", magic_number=42)

Usage with Quart

If you want to use Jinja2 Fragments with Quart, assuming the same template as the example above, do:

from quart import Quart, render_template
from jinja2_fragments.quart import render_block

app = Quart(__name__)

@app.get("/full_page")
async def full_page():
    return await render_template("page.html.jinja2", magic_number=42)


@app.get("/only_content")
async def only_content():
    return await render_block("page.html.jinja2", "content", magic_number=42)

Usage with FastAPI

You can also use Jinja2 Fragments with FastAPI. In this case, Jinja2 Fragments has a wrapper around the FastAPI Jinja2Templates object called Jinja2Blocks.

It functions exactly the same, but allows you to include an optional parameter to the TemplateResponse that includes the block_name you want to render.

Assuming the same template as the examples above:

from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi.requests import Request
from jinja2_fragments.fastapi import Jinja2Blocks

app = FastAPI()

templates = Jinja2Blocks(directory="path/to/templates")

@app.get("/full_page")
async def full_page(request: Request):
    return templates.TemplateResponse(
        "page.html.jinja2",
        {"request": request, "magic_number": 42}
    )

@app.get("/only_content")
async def only_content(request: Request):
    return templates.TemplateResponse(
        "page.html.jinja2",
        {"request": request, "magic_number": 42},
        block_name="content"
    )

Usage with Sanic

You can use jinja2-fragments's render() with Sanic as a drop-in replacement of the Sanic template extension's render(). Your request context and environment configuration will work the same as before. You must have sanic_ext and Jinja2 installed.

By default, the full page is rendered (block=None) unless you provide a block keyword argument.

from sanic import Sanic, Request
import sanic_ext
from jinja2_fragments.sanic import render

app = Sanic(__name__)
app.extend(config=sanic_ext.Config(templating_path_to_templates='path/to/templates'))

@app.get('/full_page')
async def full_page(request: Request):
    return await render(
        'page.html.jinja2', 
        context={"magic_number": 42}
    )

@app.get("/only_content")
async def only_content(request: Request):
    return await render(
        'page.html.jinja2',
        block='content',
        context={"magic_number": 42}
    )

Usage with Litestar

You can use Jinja2 Fragments with Litestar by using the LitestarHTMXTemplate class. This gives you access to the block_name parameter when rendering the template.

By default, the full page is rendered unless you provide a block_name keyword argument.

from litestar.contrib.htmx.request import HTMXRequest
from litestar import get, Litestar
from litestar.response import Template

from litestar.contrib.jinja import JinjaTemplateEngine
from litestar.template.config import TemplateConfig
from jinja2_fragments.litestar import HTMXBlockTemplate


@get('/full_page')
def full_page(request: HTMXRequest) -> Template:
    return HTMXBlockTemplate(
        template_name='page.html.jinja2',
        context={"magic_number": 42}
    )

@get('/only_content')
def only_content(request: HTMXRequest) -> Template:
    return HTMXBlockTemplate(
        template_name='page.html.jinja2',
        block_name='content',
        context={"magic_number": 42}
    )

app = Litestar(
    route_handlers=[full_page, only_content],
    request_class=HTMXRequest,
    template_config=TemplateConfig(
        directory="path/to/templates",
        engine=JinjaTemplateEngine,
    )
)

How to collaborate

This project uses pre-commit hooks to run black, isort, pyupgrade and flake8 on each commit. To have that running automatically on your environment, install the project with:

pip install -e .[dev]

And then run once:

pre-commit install

From now on, every time you commit your files on this project, they will be automatically processed by the tools listed above.

How to run tests

You can install pytest and other required dependencies with:

pip install -e .[tests]

And then run the test suite with:

pytest

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