UTemplates is a Python templating engine focused on HTML but with the potential to be extended to other languages. It facilitates the creation, manipulation, and rendering of HTML elements programmatically using Python classes and methods.
- Clone the repository or download the source code.
pip install utemplates
Before you start using UTemplates, ensure you have a Python environment set up. UTemplates supports Python 3.7 and newer.
To customize the behavior of UTemplates, you can modify or provide a utemplates_config.json
configuration file. This file allows you to define conversion functions that will be applied to values before rendering them. The path to the configuration file can be set through an environment variable UTEMPLATES_CONFIG_PATH
.
The configuration file is a JSON file with the following structure:
{
"conversions": [
"module1.submodule.function1",
"module2.submodule.function2"
]
}
- Each string in the "conversions" list is a dot-path to a conversion function that should be imported and applied during rendering.
UTemplates provides classes to structure HTML content. These can be generic or specific HTML elements:
- GeneralBaseElement: Abstract base class for all HTML elements.
- GroupedBaseElement: Class for grouping multiple elements.
- BaseHTMLElement: Class for creating standard HTML elements.
- SafeHTMLElement: Class for wrapping pre-processed HTML strings that should not be escaped.
You can create instances of these classes by calling their constructors and passing the appropriate arguments.
from utemplates.html_specific.base import BaseHTMLElement
div_element = BaseHTMLElement("div", {"class": "container"}, "Hello World")
This example creates a <div>
element with the class "container" and containing the text "Hello World".
To render HTML content, use the provided render
method from the rendering
module. It takes a string, a list of strings or elements, or a single element and generates an HTML string.
from utemplates.rendering import render
# For a single element
rendered_html = render(div_element())
# For multiple elements
rendered_html = render([div_element(), another_element()])
# You can also save the rendered HTML to a file
from utemplates.rendering import save_to_file
save_to_file(rendered_html, 'output.html')
The utils.py
module includes utility functions:
- convert_value: Applies configured conversion functions to a given value.
UTemplates offers integration support for the Django framework to render responses directly:
from utemplates.integrations.django_integrations import render_to_response
def my_view(request):
html_content = create_some_html_content()
return render_to_response(html_content)
UTemplates is open-sourced under the MIT license.