Create your first component
A component in django-components can be as simple as a Django template and Python code to declare the component:
from django_components import Component
class Calendar(Component):
template = """
<div class="calendar">
Today's date is <span>{{ date }}</span>
</div>
"""
Or a combination of Django template, Python, CSS, and Javascript:
from django_components import Component
class Calendar(Component):
template = """
<div class="calendar">
Today's date is <span>{{ date }}</span>
</div>
"""
css = """
.calendar {
width: 200px;
background: pink;
}
"""
js = """
document.querySelector(".calendar").onclick = function () {
alert("Clicked calendar!");
};
"""
Note
With django-components, you can "inline" the HTML, JS and CSS code into the Python class, as seen above.
You can set up syntax highlighting, but autocompletion / intellisense does not yet work.
So, in the example below we define the Django template in a separate file, calendar.html
, to allow our IDEs to interpret the file as HTML / Django file.
We'll start by creating a component that defines only a Django template:
1. Create project structureΒ€
Start by creating empty calendar.py
and calendar.html
files:
sampleproject/
βββ calendarapp/
βββ components/ π
β βββ calendar/ π
β βββ calendar.py π
β βββ calendar.html π
βββ sampleproject/
βββ manage.py
βββ requirements.txt
2. Write Django templateΒ€
Inside calendar.html
, write:
<div class="calendar">
Today's date is <span>{{ date }}</span>
</div>
In this example we've defined one template variable date
. You can use any and as many variables as you like. These variables will be defined in the Python file in get_context_data()
when creating an instance of this component.
Note
The template will be rendered with whatever template backend you've specified in your Django settings file.
Currently django-components supports only the default "django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates"
template backend!
3. Create new Component in PythonΒ€
In calendar.py
, create a subclass of Component to create a new component.
To link the HTML template with our component, set template_name
to the name of the HTML file.
from django_components import Component
class Calendar(Component):
template_name = "calendar.html"
Note
The path to the template file can be either:
- Relative to the component's python file (as seen above),
- Relative to any of the component directories as defined by
COMPONENTS.dirs
and/orCOMPONENTS.app_dirs
(e.g.[your apps]/components
dir and[project root]/components
)
4. Define the template variablesΒ€
In calendar.html
, we've used the variable date
. So we need to define it for the template to work.
This is done using Component.get_context_data()
. It's a function that returns a dictionary. The entries in this dictionary will become available within the template as variables, e.g. as {{ date }}
.
from django_components import Component
class Calendar(Component):
template_name = "calendar.html"
def get_context_data(self):
return {
"date": "1970-01-01",
}
Now, when we render the component with Component.render()
method:
It will output
And voilΓ‘!! We've created our first component.