Вопрос

I'm new to Django, and I'm pretty sure I've read or heard about a way to do this, but I can't find it anywhere.

Rather than sending the rendered output from a template to a browser, I want to create an html file that can then be served without the need to go through the rendering process every time. I'm developing on a system that's separate from our main website's server, and I need to make periodic snapshots of my data available to our users without giving them access to the development system.

My intuition says that I should be able to somehow redirect the response to a file, but I'm not seeing it in the docs or in other posts here.

Это было полезно?

Решение

You can leverage Django's template loader to render your template, including whatever context you pass to it, as a string and then save that out to the filesystem. If you need to save that file on an external system, such as Amazon S3, you can use the Boto library.

Here's an example of how to render a view to a file, using an optional querystring parameter as the trigger...

from django.shortcuts import render
from django.template.loader import render_to_string

def my_view(request):
    as_file = request.GET.get('as_file')
    context = {'some_key': 'some_value'}

    if as_file:
        content = render_to_string('your-template.html', context)                
        with open('path/to/your-template-static.html', 'w') as static_file:
            static_file.write(content)

    return render('your-template.html', context)

Другие советы

django-bakery is a well-developed "set of helpers for baking your Django site out as flat files".

There's a well developed Django app specifically for this: django-render-static

Лицензировано под: CC-BY-SA с атрибуция
Не связан с StackOverflow
scroll top