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Defining HTML / JS / CSS files

As you could have seen in the tutorial, there's multiple ways how you can associate HTML / JS / CSS with a component:

Warning

You cannot use both inlined code and separate file for a single language type:

  • You can only either set Component.template or Component.template_file
  • You can only either set Component.css or Component.css_file
  • You can only either set Component.js or Component.js_file

However, you can freely mix these for different languages:

class MyTable(Component):
    template: types.django_html = """
      <div class="welcome">
        Hi there!
      </div>
    """
    js_file = "my_table.js"
    css_file = "my_table.css"

Note

django-component's management of files is inspired by Django's Media class.

To be familiar with how Django handles static files, we recommend reading also:

Defining file paths relative to component¤

As seen in the getting started example, to associate HTML / JS / CSS files with a component, you can set them as Component.template_file, Component.js_file and Component.css_file respectively:

[project root]/components/calendar/calendar.py
from django_components import Component, register

@register("calendar")
class Calendar(Component):
    template_file = "template.html"
    css_file = "style.css"
    js_file = "script.js"

In the example above, we defined the files relative to the directory where the component file is defined.

Alternatively, you can specify the file paths relative to the directories set in COMPONENTS.dirs or COMPONENTS.app_dirs.

If you specify the paths relative to component's directory, django-componenents does the conversion automatically for you.

Thus, assuming that COMPONENTS.dirs contains path [project root]/components, the example above is the same as writing:

[project root]/components/calendar/calendar.py
from django_components import Component, register

@register("calendar")
class Calendar(Component):
    template_file = "calendar/template.html"
    css_file = "calendar/style.css"
    js_file = "calendar/script.js"

Important

File path resolution in-depth

At component class creation, django-components checks all file paths defined on the component (e.g. Component.template_file).

For each file path, it checks if the file path is relative to the component's directory. And such file exists, the component's file path is re-written to be defined relative to a first matching directory in COMPONENTS.dirs or COMPONENTS.app_dirs.

Example:

[root]/components/mytable/mytable.py
class MyTable(Component):
    template_file = "mytable.html"
  1. Component MyTable is defined in file [root]/components/mytable/mytable.py.
  2. The component's directory is thus [root]/components/mytable/.
  3. Because MyTable.template_file is mytable.html, django-components tries to resolve it as [root]/components/mytable/mytable.html.
  4. django-components checks the filesystem. If there's no such file, nothing happens.
  5. If there IS such file, django-components tries to rewrite the path.
  6. django-components searches COMPONENTS.dirs and COMPONENTS.app_dirs for a first directory that contains [root]/components/mytable/mytable.html.
  7. It comes across [root]/components/, which DOES contain the path to mytable.html.
  8. Thus, it rewrites template_file from mytable.html to mytable/mytable.html.

NOTE: In case of ambiguity, the preference goes to resolving the files relative to the component's directory.

Defining additional JS and CSS files¤

Each component can have only a single template, and single main JS and CSS. However, you can define additional JS or CSS using the nested Component.Media class.

This Media class behaves similarly to Django's Media class:

  • Paths are generally handled as static file paths, and resolved URLs are rendered to HTML with media_class.render_js() or media_class.render_css().
  • A path that starts with http, https, or / is considered a URL, skipping the static file resolution. This path is still rendered to HTML with media_class.render_js() or media_class.render_css().
  • A SafeString, or a function (with __html__ method) is considered an already-formatted HTML tag, skipping both static file resolution and rendering with media_class.render_js() or media_class.render_css().
  • You can set extend to configure whether to inherit JS / CSS from parent components. See Controlling Media Inheritance.

However, there's a few differences from Django's Media class:

  1. Our Media class accepts various formats for the JS and CSS files: either a single file, a list, or (CSS-only) a dictonary (See ComponentMediaInput).
  2. Individual JS / CSS files can be any of str, bytes, Path, SafeString, or a function (See ComponentMediaInputPath).
class MyTable(Component):
    class Media:
        js = [
            "path/to/script.js",
            "https://unpkg.com/alpinejs@3.14.7/dist/cdn.min.js",  # AlpineJS
        ]
        css = {
            "all": [
                "path/to/style.css",
                "https://unpkg.com/tailwindcss@^2/dist/tailwind.min.css",  # TailwindCSS
            ],
            "print": ["path/to/style2.css"],
        }

Configuring CSS Media Types¤

You can define which stylesheets will be associated with which CSS Media types. You do so by defining CSS files as a dictionary.

See the corresponding Django Documentation.

Again, you can set either a single file or a list of files per media type:

class MyComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        css = {
            "all": "path/to/style1.css",
            "print": ["path/to/style2.css", "path/to/style3.css"],
        }

Note

When you define CSS as a string or a list, the all media type is implied.

So these two examples are the same:

class MyComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        css = "path/to/style1.css"
class MyComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        css = {
            "all": ["path/to/style1.css"],
        }

Supported types for file paths¤

File paths can be any of:

  • str
  • bytes
  • PathLike (__fspath__ method)
  • SafeData (__html__ method)
  • Callable that returns any of the above, evaluated at class creation (__new__)

See ComponentMediaInputPath.

from pathlib import Path

from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

class SimpleComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        css = [
            mark_safe('<link href="/static/calendar/style1.css" rel="stylesheet" />'),
            Path("calendar/style1.css"),
            "calendar/style2.css",
            b"calendar/style3.css",
            lambda: "calendar/style4.css",
        ]
        js = [
            mark_safe('<script src="/static/calendar/script1.js"></script>'),
            Path("calendar/script1.js"),
            "calendar/script2.js",
            b"calendar/script3.js",
            lambda: "calendar/script4.js",
        ]

Paths as objects¤

In the example above, you can see that when we used Django's mark_safe() to mark a string as a SafeString, we had to define the full <script>/<link> tag.

This is an extension of Django's Paths as objects feature, where "safe" strings are taken as is, and accessed only at render time.

Because of that, the paths defined as "safe" strings are NEVER resolved, neither relative to component's directory, nor relative to COMPONENTS.dirs.

"Safe" strings can be used to lazily resolve a path, or to customize the <script> or <link> tag for individual paths:

In the example below, we make use of "safe" strings to add type="module" to the script tag that will fetch calendar/script2.js. In this case, we implemented a "safe" string by defining a __html__ method.

class ModuleJsPath:
    def __init__(self, static_path: str) -> None:
        self.static_path = static_path

    def __html__(self):
        full_path = static(self.static_path)
        return format_html(
            f'<script type="module" src="{full_path}"></script>'
        )

@register("calendar")
class Calendar(Component):
    template_file = "calendar/template.html"

    def get_context_data(self, date):
        return {
            "date": date,
        }

    class Media:
        css = "calendar/style1.css"
        js = [
            # <script> tag constructed by Media class
            "calendar/script1.js",
            # Custom <script> tag
            ModuleJsPath("calendar/script2.js"),
        ]

Customize how paths are rendered into HTML tags¤

Sometimes you may need to change how all CSS <link> or JS <script> tags are rendered for a given component. You can achieve this by providing your own subclass of Django's Media class to component's media_class attribute.

Normally, the JS and CSS paths are passed to Media class, which decides how the paths are resolved and how the <link> and <script> tags are constructed.

To change how the tags are constructed, you can override the Media.render_js and Media.render_css methods:

from django.forms.widgets import Media
from django_components import Component, register

class MyMedia(Media):
    # Same as original Media.render_js, except
    # the `<script>` tag has also `type="module"`
    def render_js(self):
        tags = []
        for path in self._js:
            if hasattr(path, "__html__"):
                tag = path.__html__()
            else:
                tag = format_html(
                    '<script type="module" src="{}"></script>',
                    self.absolute_path(path)
                )
        return tags

@register("calendar")
class Calendar(Component):
    template_file = "calendar/template.html"
    css_file = "calendar/style.css"
    js_file = "calendar/script.js"

    class Media:
        css = "calendar/style1.css"
        js = "calendar/script2.js"

    # Override the behavior of Media class
    media_class = MyMedia

Accessing component's HTML / JS / CSS¤

Component's HTML / CSS / JS is resolved and loaded lazily.

This means that, when you specify any of template_file, js_file, css_file, or Media.js/css, these file paths will be resolved only once you either:

  1. Access any of the following attributes on the component:

  2. Render the component.

Once the component's media files have been loaded once, they will remain in-memory on the Component class:

Thus, whether you define HTML via Component.template_file or Component.template, you can always access the HTML content under Component.template. And the same applies for JS and CSS.

Example:

# When we create Calendar component, the files like `calendar/template.html`
# are not yet loaded!
@register("calendar")
class Calendar(Component):
    template_file = "calendar/template.html"
    css_file = "calendar/style.css"
    js_file = "calendar/script.js"

    class Media:
        css = "calendar/style1.css"
        js = "calendar/script2.js"

# It's only at this moment that django-components reads the files like `calendar/template.html`
print(Calendar.css)
# Output:
# .calendar {
#   width: 200px;
#   background: pink;
# }

Warning

Do NOT modify HTML / CSS / JS after it has been loaded

django-components assumes that the component's media files like js_file or Media.js/css are static.

If you need to dynamically change these media files, consider instead defining multiple Components.

Modifying these files AFTER the component has been loaded at best does nothing. However, this is an untested behavior, which may lead to unexpected errors.

Accessing component's Media files¤

To access the files that you defined under Component.Media, use Component.media (lowercase). This is consistent behavior with Django's Media class.

class MyComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        js = "path/to/script.js"
        css = "path/to/style.css"

print(MyComponent.media)
# Output:
# <script src="/static/path/to/script.js"></script>
# <link href="/static/path/to/style.css" media="all" rel="stylesheet">

Component.Media vs Component.media¤

When working with component media files, there are a few important concepts to understand:

  • Component.Media

    • Is the "raw" media definition, or the input, which holds only the component's own media definition
    • This class is NOT instantiated, it merely holds the JS / CSS files.
  • Component.media

    • Returns all resolved media files, including those inherited from parent components
    • Is an instance of Component.media_class
class ParentComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        js = ["parent.js"]

class ChildComponent(ParentComponent):
    class Media:
        js = ["child.js"]

# Access only this component's media
print(ChildComponent.Media.js)  # ["child.js"]

# Access all inherited media
print(ChildComponent.media._js)  # ["parent.js", "child.js"]

Note

You should not manually modify Component.media or Component.Media after the component has been resolved, as this may lead to unexpected behavior.

If you want to modify the class that is instantiated for Component.media, you can configure Component.media_class (See example).

Controlling Media Inheritance¤

By default, the media files are inherited from the parent component.

class ParentComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        js = ["parent.js"]

class MyComponent(ParentComponent):
    class Media:
        js = ["script.js"]

print(MyComponent.media._js)  # ["parent.js", "script.js"]

You can set the component NOT to inherit from the parent component by setting the extend attribute to False:

class ParentComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        js = ["parent.js"]

class MyComponent(ParentComponent):
    class Media:
        extend = False  # Don't inherit parent media
        js = ["script.js"]

print(MyComponent.media._js)  # ["script.js"]

Alternatively, you can specify which components to inherit from. In such case, the media files are inherited ONLY from the specified components, and NOT from the original parent components:

class ParentComponent(Component):
    class Media:
        js = ["parent.js"]

class MyComponent(ParentComponent):
    class Media:
        # Only inherit from these, ignoring the files from the parent
        extend = [OtherComponent1, OtherComponent2]

        js = ["script.js"]

print(MyComponent.media._js)  # ["script.js", "other1.js", "other2.js"]

Info

The extend behaves consistently with Django's Media class, with one exception:

  • When you set extend to a list, the list is expected to contain Component classes (or other classes that have a nested Media class).