Accessing global variable in view using context processor in Django

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忘了有多久
忘了有多久 2021-01-13 03:17

Assuming I have a context processor:

def title(request):
   return {\'titles\': \'mytitle\'}

I can access this variable in template as

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  • 2021-01-13 04:06

    Add your context processor method path (folder.context_processor.application_context) to TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS.

    in my case application_context is the method which i defined inside file context_processor.py and method "application_context" returns {'titles': 'mytitle'}

    if you want to use "title" as global variable in views use it in this way

    global_var = RequestContext(request).get("app_config")
    titles = global_var.get("titles")
    print titles 
    

    The only advantage is "Same variable 'titles' will be visible for templates and also in your views"

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  • 2021-01-13 04:14

    If you need the data in your views, it's cleaner to use Middleware in conjunction with a Context Processor:

    1. Create a trivial custom middleware to store some data on the request object, say at request.x (example). Now you can access this in your views directly.
    2. Enable django.core.context_processors.request in your TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS to have request.x accessible from your templates.

    See my related question: Django: How to provide context to all views (not templates)?

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  • 2021-01-13 04:15

    Context processors aren't in any way global variables. They are simply functions that are run when a RequestContext is initiated, which add items to that context. So they're only available wherever you have a RequestContext, ie in a template.

    Your examples don't really give a good idea of what variables you're looking to access. If it's just some constants you want to use everywhere, a good way is to define them somewhere central, say in settings.py, and import that module wherever you need it - plus use a context processor to add them to the context.

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