An enhanced version of the Text plugin for django CMS. It allows wrapping
the text plugin inside a template selectable by the CMS content editor.
Note
This plugin is not meant to replace cms.plugins.text. It is an
enhancement for certain use cases. For most types of content, you should
probably still use cms.plugins.text or write a specifically tailored
plugin.
- Django 1.4+
- Django CMS 2.3+
- djangocms-text-ckeditor (only if using cms 3+)
- Add
cmsplugin_text_ngto yourINSTALLED_APPS.- Create some templates (more on that soon) and add them in the admin.
Let's say you want to have a text plugin with a facebook "like" button. Your template could look something like this:
<div class="text left">
{{ body|safe }}
</div>
<div class="fb-like right">
<h2>Like this page on facebook!</h2>
<fb:like send="false" width="450" show_faces="true"></fb:like>
</div>
Let's assume you want to set the content of the <h2>-tag on a per-plugin
basis. No problem! That's what the {% define %} template tag does:
{% load text_ng_tags %}
{% define h2_content as text %}
<div class="text left">
{{ body|safe }}
</div>
<div class="fb-like right">
<h2>{{ h2_content }}</h2>
<fb:like send="false" width="450" show_faces="true"></fb:like>
</div>
When you edit the plugin, you will now have a text box with the "h2_content" as
a label. Its content will be added to the context when rendering the plugin. You
can access it like any context variable: {{ h2_content }}.
The as text part of the template tag refers to the type of the variable.
cmsplugin-text-ng comes with one type (text). Additionally, there is an
image type in cmsplugin_text_ng.contrib.textng_filer that uses
django-filer to add images to the template context. If you want to use it,
make sure that both filer and cmsplugin_text_ng.contrib.textng_file are
listed in your INSTALLED_APPS.
So, you want to add some HTML code right below the "like" button, and your
content editors insist on using TinyMCE. Let's do this! Using the awesome
HTMLField from django-tinymce, we set up a model with a tinymce'd
textarea:
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
from tinymce.models import HTMLField
from cmsplugin_text_ng.models import TextNGVariableBase
from cmsplugin_text_ng.type_registry import register_type
class TextNGVariableHTML(TextNGVariableBase):
value = HTMLField(null=True, verbose_name=_('value'))
class Meta:
verbose_name = _('html text')
verbose_name_plural = _('html texts')
register_type('htmltext', TextNGVariableHTML)
A couple of things to note:
- your type has to inherit from
TextNGVariableBase.- the field containing the data that should end up in the context has to be named "value"
- it has to be nullable (the
null=Truepart).- the type name (
htmltextin the example) has to be unique over the whole project. You might want to prefix it with something unique to your app.
cmsplugin-text-ng will complain (loudly!) if these conditions are not met.
Where were we? Right, the template. To use your new, awesome type in a template,
just use the {% define %} tag to your advantage, like so:
{% load text_ng_tags %}
{% define h2_content as text %}
{% define html_content as htmltext %}
<div class="text left">
{{ body|safe }}
</div>
<div class="fb-like right">
<h2>{{ h2_content }}</h2>
<fb:like send="false" width="450" show_faces="true"></fb:like>
{{ html_content|safe }}
</div>
Done.