sections
7 rows where breadcrumbs = "["Custom pages and templates"]" sorted by content
This data as json, CSV (advanced)
page 1 ✖
id | page | ref | title | content ▼ | breadcrumbs | references |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
custom_templates:css-classes-on-the-body | custom_templates | css-classes-on-the-body | CSS classes on the <body> | Every default template includes CSS classes in the body designed to support custom styling. The index template (the top level page at / ) gets this: <body class="index"> The database template ( /dbname ) gets this: <body class="db db-dbname"> The custom SQL template ( /dbname?sql=... ) gets this: <body class="query db-dbname"> A canned query template ( /dbname/queryname ) gets this: <body class="query db-dbname query-queryname"> The table template ( /dbname/tablename ) gets: <body class="table db-dbname table-tablename"> The row template ( /dbname/tablename/rowid ) gets: <body class="row db-dbname table-tablename"> The db-x and table-x classes use the database or table names themselves if they are valid CSS identifiers. If they aren't, we strip any invalid characters out and append a 6 character md5 digest of the original name, in order to ensure that multiple tables which resolve to the same stripped character version still have different CSS classes. Some examples: "simple" => "simple" "MixedCase" => "MixedCase" "-no-leading-hyphens" => "no-leading-hyphens-65bea6" "_no-leading-underscores" => "no-leading-underscores-b921bc" "no spaces" => "no-spaces-7088d7" "-" => "336d5e" "no $ characters" => "no--characters-59e024" <td> and <th> elements also get custom CSS classes reflecting the database column they are representing, for example: <table> <thead> <tr> <th class="col-id" scope="col">id</th> <th class="col-name" scope="col">name</th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr> <td class="col-id"><a href="...">1</a></td> <td class="col-name">SMITH</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> | ["Custom pages and templates"] | [] |
custom_templates:publishing-static-assets | custom_templates | publishing-static-assets | Publishing static assets | The datasette publish command can be used to publish your static assets, using the same syntax as above: datasette publish cloudrun mydb.db --static assets:static-files/ This will upload the contents of the static-files/ directory as part of the deployment, and configure Datasette to correctly serve the assets from /assets/ . | ["Custom pages and templates"] | [] |
custom_templates:custom-pages-404 | custom_templates | custom-pages-404 | Returning 404s | To indicate that content could not be found and display the default 404 page you can use the raise_404(message) function: {% if not rows %} {{ raise_404("Content not found") }} {% endif %} If you call raise_404() the other content in your template will be ignored. | ["Custom pages and templates"] | [] |
custom_templates:custom-pages-parameters | custom_templates | custom-pages-parameters | Path parameters for pages | You can define custom pages that match multiple paths by creating files with {variable} definitions in their filenames. For example, to capture any request to a URL matching /about/* , you would create a template in the following location: templates/pages/about/{slug}.html A hit to /about/news would render that template and pass in a variable called slug with a value of "news" . If you use this mechanism don't forget to return a 404 if the referenced content could not be found. You can do this using {{ raise_404() }} described below. Templates defined using custom page routes work particularly well with the sql() template function from datasette-template-sql or the graphql() template function from datasette-graphql . | ["Custom pages and templates"] | [{"href": "https://github.com/simonw/datasette-template-sql", "label": "datasette-template-sql"}, {"href": "https://github.com/simonw/datasette-graphql#the-graphql-template-function", "label": "datasette-graphql"}] |
custom_templates:custom-pages-redirects | custom_templates | custom-pages-redirects | Custom redirects | You can use the custom_redirect(location) function to redirect users to another page, for example in a file called pages/datasette.html : {{ custom_redirect("https://github.com/simonw/datasette") }} Now requests to http://localhost:8001/datasette will result in a redirect. These redirects are served with a 302 Found status code by default. You can send a 301 Moved Permanently code by passing 301 as the second argument to the function: {{ custom_redirect("https://github.com/simonw/datasette", 301) }} | ["Custom pages and templates"] | [] |
Advanced export
JSON shape: default, array, newline-delimited, object
CREATE TABLE [sections] ( [id] TEXT PRIMARY KEY, [page] TEXT, [ref] TEXT, [title] TEXT, [content] TEXT, [breadcrumbs] TEXT, [references] TEXT );