Reputation: 10784
I'm trying to use flask with url_for. The problem is that when I try to launch an alert with the value of the javascript variable everything seems ok, but when I try to launch a alert with the url_for the content of the variable is not printed. What I'm doing wrong? or What is missing in my code?
How can I pass a JavaScript variable into the url_for function?
html code:
<a class="dissable_user_btn" data-user_id="{{user.id}}" href="#" title="Change Status"><i class="fa fa-plug"></i>
</a>
JS Code:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.dissable_user_btn').click(function( event ) {
var user_id = $(this).data("user_id")
alert(user_id) //everything ok
alert ('{{url_for('.dissable', _id=user_id)}}'); //dont print the valur of user_id
</script>
Upvotes: 2
Views: 3107
Reputation: 838
I found another solution for this. My problem started when I needed to pass a variable with space.
First I created a function to remove trailing and leading spaces
function strip(str) {
return str.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, '');}
After that, I used the function and encoded the URL
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.dissable_user_btn').click(function( event ) {
var user_id = $(this).data("user_id")
alert(user_id)
user_id = strip(user_id).replace(" ","%20");
alert ('{{url_for('.dissable', _id='user_id')}}.replace('user_id',user_id);
</script>
It worked pretty nice for me!
This is how I applied to my problem
<script>
function strip(str) {
return str.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, '');}
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#exportcountry').click(function() {
var elemento = document.getElementById("countryexportbtn");
var country = strip(elemento.textContent).replace(" ","%20");
$('#exportevent').load("{{ url_for('get_events',country = 'pais') }}".replace('pais',country));
});
});
</script>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5372
Short answer: you can't. Flask & Jinja2 render the template on the server side (e.g. Flask is translating all of the {{ }}
stuff before it sends the HTML to the web browser).
For a URL like this where you're including a variable as part of the path you'd need to build this manually in javascript. If this is an XHR endpoint I'd recommend using GET/POST to transfer the values to the server as a better best practice than constructing the URL this way. This way you can use Jinja:
$(document).ready(function(){
var baseUrl = "{{ url_for('disable') }}";
$('.dissable_user_btn').click(function(event) {
var user_id = $(this).data("user_id");
// first part = url to send data
// second part = info to send as query string (url?user=user_id)
// third parameter = function to handle response from server
$.getJSON(baseUrl, {user: user_id}, function(response) {
console.log(response);
});
});
});
Upvotes: 3