5. Navigation
There are four template tags for use in the templates that are connected to the menu:
show_menu
show_menu_below_id
show_sub_menu
show_breadcrumb
Note
Please note that menus were originally implemented to be application-independant and as such, live in the menus
application instead of the “normal” cms
5.1. show_menu
{% show_menu %}
renders the navigation of the current page. You can overwrite the appearance and the HTML if you add a menu/menu.html
template to your project or edit the one provided with django-cms. show_menu
takes four optional parameters: start_level
, end_level
, extra_inactive
, and extra_active
.
The first two parameters, start_level
(default=0) and end_level
(default=100) specify from what level to which level should the navigation be rendered. If you have a home as a root node and don’t want to display home you can render the navigation only after level 1.
The third parameter, extra_inactive
(default=0), specifies how many levels of navigation should be displayed if a node is not a direct ancestor or descendant of the current active node.
Finally, the fourth parameter, extra_active
(default=100), specifies how many levels of descendants of the currently active node should be displayed.
5.1.1. Some Examples
Complete navigation (as a nested list):
{% load cache menu_tags %}
<ul>
{% show_menu 0 100 100 100 %}
</ul>
Navigation with active tree (as a nested list):
<ul>
{% show_menu 0 100 0 100 %}
</ul>
Navigation with only one active extra level:
<ul>
{% show_menu 0 100 0 1 %}
</ul>
Level 1 navigation (as a nested list):
<ul>
{% show_menu 1 %}
</ul>
Navigation with a custom template:
{% show_menu 0 100 100 100 "myapp/menu.html" %}
5.2. show_menu_below_id
If you have set an id in the advanced settings of a page, you can display the submenu of this page with a template tag. For example, we have a page called meta that is not displayed in the navigation and that has the id “meta”:
<ul>
{% show_menu_below_id "meta" %}
</ul>
You can give it the same optional parameters as show_menu
:
<ul>
{% show_menu_below_id "meta" 0 100 100 100 "myapp/menu.html" %}
</ul>
5.3. show_sub_menu
Display the sub menu of the current page (as a nested list). Takes one argument that specifies how many levels deep should the submenu be displayed. The template can be found at menu/sub_menu.html
:
<ul>
{% show_sub_menu 1 %}
</ul>
Or with a custom template:
<ul>
{% show_sub_menu 1 "myapp/submenu.html" %}
</ul>
5.4. show_breadcrumb
Show the breadcrumb navigation of the current page. The template for the HTML can be found at menu/breadcrumb.html
.:
{% show_breadcrumb %}
Or with a custom template and only display level 2 or higher:
{% show_breadcrumb 2 "myapp/breadcrumb.html" %}
If the current URL is not handled by the CMS or you are working in a navigation extender, you may need to provide your own breadcrumb via the template. This is mostly needed for pages like login, logout and third-party apps.
5.5. Properties of Navigation Nodes in templates
{{ node.is_leaf_node }}
Is it the last in the tree? If true it doesn’t have any children. (This normally comes from mptt.)
{{ node.level }}
The level of the node. Starts at 0.
{{ node.menu_level }}
The level of the node from the root node of the menu. Starts at 0. If your menu starts at level 1 or you have a “soft root” (described in the next section) the first node still would have 0 as its menu_level.
{{ node.get_absolute_url }}
The absolute URL of the node.
{{ node.get_title }}
The title in the current language of the node.
{{ node.selected }}
If true this node is the current one selected/active at this URL.
{{ node.ancestor }}
If true this node is an ancestor of the current selected node.
{{ node.sibling }}
If true this node is a sibling of the current selected node.
{{ node.descendant }}
If true this node is a descendant of the current selected node.
{{ node.soft_root }}
If true this node is a “soft root”.
5.6. Soft Roots
“Soft roots” are pages that start a new navigation. If you are in a child of a soft root node you can only see the path to the soft root. This feature is useful if you have big navigation trees with a lot of pages and don’t want to overwhelm the user.
To enable it put the following in your settings.py
file:
CMS_SOFTROOT = True
Now you can mark a page as “soft root” in the ‘Advanced’ tab of the page’s settings in the admin interface.
5.7. Modifying & Extending the menu
Please refer to the App Integration documentation