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Passing HTML to template using Flask/Jinja2

I'm building an admin for Flask and SQLAlchemy, and I want to pass the HTML for the different inputs to my view using render_template. The templating framework seems to escape the HTML automatically, so all <"'> charac开发者_如何学JAVAters are converted to HTML entities. How can I disable that so that the HTML renders correctly?


To turn off autoescaping when rendering a value, use the |safe filter.

{{ something|safe }}

Only do this on data you trust, since rendering untrusted data without escaping is a cross-site scripting vulnerability.


MarkupSafe provides Jinja's autoescaping behavior. You can import Markup and use it to declare a value HTML safe from the code:

from markupsafe import Markup
value = Markup('<strong>The HTML String</strong>')

Pass that to the templates and you don't have to use the |safe filter on it.


From the Jinja docs section HTML Escaping:

When automatic escaping is enabled everything is escaped by default except for values explicitly marked as safe. Those can either be marked by the application or in the template by using the |safe filter.

Example:

 <div class="info">
   {{data.email_content|safe}}
 </div>


When you have a lot of variables that don't need escaping, you can use an autoescape override block:

{% autoescape false %}
{{ something }}
{{ something_else }}
<b>{{ something_important }}</b>
{% endautoescape %}


For handling line-breaks specifically, I tried a number of options before finally settling for this:

{% set list1 = data.split('\n') %}
{% for item in list1 %}
{{ item }}
  {% if not loop.last %}
  <br/>
  {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

The nice thing about this approach is that it's compatible with the auto-escaping, leaving everything nice and safe. It can also be combined with filters, like urlize.

Of course it's similar to Helge's answer, but doesn't need a macro (relying instead on Jinja's built-in split function) and also doesn't add an unnecesssary <br/> after the last item.


Some people seem to turn autoescape off which carries security risks to manipulate the string display.

If you only want to insert some linebreaks into a string and convert the linebreaks into <br />, then you could take a jinja macro like:

{% macro linebreaks_for_string( the_string ) -%}
{% if the_string %}
{% for line in the_string.split('\n') %}
<br />
{{ line }}
{% endfor %}
{% else %}
{{ the_string }}
{% endif %}
{%- endmacro %}

and in your template just call this with

{{ linebreaks_for_string( my_string_in_a_variable ) }}


Use the safe filter in your template, and then sanitize the HTML with the bleach library in your view. Using bleach, you can whitelist the HTML tags that you need to use.

This is the safest, as far as I know. I tried both the safe filter and the Markup class, and both ways allowed me to execute unwanted JavaScript. Not very safe!

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