🦉 QWeb Templating Language🦉

Content

Overview

QWeb is the primary templating engine used by Odoo. It is based on the XML format, and used mostly to generate HTML. In OWL, QWeb templates are compiled into functions that generate a virtual dom representation of the HTML.

<div> <span t-if="somecondition">Some string</span> <ul t-else=""> <li t-foreach="messages" t-as="message"> <t t-esc="message"/> </li> </ul> </div>

Template directives are specified as XML attributes prefixed with t-, for instance t-if for conditionals, with elements and other attributes being rendered directly.

To avoid element rendering, a placeholder element <t> is also available, which executes its directive but doesn’t generate any output in and of itself.

We present in this section the templating language, including its Owl specific extensions.

Directives

For reference, here is a list of all standard QWeb directives:

Name Description
t-esc Outputting safely a value
t-raw Outputting value, without escaping
t-set, t-value Setting variables
t-if, t-elif, t-else, conditionally rendering
t-foreach, t-as Loops
t-att, t-attf-*, t-att-* Dynamic attributes
t-call Rendering sub templates
t-debug, t-log Debugging
t-translation Disabling the translation of a node
t-name Defining a template (not really a directive)

The component system in Owl requires additional directives, to express various needs. Here is a list of all Owl specific directives:

Name Description
t-component, t-props Defining a sub component
t-ref Setting a reference to a dom node or a sub component
t-key Defining a key (to help virtual dom reconciliation)
t-on-* Event handling
t-transition Defining an animation
t-slot Rendering a slot
t-model Form input bindings

Reference

White Spaces

White spaces in a template are handled in a special way:

Root Nodes

For many reasons, Owl QWeb templates should have a single root node. More precisely, the result of a template rendering should have a single root node:

<!–– not ok: two root nodes ––> <t> <div>foo</div> <div>bar</div> </t> <!–– ok: result has one single root node ––> <t> <div t-if="someCondition">foo</div> <span t-else="">bar</span> </t>

Extra root nodes will actually be ignored (even though they will be rendered in memory).

Note: this does not apply to subtemplates (see the t-call directive). In that case, they will be inlined in the main template, and can actually have many root nodes.

Expression Evaluation

QWeb expressions are strings that will be processed at compile time. Each variable in the javascript expression will be replaced with a lookup in the context (so, the component). For example, a + b.c(d) will be converted into:

context["a"] + context["b"].c(context["d"]);

It is useful to explain the various rules that apply on these expressions:

  1. it should be a simple expression which returns a value. It cannot be a statement.

    <div><p t-if="1 + 2 === 3">ok</p></div>

    is valid, but the following is not valid:

    <div><p t-if="console.log(1)">NOT valid</p></div>
  2. it can use anything in the rendering context (typically, the component):

    <p t-if="user.birthday === today()">Happy bithday!</p>

    is valid, and will read the user object from the context, and call the today function.

  3. it can use a few special operators to avoid using symbols such as <, >, & or |. This is useful to make sure that we still write valid XML.

    Word replaced with
    and &&
    or \|\|
    gt >
    gte >=
    lt <
    lte <=

    So, one can write this:

    <div><p t-if="10 + 2 gt 5">ok</p></div>

Static Html Nodes

Normal, regular html nodes are rendered into themselves:

<div>hello</div> <!–– rendered as itself ––>

Outputting Data

The t-esc directive is necessary whenever you want to add a dynamic text expression in a template. The text is escaped to avoid security issues.

<p><t t-esc="value"/></p>

rendered with the value value set to 42 in the rendering context yields:

<p>42</p>

The t-raw directive is almost the same as t-esc, but without the escaping. This is mostly useful to inject a raw html string somewhere. Obviously, this is unsafe to do in general, and should only be used for strings known to be safe.

<p><t t-raw="value"/></p>

rendered with the value value set to <span>foo</span> in the rendering context yields:

<p><span>foo</span></p>

Note that since the content of the expression is not known beforehand, the t-raw directive has to parse the html (and convert it to a virtual dom structure) for each rendering. So, it will be much slower than a regular template. It is therefore advised to limit the use of t-raw whenever possible.

Setting Variables

QWeb allows creating variables from within the template, to memoize a computation (to use it multiple times), give a piece of data a clearer name, ...

This is done via the t-set directive, which takes the name of the variable to create. The value to set can be provided in two ways:

  1. a t-value attribute containing an expression, and the result of its evaluation will be set:

    <t t-set="foo" t-value="2 + 1"/> <t t-esc="foo"/>

    will print 3. Note that the evaluation is done at rendering time, not at compilte time.

  2. if there is no t-value attribute, the node’s body is saved and its value is set as the variable’s value:

    <t t-set="foo"> <li>ok</li> </t> <t t-esc="foo"/>

    will generate &lt;li&gt;ok&lt;/li&gt; (the content is escaped as we used the t-esc directive)

The t-set directive acts like a regular variable in most programming language. It is lexically scoped (inner nodes are sub scopes), can be shadowed, ...

Conditionals

The t-if directive is useful to conditionally render something. It evaluates the expression given as attribute value, and then acts accordingly.

<div> <t t-if="condition"> <p>ok</p> </t> </div>

The element is rendered if the condition (evaluated with the current rendering context) is true:

<div> <p>ok</p> </div>

but if the condition is false it is removed from the result:

<div> </div>

The conditional rendering applies to the bearer of the directive, which does not have to be <t>:

<div> <p t-if="condition">ok</p> </div>

will give the same results as the previous example.

Extra conditional branching directives t-elif and t-else are also available:

<div> <p t-if="user.birthday == today()">Happy bithday!</p> <p t-elif="user.login == 'root'">Welcome master!</p> <p t-else="">Welcome!</p> </div>

Dynamic Attributes

One can use the t-att- directive to add dynamic attributes. Its main use is to evaluate an expression (at rendering time) and bind an attribute to its result:

For example, if we have id set to 32 in the rendering context,

<div t-att-data-action-id="id"/> <!-- result: <div data-action-id="32"></div> -->

If an expression evaluates to a falsy value, it will not be set at all:

<div t-att-foo="false"/> <!-- result: <div></div> -->

It is sometimes convenient to format an attribute with string interpolation. In that case, the t-attf- directive can be used. It is useful when we need to mix literal and dynamic elements, such as css classes.

<div t-attf-foo="a {{value1}} is {{value2}} of {{value3}} ]"/> <!-- result if values are set to 1,2 and 3: <div foo="a 0 is 1 of 2 ]"></div> -->

If we need completely dynamic attribute names, then there is an additional directive: t-att, which takes either an object (with keys mapping to their values) or a pair [key, value]. For example:

<div t-att="{'a': 1, 'b': 2}"/> <!-- result: <div a="1" b="2"></div> --> <div t-att="['a', 'b']"/> <!-- <div a="b"></div> -->

Loops

QWeb has an iteration directive t-foreach which take an expression returning the collection to iterate on, and a second parameter t-as providing the name to use for the current item of the iteration:

<t t-foreach="[1, 2, 3]" t-as="i"> <p><t t-esc="i"/></p> </t>

will be rendered as:

<p>1</p> <p>2</p> <p>3</p>

Like conditions, t-foreach applies to the element bearing the directive’s attribute, and

<p t-foreach="[1, 2, 3]" t-as="i"> <t t-esc="i"/> </p>

is equivalent to the previous example.

t-foreach can iterate on an array (the current item will be the current value) or an object (the current item will be the current key).

In addition to the name passed via t-as, t-foreach provides a few other variables for various data points (note: $as will be replaced with the name passed to t-as):

These extra variables provided and all new variables created into the t-foreach are only available in the scope of the t-foreach. If the variable exists outside the context of the t-foreach, the value is copied at the end of the foreach into the global context.

<t t-set="existing_variable" t-value="false"/> <!-- existing_variable now False --> <p t-foreach="Array(3)" t-as="i"> <t t-set="existing_variable" t-value="true"/> <t t-set="new_variable" t-value="true"/> <!-- existing_variable and new_variable now true --> </p> <!-- existing_variable always true --> <!-- new_variable undefined -->

Even though Owl tries to be as declarative as possible, the DOM does not fully expose its state declaratively in the DOM tree. For example, the scrolling state, the current user selection, the focused element or the state of an input are not set as attribute in the DOM tree. This is why we use a virtual dom algorithm to keep the actual DOM node as much as possible.

However, in some situations, this is not enough, and we need to help Owl decide if an element is actually the same, or is a different element with the same properties.

Consider the following situation: we have a list of two items [{text: "a"}, {text: "b"}] and we render them in this template:

<p t-foreach="items" t-as="item"><t t-esc="item.text"/></p>

The result will be two <p> tags with text a and b. Now, if we swap them, and rerender the template, Owl needs to know what the intent is:

This might look trivial, but it actually matters. These two possibilities lead to different results in some cases. For example, if the user selected the text of the first p, swapping them will keep the selection while updating the text content will not.

There are many other cases where this is important: input tags with their value, css classes and animations, scroll position...

So, the t-key directive is used to give an identity to an element. It allows Owl to understand if different elements of a list are actually different or not.

The above example could be modified by adding an ID: [{id: 1, text: "a"}, {id: 2, text: "b"}]. Then, the template could look like this:

<p t-foreach="items" t-as="item" t-key="item.id"><t t-esc="item.text"/></p>

The t-key directive is useful for lists (t-foreach). A key should be a unique number or string (objects will not work: they will be cast to the "[object Object]" string, which is obviously not unique).

Also, the key can be set on a t tag or on its children. The following variations are all equivalent:

<p t-foreach="items" t-as="item" t-key="item.id"> <t t-esc="item.text"/> </p> <t t-foreach="items" t-as="item" t-key="item.id"> <p t-esc="item.text"/> </t> <t t-foreach="items" t-as="item"> <p t-key="item.id" t-esc="item.text"/> </t>

If there is no t-key directive, Owl will use the index as a default key.

Rendering Sub Templates

QWeb templates can be used for top level rendering, but they can also be used from within another template (to avoid duplication or give names to parts of templates), using the t-call directive:

<div t-name="other-template"> <p><t t-value="var"/></p> </div> <div t-name="main-template"> <t t-set="var" t-value="owl"/> <t t-call="other-template"/> </div>

will be rendered as <div><p>owl</p></div>. This example shows that the sub template is rendered with the execution context of the parent. The sub template is actually inlined in the main template, but in a sub scope: variables defined in the sub template do not escape.

Sometimes, one might want to pass information to the sub template. In that case, the content of the body of the t-call directive is available as a special magic variable 0:

<t t-name="other-template"> This template was called with content: <t t-raw="0"/> </t> <div t-name="main-template"> <t t-call="other-template"> <em>content</em> </t> </div>

will result in :

<div> This template was called with content: <em>content</em> </div>

This can be used to define variables scoped to a sub template:

<t t-call="other-template"> <t t-set="var" t-value="1"/> </t> <!-- "var" does not exist here -->

Translations

By default, QWeb specify that templates should be translated. If this behaviour is not wanted, there is a t-translation directive which can turn off translations (if it is set to the off value), with the following rules:

See here for more information on how to setup a translate function in Owl QWeb.

Debugging

The javascript QWeb implementation provides two useful debugging directives:

t-debug adds a debugger statement during template rendering:

<t t-if="a_test"> <t t-debug=""/> </t>

will stop execution if the browser dev tools are open.

t-log takes an expression parameter, evaluates the expression during rendering and logs its result with console.log:

<t t-set="foo" t-value="42"/> <t t-log="foo"/>

will print 42 to the console.