[Django]-Iterating through two lists in Django templates

28👍

It’s possible to do

{% for ab in mylist %}
    {{ab.0}}
    {{ab.1}}
{% endfor %}

but you cannot make a call to zip within the for structure. You’ll have to store the zipped list in another variable first, then iterate over it.

110👍

You can use zip in your view:

mylist = zip(list1, list2)
context = {
            'mylist': mylist,
        }
return render(request, 'template.html', context)

and in your template use

{% for item1, item2 in mylist %}

to iterate through both lists.

This should work with all version of Django.

👤Mermoz

61👍

Simply define zip as a template filter:

@register.filter(name='zip')
def zip_lists(a, b):
  return zip(a, b)

Then, in your template:

{%for a, b in first_list|zip:second_list %}
  {{a}}
  {{b}}
{%endfor%}
👤Marco

9👍

I built django-multiforloop to solve this problem. From the README:

With django-multiforloop installed, rendering this template

{% for x in x_list; y in y_list %}
  {{ x }}:{{ y }}
{% endfor %}

with this context

context = {
    "x_list": ('one', 1, 'carrot'),
    "y_list": ('two', 2, 'orange')
}

will output

one:two
1:2
carrot:orange

3👍

Here is modified {% for %} templatetag which allows iterating several lists at once izip-ing them before:

import re

from itertools import izip
from django import template
from django.template.base import TemplateSyntaxError
from django.template.defaulttags import ForNode

register = template.Library()


class ZipExpression(object):
    def __init__(self, var):
        self.var = var

    def resolve(self, *args, **kwargs):
        return izip(*(
            f.resolve(*args, **kwargs) for f in self.var
        ))


@register.tag('for')
def do_for(parser, token):
    """
    For tag with ziping multiple iterables.
    """
    bits = token.contents.split()
    if len(bits) < 4:
        raise TemplateSyntaxError("'foreach' statements should have at least"
                                  " four words: %s" % token.contents)

    is_reversed = False
    try:
        in_index = bits.index('in')
        sequence = bits[in_index+1:]
        if sequence[-1] == 'reversed':
            is_reversed = True
            sequence.pop()
        if not sequence or 'in' in sequence:
            raise ValueError
        sequence = re.split(r' *, *', ' '.join(sequence))
    except ValueError:
        raise TemplateSyntaxError(
            "'foreach' statements should use the format"
            " 'foreach a,b,(...) in x,y,(...)': %s" % token.contents)

    loopvars = re.split(r' *, *', ' '.join(bits[1:in_index]))
    for var in loopvars:
        if not var or ' ' in var:
            raise TemplateSyntaxError("'foreach' tag received an invalid"
                                      " argumewnt: %s" % token.contents)

    if len(sequence) > 1:
        sequence = ZipExpression(map(parser.compile_filter, sequence))
    else:
        sequence = parser.compile_filter(sequence[0])

    nodelist_loop = parser.parse(('empty', 'endfor',))
    token = parser.next_token()
    if token.contents == 'empty':
        nodelist_empty = parser.parse(('endfor',))
        parser.delete_first_token()
    else:
        nodelist_empty = None
    return ForNode(
        loopvars, sequence, is_reversed, nodelist_loop, nodelist_empty)

Just save it as templatetag library and import it in your template. It will override build-in {% for %} tag (don’t worry it is backward compatible with it).

Example usage:

{% for a,b in foo, moo %}
    {{ a }}
    {{ b }}
{% endfor %}
👤jaboja

3👍

In views.py:

foo = ['foo', 'bar']
moo = ['moo', 'loo']
zipped_list = zip(foo,moo)
return render(request,"template.html",{"context":zipped_list}

In template.html:

{% for f,m in context%}
 {{f}}{{m}}
{% endfor %}

If f is a queryset returned from database then access it by {{f.required_attribute_name}}

2👍

You can make the foo objects properties of the moo objects on the server side.

for f, b in zip(foo, bar):
    f.foosBar = b

context = {
    "foo": foo
}

This is especially clean when the second list are properties of the first (which is typically the case).

users = User.objects.all()
for user in users:
    user.bestFriend = findBestFriendForUser(user)

context = {
    "users": users
}
👤bbrame

0👍

@marco’s approach, using zip in a custom template filter, works well for the OP’s case with two lists.

However, a template filter only supports two arguments, so, if you want to combine more than two lists, you would need to resort to filter chaining.

As an alternative, you could create a simple_tag, which supports any number of arguments.

For example:

@register.simple_tag(name='zip')
def zip_many(*args):    
    return zip(*args)

This can be used in a template as follows:

{% zip a b c as abc_zipped %}
{% for x, y, z in abc_zipped %}
...
{% endfor %}

where a, b, and c are lists.

👤djvg

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