title: Templates --- sort_key: 90 --- summary: A quick introduction into templating in Lektor. --- body: Lektor uses the [Jinja2 :ext](http://jinja.pocoo.org/) templating language for generating HTML out of your pages. You do not need to understand Jinja2 to be able to generate beautiful websites but if you want to dive deep into the powers of the templating language then you can learn more about it by reading the [Jinja2 Documentation :ext](http://jinja.pocoo.org/docs). ## Template Folder and Naming All templates are stored within the `templates/` folder. Templates typically carry a `.html` extension. The default naming convention which is used in Lektor is that the template name matches the model name. So if you have a model called `page` there would be a template named `page.html`. Pages can however manually force a different template to be rendered. ## Template Context When a template is rendered it's rendered in the context of a few variables. Which ones are available often depends on the situation the template is evaluated in but the following are always available: | Variable | Description | -------------- | -------------------------------------------------------- | `this` | The current [Record :ref](../api/db/record/) that is being rendered. | `site` | The database [Pad :ref](../api/db/pad/) that can be used to query the site. | `alt` | A string that identifies the [Alternative :ref](../content/alts/) of the page. | `config` | Gives access to the Lektor project configuration. ## The First Template So let's dive in making our first template. In case you went through the [Quickstart :ref](../quickstart/) which should give you an example model to work with called `page`, otherwise just add one with the format shown in the [Data Modelling Documentation :ref](../models/). With that we can create a page template named `templates/page.html`: ```html+jinja {% extends "layout.html" %} {% block title %}{{ this.title }}{% endblock %} {% block body %}

{{ this.title }}

{{ this.body }} {% endblock %} ``` If you are unfamiliar with Jinja this template might look very confusing, but worry not. We will go through it step by step. * `{%` starts a Jinja section and `%}` ends it * `extends` is a tag that instructs Jinja to extend another template. In this case we extend our layout template. We will create this next. * `block` creates or updates a block from the layout template. In this case we have two blocks: one for the `title` of the page and another one for the `body`. * `{{` prints a variable and `}}` is the end of the print part. We do not need to worry about escaping here as Jinja2 does that automatically for us. ## Layout Templates So we have this page template now, but what about this layout? Jinja2 supports template inheritance where one template can inherit code from another. In this case we configured our page template to inherit from `layout.html`. Let's create it: ```html+jinja {% block title %}Welcome{% endblock %} — My Website

My Website

{% block body %}{% endblock %}
``` I hope you can see how the blocks work together now when template inheritance is involved. ## Everything about Templates Templates are the bread and butter of creating expressive websites with Lektor. As such this is one of the most complex topics in the documentation and split into smaller parts. Feel free to experiment around to see what you can do with it.