The navigation mechanism is fairly complex; unfortunately, there's no real way around that - without a lot of equally complex code that you are quite welcome to write and contribute! ;-)
-For this guide, we'll assume that you have the setup described in :doc:`getting-started`. We'll be adding a main :class:`.Navigation` to the root :class:`.Node` and making it display as part of the :class:`.Template`. Before getting started, make sure that you've added :mod:`philo.contrib.shipherd` to your :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` and :mod:`django.core.context_processors.request` to TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS.
+For this guide, we'll assume that you have the setup described in :doc:`getting-started`. We'll be adding a main :class:`.Navigation` to the root :class:`.Node` and making it display as part of the :class:`.Template`.
+
+Before getting started, make sure that you've added :mod:`philo.contrib.shipherd` to your :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`. :mod:`~philo.contrib.shipherd` template tags also require the request context processor, so make sure to set :setting:`TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS` appropriately::
+
+ TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
+ # Defaults
+ "django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth",
+ "django.core.context_processors.debug",
+ "django.core.context_processors.i18n",
+ "django.core.context_processors.media",
+ "django.core.context_processors.static",
+ "django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages"
+ ...
+ "django.core.context_processors.request"
+ )
Creating the Navigation
+++++++++++++++++++++++
All you need to do now is show the navigation in the template! This is quite easy, using the :ttag:`~philo.contrib.shipherd.templatetags.shipherd.recursenavigation` templatetag. For now we'll keep it simple. Adjust the "Hello World Template" to look like this::
- <html>
+ <html>{% load shipherd %}
<head>
<title>{% container page_title %}</title>
</head>