Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

Django Loading Static Files?

Django is not loading my static files. However it is loading my templates which are in the static folder. Also chrome is not seeing the static files either I'm not even getting a 4

Solution 1:

The approach I take with static files is basically what's outlined in the docs.

In local development, Django will serve static files automatically from the directory specified in STATIC_ROOT as long as django.contrib.staticfiles is in your INSTALLED_APPS and DEBUG = True

My project structure typically looks like this:

my_project/
    some_app/
    lib/static/<------- STATIC_ROOT - used in production. `collectstatic` collects here
    static_assets/<- STATICFILES_DIRS - used inlocal dev
        css/
        less/
        js/
        images/
    templates/<---- TEMPLATE_DIRS
    manage.py

settings.py is typically:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    . . .
    'django.contrib.staticfiles',
    . . .
)

STATIC_URL = '/static/'
STATIC_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static')
STATICFILES_DIRS = (
    os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static_assets'),
)
STATICFILES_FINDERS = (
    'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.FileSystemFinder',
    'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.AppDirectoriesFinder',
)

TEMPLATE_DIRS = (
    os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'templates'),
)

Then in templates, you can again use the staticfiles app's template tags to build out paths to static files:

{% load staticfrom staticfiles %}

<link  href="{% static 'css/normalize.css' %}" />

Also note that with <link> tags, you need to use the href property for the url instead of src.

Solution 2:

In your setting.py file add this

STATIC_URL = '/static/'STATIC_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static')

create a folder in your app named static and in your template file add this {% load static %}

Post a Comment for "Django Loading Static Files?"