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Home/ Questions/Q 8878825
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T19:48:23+00:00 2026-06-14T19:48:23+00:00

Recently I’ve been working on a project in Django that uses a site-wide CSS

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Recently I’ve been working on a project in Django that uses a site-wide CSS layout, so I decided that each template (in this case a template in /projects/index.html) used would extend a base file containing the header, footer, javascript, etc. called base.html.

The problem is that my directory structure looks like so:

.
├── static
│   └── base.html
├── templates
│   └── projects
│   └── index.html

And, as you can see the base file I want to extend is in a higher directory than that of the index.html file. Normally, I would use a relative path and use the following code at the top of the index file: {% extends "../base.html" %} or simply use an absolute path to the file (if necessary)

It seems, however, that by using either of these methods, whatever is inside the quotes for extends simply gets appended onto the current path, and my call to the upper directory with .. gets ignored entirely.

That is, if the current path is, for example, /project/templates/projects and I use {% extends "/project/static/base.html" %}, that will be appended to the current path, causing the system to look for /project/templates/projects/project/static/base.html, which, of course, doesn’t exist. After researching I came across an article that said the blocking of relative paths is intentional for security purposes, but it leaves me with no way to access any file outside the current working directory.

I figured this had to be an extremely common setup when building a website, and so there must be some sort of way to interact with multiple templates that I’m just not aware of yet. If anyone has any information on that, it would be much appreciated.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T19:48:24+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 7:48 pm

    All of your html templates should live under the templates directory (including your base.html). The location of this folder is set using the TEMPLATE_DIRECTORY settings in your settings.py. The static folder is solely for css, js, etc.

    When inheriting from another template using the extends tag, the path you give is always relative to your template directory, not project.

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