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page Templating Instructions how to use the templating feature of Home Assistant. 2015-12-12 12:00 false false true true

This is an advanced feature of Home Assistant. You need a basic understanding of the [Home Assistant architecture], especially states.

Templating is a powerful feature in Home Assistant that allows the user control over information that is going into and out of the system. It is used for:

{% linkable_title Building templates %}

Templating in Home Assistant is powered by the Jinja2 templating engine. This means that we are using their syntax and make some custom Home Assistant variables available to templates during rendering. We will not go over the basics of the syntax, as Jinja2 does a lot better job at this in their Jinja2 documentation.

The frontend has a template editor developer tool to help develop and debug templates.

Templates can get pretty big pretty fast. To keep a clear overview, consider using YAML multiline strings to define your templates:

script:
  msg_who_is_home:
    sequence:
      - service: notify.notify
        data:
          message: >
            {% raw %}{% if is_state('device_tracker.paulus', 'home') %}
              Ha, Paulus is home!
            {% else %}
              Paulus is at {{ states('device_tracker.paulus')) }}.
            {% endif %}{% endraw %}

{% linkable_title Home Assistant template extensions %}

Home Assistant adds extensions to allow templates to access all of the current states:

  • Iterating states will yield each state sorted alphabetically by entity id
  • Iterating states.domain will yield each state of that domain sorted alphabetically by entity id
  • states.sensor.temperature returns state object for sensor.temperature
  • states('device_tracker.paulus') will return the state string (not the object) of given entity or unknown if it doesn't exist.
  • is_state('device_tracker.paulus', 'home') will test if given entity is specified state.
  • is_state_attr('device_tracker.paulus', 'battery', 40) will test if given entity is specified state.
  • Filter multiply(x) will convert input to number and multiply it with x
  • Filter round(x) will convert input to number and round it to x decimals.

{% linkable_title Examples %}

{% raw %}
# Next two statements result in same value if state exists
# Second one will result in an error if state does not exist
{{ states('device_tracker.paulus') }}
{{ states.device_tracker.paulus.state }}

# Print an attribute if state is defined
{% if states.device_tracker.paulus %}
{{ states.device_tracker.paulus.attributes.battery }}
{% else %}
??
{% endif %}

# Print out a list of all the sensor states
{% for state in states.sensor %}
  {{ state.entity_id }}={{ state.state }},
{% endfor %}

{% if is_state('device_tracker.paulus', 'home') %}
  Ha, Paulus is home!
{% else %}
  Paulus is at {{ states('device_tracker.paulus')) }}.
{% endif %}

{{ states.sensor.temperature | multiply(10) | round(2) }}

{% if states('sensor.temperature') | float > 20 %}
  It is warm!
{%endif %}{% endraw %}

{% linkable_title Processing incoming data %}

The other part of templating is processing incoming data. It will allow you to modify incoming data and extract only the data that you care about. This will work only for platforms and components that mentioned support for this in their documentation.

It depends per component or platform but it is common to be able to define a template using the value_template configuration key. When a new value arrives, your template will be rendered while having access to the following values on top of the usual Home Assistant extensions:

Variable Description
value The incoming value.
value_json The incoming value parsed as JSON.
# Incoming value:
{"primes": [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13]}

# Extract third prime number
{% raw %}{{ value_json.primes[2] }}{% endraw %}