Use py:strip="" [1] like so:

<a href="?${page_var=paginator.next}" py:strip="not
paginator.has_next">later >></a>

http://kid.lesscode.org/language.html#stripping-tags-py-strip

On 12/17/05, Graham Ashton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm just playing around with TurboGears at the moment, evaluating it
> for use in a more substantial project. I've got a table with lots of
> rows in it and am displaying them in pages of 10. When presenting links
> to the previous and next page I've found myself doing this:
>
>   <div py:def="paginate_links(paginator, name)" class="toolbar">
>     <?python
>     page_var = name + "_page"
>     ?>
>     <span py:if="paginator.has_previous">
>       <a href="?${page_var=paginator.next}">&lt;&lt; earlier</a>
>     </span>
>     <span py:if="not paginator.has_previous">
>       &lt;&lt; earlier
>     </span>
>     |
>     <span py:if="paginator.has_next">
>       <a href="?${page_var=paginator.next}">later >></a>
>     </span>
>     <span py:if="not paginator.has_next">
>       later >>
>     </span>
>   </div>
>
> It feels dirty typing everything twice to duplicate the
> (understandable) lack of something like py:else. Feelings like this are
> usually accompanied by me having failed to grasp something fairly
> crucial.
>
> So how would you do it? I thought of making a normal Python function
> that creates the links, but once I start producing XML outside of a kid
> template wouldn't I lose the benefit of knowing that my XHTML is well
> formed?
>
> Graham
>
>


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