When having a look at Ruby on Rails, I discovered a nice feature that was missing in Django: controllers. Contrary to what I often read, views in Django are not really equivalent to controllers in Rails. A Rails controller basically is a set of Django views and Django URL patterns. Apart from driving off boring URL work, this is a clean way to group views that belongs to the same model.
Any good djangonaut would make the connection with generic views − especially class-based. This is the easiest solution to avoid repeating the same code with a few changes. But this is not simplifying URL patterns and we often have to define such files:
# views.py
from django.views.generic import ListView, DetailView # and so on…
from .models import Example
class ExampleListView(ListView):
model = Example
class ExampleDetailView(DetailView):
model = Example
# and so on…
# urls.py
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url
from .views import *
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url('^examples/$', ExampleListView.as_view(), name='example_index'),
url('^examples/(?P<pk>\d+)$', ExampleDetailView.as_view(),
name='example_detail'),
# and so on…
)
With a single model, this looks easy. With complex applications containing dozens of models, this looks painful − and definitely not DRY1.
django-viewsets proposes a solution inspired of Rails controllers. ViewSet
is a class that builds a set of URL patterns from a set of class-based generic views. It is designed to be overridable, so that it fits standard as well as advanced use.
[sudo] pip install django-viewsets
You don't have to change your project settings.py.
Generic view | URL | URL name |
---|---|---|
ListView |
your-models/ | your-model_index |
DetailView |
your-models/[pk] | your-model_detail |
CreateView |
your-models/create/ | your-model_create |
UpdateView |
your-models/[pk]/update | your-model_update |
DeleteView |
your-models/[pk]/delete | your-model_delete |
In your application (or project) `urls.py`:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
from viewsets import ModelViewSet
from .models import YourModel
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url('', include(ModelViewSet(YourModel).urls)),
)
You can also provide other basic attributes as keyword arguments. For example, if you want to use slugs instead of primary keys in URL patterns, lines 2 and 6 become:
from viewsets import ModelViewSet, SLUG # line 2
url('', include(ModelViewSet(YourModel, id_pattern=SLUG).urls)), # line 6
This allow more customization.
In your application `views.py`:
from viewsets import ModelViewSet
from .models import YourModel
class YourModelViewSet(ModelViewSet):
model = YourModel
In your application (or project) `urls.py`:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
from .views import YourModelViewSet
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url('', include(YourModelViewSet().urls)),
)
What is interesting in this use is that you can easily customize views and urls. Let's say you want to use primary keys in update and delete url patterns, but you want to use slugs in detail view. The fastest way to do it is:
from viewsets import ModelViewSet, SLUG
class CustomModelViewSet(ModelViewSet):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.views['detail_view']['pattern'] = SLUG
super(CustomModelViewSet, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
Here we don't set the model
attribute, so that CustomModelViewSet
can be used for any of your models. Of course, you can now use CustomModelViewSet
with basic use as well as Advanced use. And we could have set model
, if this viewset was meant to be used only with a specific model.
model
The model class from which ModelViewSet will create views and urls. This is the only mandatory attribute.
base_url_pattern
Overrides your-models in all URL patterns. Calculated from
model._meta.verbose_name_plural
if unset.base_url_name
Overrides your-model in all URL names. Calculated from
model._meta.verbose_name
if unset.id_pattern
Overrides [pk] in all URL patterns. You can either use
viewsets.PK
orviewsets.SLUG
.excluded_views
A sequence of keys from the
views
. Unset by default. Example:('create_view', 'delete_view',)
.namespace
Set this if your application has a URL namespace. It is used to redirect to
main_view
in delete_view. You can also setmain_url
.main_view
Used to calculate
main_url
.'list_view'
by default.main_url
The main url where delete_view redirects. If set,
main_view
is ignored.
views
Dictionary defining views and URLs. CRUD2 by default.