/django-viewsets

A different way of constructing Django class-based views

Primary LanguagePythonGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

django-viewsets

A different way of constructing Django class-based views

Django's class based views provide many advantages over 'traditional' function based views. They simplify the handling of different HTTP methods and do much of the work in setting up and handling forms.

But the downside is that each class basically handles only one endpoint. You then have to stitch them together in the urls file. And the names of the endpoints there kind of look like the names of your classes. It almost seems like... repeating yourself.

Now, Django REST Framework has the concept of a ViewSet. Firstly they handle the different HTTP methods - handling POST is via a create method, for example. But they also allow extra views to be annotated as either a 'list' or a 'detail' view, so for instance you can have a /author/ list view of all authors, an /author/sales/ list view of the sales information for all authors, an /author/Shakespeare/ detail view of Shakespeare, and an /author/Shakespeare/books/ detail view for Shakespeare's publications. DRF's 'routers' can then introspect the ViewSet to find which URLs it publishes and maps them automatically.

django-viewsets provides the best of both worlds for Django users.

Example:

models.py

from django.db import models

class BlogPost(models.Model):
    slug = models.SlugField()
    title = models.CharField()
    text = models.TextField()

views.py

from my_site.models import BlogPost
from viewsets.decorators import detail
from viewsets import ViewSet, ModelViewSet

class HomePage(ViewSet):
    """
    A simple handler for the home page index.
    """
    template_dir = 'home'

    def index(self, request):
        return self.render()

class BlogViewSet(ModelViewSet):
    lookup = 'slug'
    queryset = BlogPost.objects.all()
    template_dir = 'home/blog'

    # list, detail, create, destroy already included

    @detail()
    def stats(self, request, slug):
        post = self.get_object(slug=slug)
        # render assumes template = action name otherwise:
        return self.render(post, template='blog_stats')

urls.py

from django.conf.urls import url, include
from viewsets.routers import DefaultRouter
from views import HomePage, BlogViewSet

router = DefaultRouter()
router.add('^', HomePage, 'home')
router.add('blog', BlogViewSet)

urlpatterns = [url(r'^', include(router.urls)),]