/django-preferences

Django app allowing users to set app specific preferences through the admin interface.

Primary LanguagePythonBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

Django Preferences

Django app allowing users to set app specific preferences through the admin interface.

Provides singleton admin views for Preferences objects and a simple interface to preference values. Singleton views ensure only one preference intance per site is available for each Preferences class.

Note

django-preferences requires and supports Django's "sites" framework, which means you can have multiple preferences, each associated with a particular site.

Note

django-preferences version 0.0.5 and higher requires Django 1.3 and higher for correct operation. If you are getting the super vague Error: cannot import name receiver error on startup either update to Django 1.3 or use django-preferences version 0.0.4 or earlier.

Contents

  1. Install or add django-preferences to your Python path.

  2. Add preferences to your INSTALLED APPS setting.

  3. Add django.contrib.sites to your INSTALLED APPS setting. django-preferences associates preferences to specific sites and thus requires Django's "sites" framework to be installed.

  4. Optionally, add preferences.context_processors.preferences_cp to your TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS settings. This will automatically add a preferences variable to your template context if you use RequestContext to create your context (see Usage below), i.e.:

    TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
        ...other context processors...,
        "preferences.context_processors.preferences_cp",
    )
    

To create preferences for your app create a Django ORM model as usual, with the model inheriting from preferences.models.Preferences. Also specify preferences.models as your model's module:

from django.db import models
from preferences.models import Preferences

class MyPreferences(Preferences):
    __module__ = 'preferences.models'
    portal_contact_email = models.EmailField()

Admin classes are specified as per usual, except that they have to inherit from or be registered with preferences.admin.PreferencesAdmin, i.e.:

from django.contrib import admin

from preferences.admin import PreferencesAdmin
from <my_app>.models import MyPreferences

admin.site.register(MyPreferences, PreferencesAdmin)

When your model is registered with admin it will show up under the Preferences app label in Django admin.

Preferences can be accessed in Python by importing the preferences module and traversing to your required preference in the form preferences.<ModelName>.<field>, i.e.:

from preferences import preferences

portal_contact_email = preferences.MyPreferences.portal_contact_email

If you've specified the preferences.context_processors.preferences_cp as a TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS you can similarly access your preferences within templates through the preferences variable, i.e.:

{{ preferences.MyPreferences.portal_contact_email }}