You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
490 lines
20 KiB
490 lines
20 KiB
.. _intro-tutorial03: |
|
|
|
===================================== |
|
Writing your first Django app, part 3 |
|
===================================== |
|
|
|
This tutorial begins where :ref:`Tutorial 2 <intro-tutorial02>` left off. We're |
|
continuing the Web-poll application and will focus on creating the public |
|
interface -- "views." |
|
|
|
Philosophy |
|
========== |
|
|
|
A view is a "type" of Web page in your Django application that generally serves |
|
a specific function and has a specific template. For example, in a weblog |
|
application, you might have the following views: |
|
|
|
* Blog homepage -- displays the latest few entries. |
|
|
|
* Entry "detail" page -- permalink page for a single entry. |
|
|
|
* Year-based archive page -- displays all months with entries in the |
|
given year. |
|
|
|
* Month-based archive page -- displays all days with entries in the |
|
given month. |
|
|
|
* Day-based archive page -- displays all entries in the given day. |
|
|
|
* Comment action -- handles posting comments to a given entry. |
|
|
|
In our poll application, we'll have the following four views: |
|
|
|
* Poll "archive" page -- displays the latest few polls. |
|
|
|
* Poll "detail" page -- displays a poll question, with no results but |
|
with a form to vote. |
|
|
|
* Poll "results" page -- displays results for a particular poll. |
|
|
|
* Vote action -- handles voting for a particular choice in a particular |
|
poll. |
|
|
|
In Django, each view is represented by a simple Python function. |
|
|
|
Design your URLs |
|
================ |
|
|
|
The first step of writing views is to design your URL structure. You do this by |
|
creating a Python module, called a URLconf. URLconfs are how Django associates |
|
a given URL with given Python code. |
|
|
|
When a user requests a Django-powered page, the system looks at the |
|
:setting:`ROOT_URLCONF` setting, which contains a string in Python dotted |
|
syntax. Django loads that module and looks for a module-level variable called |
|
``urlpatterns``, which is a sequence of tuples in the following format:: |
|
|
|
(regular expression, Python callback function [, optional dictionary]) |
|
|
|
Django starts at the first regular expression and makes its way down the list, |
|
comparing the requested URL against each regular expression until it finds one |
|
that matches. |
|
|
|
When it finds a match, Django calls the Python callback function, with an |
|
:class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` object as the first argument, any "captured" |
|
values from the regular expression as keyword arguments, and, optionally, |
|
arbitrary keyword arguments from the dictionary (an optional third item in the |
|
tuple). |
|
|
|
For more on :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` objects, see the |
|
:ref:`ref-request-response`. For more details on URLconfs, see the |
|
:ref:`topics-http-urls`. |
|
|
|
When you ran ``python django-admin.py startproject mysite`` at the beginning of |
|
Tutorial 1, it created a default URLconf in ``mysite/urls.py``. It also |
|
automatically set your :setting:`ROOT_URLCONF` setting (in ``settings.py``) to |
|
point at that file:: |
|
|
|
ROOT_URLCONF = 'mysite.urls' |
|
|
|
Time for an example. Edit ``mysite/urls.py`` so it looks like this:: |
|
|
|
from django.conf.urls.defaults import * |
|
|
|
urlpatterns = patterns('', |
|
(r'^polls/$', 'mysite.polls.views.index'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$', 'mysite.polls.views.detail'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/results/$', 'mysite.polls.views.results'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'mysite.polls.views.vote'), |
|
) |
|
|
|
This is worth a review. When somebody requests a page from your Web site -- say, |
|
"/polls/23/", Django will load this Python module, because it's pointed to by |
|
the :setting:`ROOT_URLCONF` setting. It finds the variable named ``urlpatterns`` |
|
and traverses the regular expressions in order. When it finds a regular |
|
expression that matches -- ``r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$'`` -- it loads the |
|
associated Python package/module: ``mysite.polls.views.detail``. That |
|
corresponds to the function ``detail()`` in ``mysite/polls/views.py``. Finally, |
|
it calls that ``detail()`` function like so:: |
|
|
|
detail(request=<HttpRequest object>, poll_id='23') |
|
|
|
The ``poll_id='23'`` part comes from ``(?P<poll_id>\d+)``. Using parenthesis |
|
around a pattern "captures" the text matched by that pattern and sends it as an |
|
argument to the view function; the ``?P<poll_id>`` defines the name that will be |
|
used to identify the matched pattern; and ``\d+`` is a regular expression to |
|
match a sequence of digits (i.e., a number). |
|
|
|
Because the URL patterns are regular expressions, there really is no limit on |
|
what you can do with them. And there's no need to add URL cruft such as ``.php`` |
|
-- unless you have a sick sense of humor, in which case you can do something |
|
like this:: |
|
|
|
(r'^polls/latest\.php$', 'mysite.polls.views.index'), |
|
|
|
But, don't do that. It's silly. |
|
|
|
Note that these regular expressions do not search GET and POST parameters, or |
|
the domain name. For example, in a request to ``http://www.example.com/myapp/``, |
|
the URLconf will look for ``/myapp/``. In a request to |
|
``http://www.example.com/myapp/?page=3``, the URLconf will look for ``/myapp/``. |
|
|
|
If you need help with regular expressions, see `Wikipedia's entry`_ and the |
|
`Python documentation`_. Also, the O'Reilly book "Mastering Regular Expressions" |
|
by Jeffrey Friedl is fantastic. |
|
|
|
Finally, a performance note: these regular expressions are compiled the first |
|
time the URLconf module is loaded. They're super fast. |
|
|
|
.. _Wikipedia's entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression |
|
.. _Python documentation: http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-re.html |
|
|
|
Write your first view |
|
===================== |
|
|
|
Well, we haven't created any views yet -- we just have the URLconf. But let's |
|
make sure Django is following the URLconf properly. |
|
|
|
Fire up the Django development Web server: |
|
|
|
.. code-block:: bash |
|
|
|
python manage.py runserver |
|
|
|
Now go to "http://localhost:8000/polls/" on your domain in your Web browser. |
|
You should get a pleasantly-colored error page with the following message:: |
|
|
|
ViewDoesNotExist at /polls/ |
|
|
|
Tried index in module mysite.polls.views. Error was: 'module' |
|
object has no attribute 'index' |
|
|
|
This error happened because you haven't written a function ``index()`` in the |
|
module ``mysite/polls/views.py``. |
|
|
|
Try "/polls/23/", "/polls/23/results/" and "/polls/23/vote/". The error |
|
messages tell you which view Django tried (and failed to find, because you |
|
haven't written any views yet). |
|
|
|
Time to write the first view. Open the file ``mysite/polls/views.py`` |
|
and put the following Python code in it:: |
|
|
|
from django.http import HttpResponse |
|
|
|
def index(request): |
|
return HttpResponse("Hello, world. You're at the poll index.") |
|
|
|
This is the simplest view possible. Go to "/polls/" in your browser, and you |
|
should see your text. |
|
|
|
Now add the following view. It's slightly different, because it takes an |
|
argument (which, remember, is passed in from whatever was captured by the |
|
regular expression in the URLconf):: |
|
|
|
def detail(request, poll_id): |
|
return HttpResponse("You're looking at poll %s." % poll_id) |
|
|
|
Take a look in your browser, at "/polls/34/". It'll display whatever ID you |
|
provide in the URL. |
|
|
|
Write views that actually do something |
|
====================================== |
|
|
|
Each view is responsible for doing one of two things: Returning an |
|
:class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` object containing the content for the |
|
requested page, or raising an exception such as :exc:`~django.http.Http404`. The |
|
rest is up to you. |
|
|
|
Your view can read records from a database, or not. It can use a template |
|
system such as Django's -- or a third-party Python template system -- or not. |
|
It can generate a PDF file, output XML, create a ZIP file on the fly, anything |
|
you want, using whatever Python libraries you want. |
|
|
|
All Django wants is that :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`. Or an exception. |
|
|
|
Because it's convenient, let's use Django's own database API, which we covered |
|
in :ref:`Tutorial 1 <intro-tutorial01>`. Here's one stab at the ``index()`` |
|
view, which displays the latest 5 poll questions in the system, separated by |
|
commas, according to publication date:: |
|
|
|
from mysite.polls.models import Poll |
|
from django.http import HttpResponse |
|
|
|
def index(request): |
|
latest_poll_list = Poll.objects.all().order_by('-pub_date')[:5] |
|
output = ', '.join([p.question for p in latest_poll_list]) |
|
return HttpResponse(output) |
|
|
|
There's a problem here, though: The page's design is hard-coded in the view. If |
|
you want to change the way the page looks, you'll have to edit this Python code. |
|
So let's use Django's template system to separate the design from Python:: |
|
|
|
from django.template import Context, loader |
|
from mysite.polls.models import Poll |
|
from django.http import HttpResponse |
|
|
|
def index(request): |
|
latest_poll_list = Poll.objects.all().order_by('-pub_date')[:5] |
|
t = loader.get_template('polls/index.html') |
|
c = Context({ |
|
'latest_poll_list': latest_poll_list, |
|
}) |
|
return HttpResponse(t.render(c)) |
|
|
|
That code loads the template called "polls/index.html" and passes it a context. |
|
The context is a dictionary mapping template variable names to Python objects. |
|
|
|
Reload the page. Now you'll see an error:: |
|
|
|
TemplateDoesNotExist at /polls/ |
|
polls/index.html |
|
|
|
Ah. There's no template yet. First, create a directory, somewhere on your |
|
filesystem, whose contents Django can access. (Django runs as whatever user your |
|
server runs.) Don't put them under your document root, though. You probably |
|
shouldn't make them public, just for security's sake. |
|
Then edit :setting:`TEMPLATE_DIRS` in your ``settings.py`` to tell Django where |
|
it can find templates -- just as you did in the "Customize the admin look and |
|
feel" section of Tutorial 2. |
|
|
|
When you've done that, create a directory ``polls`` in your template directory. |
|
Within that, create a file called ``index.html``. Note that our |
|
``loader.get_template('polls/index.html')`` code from above maps to |
|
"[template_directory]/polls/index.html" on the filesystem. |
|
|
|
Put the following code in that template: |
|
|
|
.. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
|
{% if latest_poll_list %} |
|
<ul> |
|
{% for poll in latest_poll_list %} |
|
<li>{{ poll.question }}</li> |
|
{% endfor %} |
|
</ul> |
|
{% else %} |
|
<p>No polls are available.</p> |
|
{% endif %} |
|
|
|
Load the page in your Web browser, and you should see a bulleted-list |
|
containing the "What's up" poll from Tutorial 1. |
|
|
|
A shortcut: render_to_response() |
|
-------------------------------- |
|
|
|
It's a very common idiom to load a template, fill a context and return an |
|
:class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` object with the result of the rendered |
|
template. Django provides a shortcut. Here's the full ``index()`` view, |
|
rewritten:: |
|
|
|
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response |
|
from mysite.polls.models import Poll |
|
|
|
def index(request): |
|
latest_poll_list = Poll.objects.all().order_by('-pub_date')[:5] |
|
return render_to_response('polls/index.html', {'latest_poll_list': latest_poll_list}) |
|
|
|
Note that once we've done this in all these views, we no longer need to import |
|
:mod:`~django.template.loader`, :class:`~django.template.Context` and |
|
:class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`. |
|
|
|
The :func:`~django.shortcuts.render_to_response` function takes a template name |
|
as its first argument and a dictionary as its optional second argument. It |
|
returns an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` object of the given template |
|
rendered with the given context. |
|
|
|
Raising 404 |
|
=========== |
|
|
|
Now, let's tackle the poll detail view -- the page that displays the question |
|
for a given poll. Here's the view:: |
|
|
|
from django.http import Http404 |
|
# ... |
|
def detail(request, poll_id): |
|
try: |
|
p = Poll.objects.get(pk=poll_id) |
|
except Poll.DoesNotExist: |
|
raise Http404 |
|
return render_to_response('polls/detail.html', {'poll': p}) |
|
|
|
The new concept here: The view raises the :exc:`~django.http.Http404` exception |
|
if a poll with the requested ID doesn't exist. |
|
|
|
A shortcut: get_object_or_404() |
|
------------------------------- |
|
|
|
It's a very common idiom to use :meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.get` and raise |
|
:exc:`~django.http.Http404` if the object doesn't exist. Django provides a |
|
shortcut. Here's the ``detail()`` view, rewritten:: |
|
|
|
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response, get_object_or_404 |
|
# ... |
|
def detail(request, poll_id): |
|
p = get_object_or_404(Poll, pk=poll_id) |
|
return render_to_response('polls/detail.html', {'poll': p}) |
|
|
|
The :func:`~django.shortcuts.get_object_or_404` function takes a Django model |
|
module as its first argument and an arbitrary number of keyword arguments, which |
|
it passes to the module's :meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.get` function. It |
|
raises :exc:`~django.http.Http404` if the object doesn't exist. |
|
|
|
.. admonition:: Philosophy |
|
|
|
Why do we use a helper function :func:`~django.shortcuts.get_object_or_404` |
|
instead of automatically catching the |
|
:exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist` exceptions at a higher |
|
level, or having the model API raise :exc:`~django.http.Http404` instead of |
|
:exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist`? |
|
|
|
Because that would couple the model layer to the view layer. One of the |
|
foremost design goals of Django is to maintain loose coupling. |
|
|
|
There's also a :func:`~django.shortcuts.get_list_or_404` function, which works |
|
just as :func:`~django.shortcuts.get_object_or_404` -- except using |
|
:meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.filter` instead of |
|
:meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.get`. It raises :exc:`~django.http.Http404` if |
|
the list is empty. |
|
|
|
Write a 404 (page not found) view |
|
================================= |
|
|
|
When you raise :exc:`~django.http.Http404` from within a view, Django will load |
|
a special view devoted to handling 404 errors. It finds it by looking for the |
|
variable ``handler404``, which is a string in Python dotted syntax -- the same |
|
format the normal URLconf callbacks use. A 404 view itself has nothing special: |
|
It's just a normal view. |
|
|
|
You normally won't have to bother with writing 404 views. By default, URLconfs |
|
have the following line up top:: |
|
|
|
from django.conf.urls.defaults import * |
|
|
|
That takes care of setting ``handler404`` in the current module. As you can see |
|
in ``django/conf/urls/defaults.py``, ``handler404`` is set to |
|
:func:`django.views.defaults.page_not_found` by default. |
|
|
|
Three more things to note about 404 views: |
|
|
|
* The 404 view is also called if Django doesn't find a match after checking |
|
every regular expression in the URLconf. |
|
|
|
* If you don't define your own 404 view -- and simply use the default, which |
|
is recommended -- you still have one obligation: To create a ``404.html`` |
|
template in the root of your template directory. The default 404 view will |
|
use that template for all 404 errors. |
|
|
|
* If :setting:`DEBUG` is set to ``True`` (in your settings module) then your |
|
404 view will never be used, and the traceback will be displayed instead. |
|
|
|
Write a 500 (server error) view |
|
=============================== |
|
|
|
Similarly, URLconfs may define a ``handler500``, which points to a view to call |
|
in case of server errors. Server errors happen when you have runtime errors in |
|
view code. |
|
|
|
Use the template system |
|
======================= |
|
|
|
Back to the ``detail()`` view for our poll application. Given the context |
|
variable ``poll``, here's what the "polls/detail.html" template might look |
|
like: |
|
|
|
.. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
|
<h1>{{ poll.question }}</h1> |
|
<ul> |
|
{% for choice in poll.choice_set.all %} |
|
<li>{{ choice.choice }}</li> |
|
{% endfor %} |
|
</ul> |
|
|
|
The template system uses dot-lookup syntax to access variable attributes. In |
|
the example of ``{{ poll.question }}``, first Django does a dictionary lookup |
|
on the object ``poll``. Failing that, it tries attribute lookup -- which works, |
|
in this case. If attribute lookup had failed, it would've tried calling the |
|
method ``question()`` on the poll object. |
|
|
|
Method-calling happens in the ``{% for %}`` loop: ``poll.choice_set.all`` is |
|
interpreted as the Python code ``poll.choice_set.all()``, which returns an |
|
iterable of Choice objects and is suitable for use in the ``{% for %}`` tag. |
|
|
|
See the :ref:`template guide <topics-templates>` for more about templates. |
|
|
|
Simplifying the URLconfs |
|
======================== |
|
|
|
Take some time to play around with the views and template system. As you edit |
|
the URLconf, you may notice there's a fair bit of redundancy in it:: |
|
|
|
urlpatterns = patterns('', |
|
(r'^polls/$', 'mysite.polls.views.index'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$', 'mysite.polls.views.detail'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/results/$', 'mysite.polls.views.results'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'mysite.polls.views.vote'), |
|
) |
|
|
|
Namely, ``mysite.polls.views`` is in every callback. |
|
|
|
Because this is a common case, the URLconf framework provides a shortcut for |
|
common prefixes. You can factor out the common prefixes and add them as the |
|
first argument to :func:`~django.conf.urls.defaults.patterns`, like so:: |
|
|
|
urlpatterns = patterns('mysite.polls.views', |
|
(r'^polls/$', 'index'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$', 'detail'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/results/$', 'results'), |
|
(r'^polls/(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'vote'), |
|
) |
|
|
|
This is functionally identical to the previous formatting. It's just a bit |
|
tidier. |
|
|
|
Decoupling the URLconfs |
|
======================= |
|
|
|
While we're at it, we should take the time to decouple our poll-app URLs from |
|
our Django project configuration. Django apps are meant to be pluggable -- that |
|
is, each particular app should be transferable to another Django installation |
|
with minimal fuss. |
|
|
|
Our poll app is pretty decoupled at this point, thanks to the strict directory |
|
structure that ``python manage.py startapp`` created, but one part of it is |
|
coupled to the Django settings: The URLconf. |
|
|
|
We've been editing the URLs in ``mysite/urls.py``, but the URL design of an |
|
app is specific to the app, not to the Django installation -- so let's move the |
|
URLs within the app directory. |
|
|
|
Copy the file ``mysite/urls.py`` to ``mysite/polls/urls.py``. Then, change |
|
``mysite/urls.py`` to remove the poll-specific URLs and insert an |
|
:func:`~django.conf.urls.defaults.include`:: |
|
|
|
(r'^polls/', include('mysite.polls.urls')), |
|
|
|
:func:`~django.conf.urls.defaults.include`, simply, references another URLconf. |
|
Note that the regular expression doesn't have a ``$`` (end-of-string match |
|
character) but has the trailing slash. Whenever Django encounters |
|
:func:`~django.conf.urls.defaults.include`, it chops off whatever part of the |
|
URL matched up to that point and sends the remaining string to the included |
|
URLconf for further processing. |
|
|
|
Here's what happens if a user goes to "/polls/34/" in this system: |
|
|
|
* Django will find the match at ``'^polls/'`` |
|
|
|
* Then, Django will strip off the matching text (``"polls/"``) and send the |
|
remaining text -- ``"34/"`` -- to the 'mysite.polls.urls' URLconf for |
|
further processing. |
|
|
|
Now that we've decoupled that, we need to decouple the 'mysite.polls.urls' |
|
URLconf by removing the leading "polls/" from each line:: |
|
|
|
urlpatterns = patterns('mysite.polls.views', |
|
(r'^$', 'index'), |
|
(r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$', 'detail'), |
|
(r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/results/$', 'results'), |
|
(r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'vote'), |
|
) |
|
|
|
The idea behind :func:`~django.conf.urls.defaults.include` and URLconf |
|
decoupling is to make it easy to plug-and-play URLs. Now that polls are in their |
|
own URLconf, they can be placed under "/polls/", or under "/fun_polls/", or |
|
under "/content/polls/", or any other URL root, and the app will still work. |
|
|
|
All the poll app cares about is its relative URLs, not its absolute URLs. |
|
|
|
When you're comfortable with writing views, read :ref:`part 4 of this tutorial |
|
<intro-tutorial04>` to learn about simple form processing and generic views.
|
|
|