Book Image

Odoo 11 Development Essentials - Third Edition

By : Daniel Reis
Book Image

Odoo 11 Development Essentials - Third Edition

By: Daniel Reis

Overview of this book

Odoo continues to gain worldwide momentum as the best platform for open source ERP installations. Now, with Odoo 11, you have access to an improved GUI, performance optimization, integrated in-app purchase features, and a fast-growing community to help transform and modernize your business. With this practical guide, you will cover all the new features that Odoo 11 has to offer to build and customize business applications, focusing on the publicly available community edition. We begin with setting up a development environment, and as you make your way through the chapters, you will learn to build feature-rich business applications. With the aim of jump-starting your Odoo proficiency level, from no specific knowledge to application development readiness, you will develop your first Odoo application. We then move on to topics such as models and views, and understand how to use server APIs to add business logic, helping to lay a solid foundation for advanced topics. The book concludes with Odoo interactions and how to use the Odoo API from other programs, all of which will enable you to efficiently integrate applications with other external systems.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Report totals


A common need in reports is to provide totals. This can be done using Python expressions to compute those totals.

After the closing tag of <t t-foreach>, we will add a final row with the totals:

<!-- Report footer content -->
<div class="row">
  <div class="col-xs-3">
    Count: <t t-esc="len(docs)" /> 
  </div> 
  <div class="col-xs-2" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-1" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-3" /> 
  <div class="col-xs-3" /> 
</div> 

The len() Python statement is used to count the number of elements in a collection. Similarly, totals can also be computed using sum() over a list of values. For example, if we had an amount_cost field, we could have used the following list comprehension to compute the corresponding total:

<t t-esc="sum([o.amount_cost for o in docs])" />

You can think of list comprehensions as embedded for loops.

Sometimes, we want to perform some computations as we go along with the report, for example...