Book Image

Web Development with Django Cookbook

By : Aidas Bendoraitis
Book Image

Web Development with Django Cookbook

By: Aidas Bendoraitis

Overview of this book

<p>Django is easy to learn and solves all types of web development problems and questions, providing Python developers an easy solution to web-application development. With a wealth of third-party modules available, you'll be able to create a highly customizable web application with this powerful framework.</p> <p>Web Development with Django Cookbook will guide you through all web development processes with the Django framework. You will get started with the virtual environment and configuration of the project, and then you will learn how to define a database structure with reusable components. Find out how to tweak the administration to make the website editors happy. This book deals with some important third-party modules necessary for fully equipped web development.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <div class="book-toc-chapter">&nbsp;</div> <h2>Read an extract of the book</h2> <h3>Creating Filterable RSS Feeds</h3> <p>Django comes with a syndication feed framework that allows you to create RSS and Atom feeds easily. RSS and Atom feeds are XML documents with specific semantics. They can be subscribed in an RSS reader such as Feedly, or they can be aggregated into other websites, mobile applications, or desktop applications. In this recipe, we will create <em>BulletinFeed</em>, which provides a bulletin board with images. Moreover, the results will be filterable by URL query parameters.</p> <h4>Getting ready</h4> <p>Create a new <em>bulletin_board</em> app and put it under <em>INSTALLED_APPS</em> in the settings.</p> <h4>How to do it…</h4> <p>We will create a <em>Bulletin</em> model and an RSS feed for it that can be filtered by type or category, so that the visitor can subscribe only to bulletins that are, for example, offering used books:</p> <ol> <li>In the <em>models.py</em> file of that app, add the models <em>Category</em> and <em>Bulletin</em> with a foreign key relationship between them: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">#bulletin_board/models.py # -*- coding: UTF-8 -*- from django.db import models from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _ from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse from utils.models import CreationModificationDateMixin from utils.models import UrlMixin TYPE_CHOICES = ( ("searching", _("Searching")), ("offering", _("Offering")), ) class Category(models.Model): title = models.CharField(_("Title"), max_length=200) def __unicode__(self): return self.title class Meta: verbose_name = _("Category") verbose_name_plural = _("Categories") class Bulletin(CreationModificationDateMixin, UrlMixin): bulletin_type = models.CharField(_("Type"), max_length=20, choices=TYPE_CHOICES) category = models.ForeignKey(Category, verbose_name=_("Category")) title = models.CharField(_("Title"), max_length=255) description = models.TextField(_("Description"), max_length=300) contact_person = models.CharField(_("Contact person"), max_length=255) phone = models.CharField(_("Phone"), max_length=200, blank=True) email = models.CharField(_("Email"), max_length=254, blank=True) image = models.ImageField(_("Image"), max_length=255, upload_to="bulletin_board/", blank=True) class Meta: verbose_name = _("Bulletin") verbose_name_plural = _("Bulletins") ordering = ("-created",) def __unicode__(self): return self.title def get_url_path(self): return reverse("bulletin_detail", kwargs={"pk": self.pk}) </code></pre> </li> <li>Then, create <em>BulletinFilterForm</em> that allows the visitor to filter bulletins by type and by category, as follows: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">#bulletin_board/forms.py # -*- coding: UTF-8 -*- from django import forms from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _ from models import Category, TYPE_CHOICES class BulletinFilterForm(forms.Form): bulletin_type = forms.ChoiceField( label=_("Bulletin Type"), required=False, choices=(("", "---------"),) + TYPE_CHOICES, ) category = forms.ModelChoiceField( label=_("Category"), required=False, queryset=Category.objects.all(), ) </code></pre> </li> <li>Add a <em>feeds.py</em> file with the <em>BulletinFeed</em> class inside, as follows: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">#bulletin_board/feeds.py # -*- coding: UTF-8 -*- from django.contrib.syndication.views import Feed from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse from models import Bulletin, TYPE_CHOICES from forms import BulletinFilterForm class BulletinFeed(Feed): description_template = "bulletin_board/feeds/bulletin_description.html" def get_object(self, request, *args, **kwargs): form = BulletinFilterForm(data=request.REQUEST) obj = {} if form.is_valid(): obj = { "bulletin_type": form.cleaned_data["bulletin_type"], "category": form.cleaned_data["category"], "query_string": request.META["QUERY_STRING"], } return obj def title(self, obj): t = u"My Website - Bulletin Board" # add type "Searching" or "Offering" if obj.get("bulletin_type", False): tp = obj["bulletin_type"] t += u" - %s" % dict(TYPE_CHOICES)[tp] # add category if obj.get("category", False): t += u" - %s" % obj["category"].title return t def link(self, obj): if obj.get("query_string", False): return reverse("bulletin_list") + "?" + obj["query_string"] return reverse("bulletin_list") def feed_url(self, obj): if obj.get("query_string", False): return reverse("bulletin_rss") + "?" + obj["query_string"] return reverse("bulletin_rss") def item_pubdate(self, item): return item.created def items(self, obj): qs = Bulletin.objects.order_by("-created") if obj.get("bulletin_type", False): qs = qs.filter( bulletin_type=obj["bulletin_type"], ).distinct() if obj.get("category", False): qs = qs.filter( category=obj["category"], ).distinct() return qs[:30] </code></pre> </li> <li>Create a template for the bulletin description in the feed as follows: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">{#templates/bulletin_board/feeds/bulletin_description.html#} {% if obj.image %} &lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="{{ obj.get_url }}"&gt;&lt;img src="http://{{ request.META.HTTP_HOST }}{{ obj.image.url }}" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt; {% endif %} &lt;p&gt;{{ obj.description }}&lt;/p&gt; </code></pre> </li> <li>Create a URL configuration for the <em>bulletin board</em> app and include it in the root URL configuration, as follows: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">#templates/bulletin_board/urls.py # -*- coding: UTF-8 -*- from django.conf.urls import * from feeds import BulletinFeed urlpatterns = patterns("bulletin_board.views", url(r"^$", "bulletin_list", name="bulletin_list"), url(r"^(?P&lt;bulletin_id&gt;[0-9]+)/$", "bulletin_detail", name="bulletin_detail"), url(r"^rss/$", BulletinFeed(), name="bulletin_rss"), ) </code></pre> </li> <li>You will also need the views and templates for the filterable list and details of the bulletins. In the <em>Bulletin</em> list page template, add this link: <pre class="line-numbers"><code class="language-python">&lt;a href="{% url "bulletin_rss" %}?{{ request.META.QUERY_STRING }}"&gt;RSS Feed&lt;/a&gt;</code></pre> </li> </ol> <h4>How it works…</h4> <p>So, if you have some data in the database and you open <em>http://127.0.0.1:8000/bulletin-board/rss/?bulletin_type=offering&amp;category=4</em> in your browser, you will get an RSS feed of bulletins with the type Offering and category ID 4.</p> <p>The <em>BulletinFeed</em> class has the <em>get_objects</em> method that takes the current <em>HttpRequest</em> and defines the <em>obj</em> dictionary used in other methods of the same class.</p> <p>The <em>obj</em> dictionary contains the bulletin type, category, and current query string.</p> <p>The <em>title</em> method returns the title of the feed. It can either be generic or related to the selected bulletin type or category. The <em>link</em> method returns the link to the original bulletin list with the filtering done. The <em>feed_url</em> method returns the URL of the current feed. The items method does the filtering itself and returns a filtered <em>QuerySet</em> of bulletins. And finally, the <em>item_pubdate</em> method returns the creation date of the bulletin.</p> <p>To see all the available methods and properties of the <em>Feed</em> class that we are extending, refer to the following documentation: <a href="https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/ref/contrib/syndication/#feed-class-reference">https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/ref/contrib/syndication/#feed-class-reference</a></p> <p>The other parts of the code are kind of self-explanatory!</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Web Development with Django Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Handling project dependencies with pip


Pip is the most convenient tool to install and manage Python packages. Besides installing packages one by one, it is possible to define a list of packages you want to install and pass it to the tool so that it deals with the list automatically.

Getting ready

Before using this recipe, you need to have pip installed and a virtual environment activated. For more information on how to do this, read the Working with a virtual environment recipe.

How to do it...

Let's go to your Django project that you have under version control and create the requirements file with the following content:

#requirements.txt
Django==1.6
South==0.8.4
django-cms==2.4

Now, you can run the following command to install all required dependencies for your Django project:

(myproject_env)$ pip install -r requirements.txt

How it works...

This command installs all your project dependencies into your virtual environment one after another.

When you have many dependencies in your project, it is good practice to stick to specific versions of the Python modules because you can then be sure that when you deploy your project or give it to a new developer, the integrity doesn't get broken and all the modules function without conflicts.

If you have already installed project requirements with pip manually one by one, you can generate the requirements.txt file using the following command:

(myproject_env)$ pip freeze > requirements.txt

There's more...

If you need to install a Python library directly from a version control system or a local path, you can learn more about pip from the official documentation at http://pip.readthedocs.org/en/latest/reference/pip_install.html.

See also

  • The Working with a virtual environment recipe

  • The Including external dependencies in your project recipe