Note
From Django 1.3, function-based generic views have been deprecated in favor of a class-based approach, described in the class-based views topic guide and detailed reference.
Writing Web applications can be monotonous, because we repeat certain patterns again and again. Django tries to take away some of that monotony at the model and template layers, but Web developers also experience this boredom at the view level.
Django’s generic views were developed to ease that pain. They take certain common idioms and patterns found in view development and abstract them so that you can quickly write common views of data without having to write too much code.
We can recognize certain common tasks, like displaying a list of objects, and write code that displays a list of any object. Then the model in question can be passed as an extra argument to the URLconf.
Django ships with generic views to do the following:
talk_list
view and a
registered_user_list
view would be examples of list views. A single
talk page is an example of what we call a “detail” view.Taken together, these views provide easy interfaces to perform the most common tasks developers encounter.
All of these views are used by creating configuration dictionaries in your URLconf files and passing those dictionaries as the third member of the URLconf tuple for a given pattern.
For example, here’s a simple URLconf you could use to present a static “about” page:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
from django.views.generic.simple import direct_to_template
urlpatterns = patterns('',
('^about/$', direct_to_template, {
'template': 'about.html'
})
)
Though this might seem a bit “magical” at first glance – look, a view with no
code! –, actually the direct_to_template
view simply grabs information from
the extra-parameters dictionary and uses that information when rendering the
view.
Because this generic view – and all the others – is a regular view function
like any other, we can reuse it inside our own views. As an example, let’s
extend our “about” example to map URLs of the form /about/<whatever>/
to
statically rendered about/<whatever>.html
. We’ll do this by first modifying
the URLconf to point to a view function:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include from django.views.generic.simple import direct_to_template from books.views import about_pages urlpatterns = patterns('', ('^about/$', direct_to_template, { 'template': 'about.html' }), ('^about/(\w+)/$', about_pages), )
Next, we’ll write the about_pages
view:
from django.http import Http404
from django.template import TemplateDoesNotExist
from django.views.generic.simple import direct_to_template
def about_pages(request, page):
try:
return direct_to_template(request, template="about/%s.html" % page)
except TemplateDoesNotExist:
raise Http404()
Here we’re treating direct_to_template
like any other function. Since it
returns an HttpResponse
, we can simply return it as-is. The only slightly
tricky business here is dealing with missing templates. We don’t want a
nonexistent template to cause a server error, so we catch
TemplateDoesNotExist
exceptions and return 404 errors instead.
Is there a security vulnerability here?
Sharp-eyed readers may have noticed a possible security hole: we’re
constructing the template name using interpolated content from the browser
(template="about/%s.html" % page
). At first glance, this looks like a
classic directory traversal vulnerability. But is it really?
Not exactly. Yes, a maliciously crafted value of page
could cause
directory traversal, but although page
is taken from the request URL,
not every value will be accepted. The key is in the URLconf: we’re using
the regular expression \w+
to match the page
part of the URL, and
\w
only accepts letters and numbers. Thus, any malicious characters
(dots and slashes, here) will be rejected by the URL resolver before they
reach the view itself.
The direct_to_template
certainly is useful, but Django’s generic views
really shine when it comes to presenting views on your database content. Because
it’s such a common task, Django comes with a handful of built-in generic views
that make generating list and detail views of objects incredibly easy.
Let’s take a look at one of these generic views: the “object list” view. We’ll be using these models:
# models.py
from django.db import models
class Publisher(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
address = models.CharField(max_length=50)
city = models.CharField(max_length=60)
state_province = models.CharField(max_length=30)
country = models.CharField(max_length=50)
website = models.URLField()
def __unicode__(self):
return self.name
class Meta:
ordering = ["-name"]
class Book(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
authors = models.ManyToManyField('Author')
publisher = models.ForeignKey(Publisher)
publication_date = models.DateField()
To build a list page of all publishers, we’d use a URLconf along these lines:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
from django.views.generic import list_detail
from books.models import Publisher
publisher_info = {
"queryset" : Publisher.objects.all(),
}
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^publishers/$', list_detail.object_list, publisher_info)
)
That’s all the Python code we need to write. We still need to write a template,
however. We could explicitly tell the object_list
view which template to use
by including a template_name
key in the extra arguments dictionary, but in
the absence of an explicit template Django will infer one from the object’s
name. In this case, the inferred template will be
"books/publisher_list.html"
– the “books” part comes from the name of the
app that defines the model, while the “publisher” bit is just the lowercased
version of the model’s name.
This template will be rendered against a context containing a variable called
object_list
that contains all the publisher objects. A very simple template
might look like the following:
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<h2>Publishers</h2>
<ul>
{% for publisher in object_list %}
<li>{{ publisher.name }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endblock %}
That’s really all there is to it. All the cool features of generic views come from changing the “info” dictionary passed to the generic view. The generic views reference documents all the generic views and all their options in detail; the rest of this document will consider some of the common ways you might customize and extend generic views.
There’s no question that using generic views can speed up development substantially. In most projects, however, there comes a moment when the generic views no longer suffice. Indeed, the most common question asked by new Django developers is how to make generic views handle a wider array of situations.
Luckily, in nearly every one of these cases, there are ways to simply extend generic views to handle a larger array of use cases. These situations usually fall into a handful of patterns dealt with in the sections that follow.
You might have noticed that our sample publisher list template stores all the
books in a variable named object_list
. While this works just fine, it isn’t
all that “friendly” to template authors: they have to “just know” that they’re
dealing with publishers here. A better name for that variable would be
publisher_list
; that variable’s content is pretty obvious.
We can change the name of that variable easily with the template_object_name
argument:
publisher_info = { "queryset" : Publisher.objects.all(), "template_object_name" : "publisher", } urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^publishers/$', list_detail.object_list, publisher_info) )
Providing a useful template_object_name
is always a good idea. Your
coworkers who design templates will thank you.
Often you simply need to present some extra information beyond that provided by
the generic view. For example, think of showing a list of all the books on each
publisher detail page. The object_detail
generic view provides the
publisher to the context, but it seems there’s no way to get additional
information in that template.
But there is: all generic views take an extra optional parameter,
extra_context
. This is a dictionary of extra objects that will be added to
the template’s context. So, to provide the list of all books on the detail
detail view, we’d use an info dict like this:
from books.models import Publisher, Book publisher_info = { "queryset" : Publisher.objects.all(), "template_object_name" : "publisher", "extra_context" : {"book_list" : Book.objects.all()} }
This would populate a {{ book_list }}
variable in the template context.
This pattern can be used to pass any information down into the template for the
generic view. It’s very handy.
However, there’s actually a subtle bug here – can you spot it?
The problem has to do with when the queries in extra_context
are evaluated.
Because this example puts Book.objects.all()
in the URLconf, it will
be evaluated only once (when the URLconf is first loaded). Once you add or
remove books, you’ll notice that the generic view doesn’t reflect those
changes until you reload the Web server (see Caching and QuerySets
for more information about when QuerySets are cached and evaluated).
Note
This problem doesn’t apply to the queryset
generic view argument. Since
Django knows that particular QuerySet should never be cached, the generic
view takes care of clearing the cache when each view is rendered.
The solution is to use a callback in extra_context
instead of a value. Any
callable (i.e., a function) that’s passed to extra_context
will be evaluated
when the view is rendered (instead of only once). You could do this with an
explicitly defined function:
def get_books(): return Book.objects.all() publisher_info = { "queryset" : Publisher.objects.all(), "template_object_name" : "publisher", "extra_context" : {"book_list" : get_books} }
or you could use a less obvious but shorter version that relies on the fact that
Book.objects.all
is itself a callable:
publisher_info = { "queryset" : Publisher.objects.all(), "template_object_name" : "publisher", "extra_context" : {"book_list" : Book.objects.all} }
Notice the lack of parentheses after Book.objects.all
; this references
the function without actually calling it (which the generic view will do later).
Now let’s take a closer look at this queryset
key we’ve been using all
along. Most generic views take one of these queryset
arguments – it’s how
the view knows which set of objects to display (see Making queries for
more information about QuerySet
objects, and see the
generic views reference for the complete details).
To pick a simple example, we might want to order a list of books by publication date, with the most recent first:
book_info = { "queryset" : Book.objects.all().order_by("-publication_date"), } urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^publishers/$', list_detail.object_list, publisher_info), (r'^books/$', list_detail.object_list, book_info), )
That’s a pretty simple example, but it illustrates the idea nicely. Of course, you’ll usually want to do more than just reorder objects. If you want to present a list of books by a particular publisher, you can use the same technique:
acme_books = { "queryset": Book.objects.filter(publisher__name="Acme Publishing"), "template_name" : "books/acme_list.html" } urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^publishers/$', list_detail.object_list, publisher_info), (r'^books/acme/$', list_detail.object_list, acme_books), )
Notice that along with a filtered queryset
, we’re also using a custom
template name. If we didn’t, the generic view would use the same template as the
“vanilla” object list, which might not be what we want.
Also notice that this isn’t a very elegant way of doing publisher-specific books. If we want to add another publisher page, we’d need another handful of lines in the URLconf, and more than a few publishers would get unreasonable. We’ll deal with this problem in the next section.
Note
If you get a 404 when requesting /books/acme/
, check to ensure you
actually have a Publisher with the name ‘ACME Publishing’. Generic
views have an allow_empty
parameter for this case. See the
generic views reference for more details.
Another common need is to filter down the objects given in a list page by some
key in the URL. Earlier we hard-coded the publisher’s name in the URLconf, but
what if we wanted to write a view that displayed all the books by some arbitrary
publisher? We can “wrap” the object_list
generic view to avoid writing a lot
of code by hand. As usual, we’ll start by writing a URLconf:
from books.views import books_by_publisher urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^publishers/$', list_detail.object_list, publisher_info), (r'^books/(\w+)/$', books_by_publisher), )
Next, we’ll write the books_by_publisher
view itself:
from django.http import Http404
from django.views.generic import list_detail
from books.models import Book, Publisher
def books_by_publisher(request, name):
# Look up the publisher (and raise a 404 if it can't be found).
try:
publisher = Publisher.objects.get(name__iexact=name)
except Publisher.DoesNotExist:
raise Http404
# Use the object_list view for the heavy lifting.
return list_detail.object_list(
request,
queryset = Book.objects.filter(publisher=publisher),
template_name = "books/books_by_publisher.html",
template_object_name = "books",
extra_context = {"publisher" : publisher}
)
This works because there’s really nothing special about generic views – they’re
just Python functions. Like any view function, generic views expect a certain
set of arguments and return HttpResponse
objects. Thus, it’s incredibly easy
to wrap a small function around a generic view that does additional work before
(or after; see the next section) handing things off to the generic view.
Note
Notice that in the preceding example we passed the current publisher being
displayed in the extra_context
. This is usually a good idea in wrappers
of this nature; it lets the template know which “parent” object is currently
being browsed.
The last common pattern we’ll look at involves doing some extra work before or after calling the generic view.
Imagine we had a last_accessed
field on our Author
object that we were
using to keep track of the last time anybody looked at that author:
# models.py
class Author(models.Model):
salutation = models.CharField(max_length=10)
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
email = models.EmailField()
headshot = models.ImageField(upload_to='/tmp')
last_accessed = models.DateTimeField()
The generic object_detail
view, of course, wouldn’t know anything about this
field, but once again we could easily write a custom view to keep that field
updated.
First, we’d need to add an author detail bit in the URLconf to point to a custom view:
from books.views import author_detail urlpatterns = patterns('', #... (r'^authors/(?P<author_id>\d+)/$', author_detail), )
Then we’d write our wrapper function:
import datetime
from books.models import Author
from django.views.generic import list_detail
from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404
def author_detail(request, author_id):
# Look up the Author (and raise a 404 if she's not found)
author = get_object_or_404(Author, pk=author_id)
# Record the last accessed date
author.last_accessed = datetime.datetime.now()
author.save()
# Show the detail page
return list_detail.object_detail(
request,
queryset = Author.objects.all(),
object_id = author_id,
)
Note
This code won’t actually work unless you create a
books/author_detail.html
template.
We can use a similar idiom to alter the response returned by the generic view. If we wanted to provide a downloadable plain-text version of the list of authors, we could use a view like this:
def author_list_plaintext(request):
response = list_detail.object_list(
request,
queryset = Author.objects.all(),
mimetype = "text/plain",
template_name = "books/author_list.txt"
)
response["Content-Disposition"] = "attachment; filename=authors.txt"
return response
This works because the generic views return simple HttpResponse
objects
that can be treated like dictionaries to set HTTP headers. This
Content-Disposition
business, by the way, instructs the browser to
download and save the page instead of displaying it in the browser.
Jul 07, 2017