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Django 2 by Example

You're reading from   Django 2 by Example Build powerful and reliable Python web applications from scratch

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788472487
Length 526 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Antonio Melé Antonio Melé
Author Profile Icon Antonio Melé
Antonio Melé
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Blog Application 2. Enhancing Your Blog with Advanced Features FREE CHAPTER 3. Extending Your Blog Application 4. Building a Social Website 5. Sharing Content in Your Website 6. Tracking User Actions 7. Building an Online Shop 8. Managing Payments and Orders 9. Extending Your Shop 10. Building an E-Learning Platform 11. Rendering and Caching Content 12. Building an API 13. Going Live 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using class-based views

Class-based views are an alternative way to implement views as Python objects instead of functions. Since a view is a callable that takes a web request and returns a web response, you can also define your views as class methods. Django provides base view classes for this. All of them inherit from the View class, which handles HTTP method dispatching and other common functionalities.

Class-based views offer advantages over function-based views for some use cases. They have the following features:

  • Organizing code related to HTTP methods, such as GET, POST, or PUT, in separate methods instead of using conditional branching
  • Using multiple inheritance to create reusable view classes (also known as mixins)

You can take a look at an introduction to class-based views at https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.0/topics/class-based-views/intro/.

We will change our post_list view into a class-based view to use the generic ListView offered by Django. This base view allows you to list objects of any kind.

Edit the views.py file of your blog application and add the following code:

from django.views.generic import ListView

class PostListView(ListView):
queryset = Post.published.all()
context_object_name = 'posts'
paginate_by = 3
template_name = 'blog/post/list.html'

This class-based view is analogous to the previous post_list view. In the preceding code, we are telling ListView to do the following things:

  • Use a specific QuerySet instead of retrieving all objects. Instead of defining a queryset attribute, we could have specified model = Post and Django would have built the generic Post.objects.all() QuerySet for us.
  • Use the context variable posts for the query results. The default variable is object_list if we don't specify any context_object_name.
  • Paginate the result displaying three objects per page.
  • Use a custom template to render the page. If we don't set a default template, ListView will use blog/post_list.html.

Now, open the urls.py file of your blog application, comment the preceding post_list URL pattern, and add a new URL pattern using the PostListView class, as follows:

urlpatterns = [
# post views
# path('', views.post_list, name='post_list'),
path('', views.PostListView.as_view(), name='post_list'),
path('<int:year>/<int:month>/<int:day>/<slug:post>/',
views.post_detail,
name='post_detail'),
]

In order to keep pagination working, we have to use the right page object that is passed to the template. Django's ListView generic view passes the selected page in a variable called page_obj, so you have to edit your post/list.html template accordingly to include the paginator using the right variable, as follows:

{% include "pagination.html" with page=page_obj %}

Open http://127.0.0.1:8000/blog/ in your browser and verify that everything works the same way as with the previous post_list view. This is a simple example of a class-based view that uses a generic class provided by Django. You will learn more about class-based views in Chapter 10, Building an E-Learning Platform, and successive chapters.

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