| ================================= |
| Introduction to class-based views |
| ================================= |
|
|
| Class-based views provide an alternative way to implement views as Python |
| objects instead of functions. They do not replace function-based views, but |
| have certain differences and advantages when compared to function-based views: |
|
|
| * Organization of code related to specific HTTP methods (``GET``, ``POST``, |
| etc.) can be addressed by separate methods instead of conditional branching. |
|
|
| * Object oriented techniques such as mixins (multiple inheritance) can be |
| used to factor code into reusable components. |
|
|
| The relationship and history of generic views, class-based views, and class-based generic views |
| =============================================================================================== |
|
|
| In the beginning there was only the view function contract, Django passed your |
| function an :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` and expected back an |
| :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`. This was the extent of what Django provided. |
|
|
| Early on it was recognized that there were common idioms and patterns found in |
| view development. Function-based generic views were introduced to abstract |
| these patterns and ease view development for the common cases. |
|
|
| The problem with function-based generic views is that while they covered the |
| simple cases well, there was no way to extend or customize them beyond some |
| configuration options, limiting their usefulness in many real-world |
| applications. |
|
|
| Class-based generic views were created with the same objective as |
| function-based generic views, to make view development easier. However, the way |
| the solution is implemented, through the use of mixins, provides a toolkit that |
| results in class-based generic views being more extensible and flexible than |
| their function-based counterparts. |
|
|
| If you have tried function based generic views in the past and found them |
| lacking, you should not think of class-based generic views as a class-based |
| equivalent, but rather as a fresh approach to solving the original problems |
| that generic views were meant to solve. |
|
|
| The toolkit of base classes and mixins that Django uses to build class-based |
| generic views are built for maximum flexibility, and as such have many hooks in |
| the form of default method implementations and attributes that you are unlikely |
| to be concerned with in the simplest use cases. For example, instead of |
| limiting you to a class-based attribute for ``form_class``, the implementation |
| uses a ``get_form`` method, which calls a ``get_form_class`` method, which in |
| its default implementation returns the ``form_class`` attribute of the class. |
| This gives you several options for specifying what form to use, from an |
| attribute, to a fully dynamic, callable hook. These options seem to add hollow |
| complexity for simple situations, but without them, more advanced designs would |
| be limited. |
|
|
| Using class-based views |
| ======================= |
|
|
| At its core, a class-based view allows you to respond to different HTTP request |
| methods with different class instance methods, instead of with conditionally |
| branching code inside a single view function. |
|
|
| So where the code to handle HTTP ``GET`` in a view function would look |
| something like:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponse |
|
|
|
|
| def my_view(request): |
| if request.method == "GET": |
| # <view logic> |
| return HttpResponse("result") |
|
|
| In a class-based view, this would become:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponse |
| from django.views import View |
|
|
|
|
| class MyView(View): |
| def get(self, request): |
| # <view logic> |
| return HttpResponse("result") |
|
|
| Because Django's URL resolver expects to send the request and associated |
| arguments to a callable function, not a class, class-based views have an |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.as_view` class method which returns a |
| function that can be called when a request arrives for a URL matching the |
| associated pattern. The function creates an instance of the class, calls |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.setup` to initialize its attributes, and |
| then calls its :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.dispatch` method. |
| ``dispatch`` looks at the request to determine whether it is a ``GET``, |
| ``POST``, etc, and relays the request to a matching method if one is defined, |
| or raises :class:`~django.http.HttpResponseNotAllowed` if not:: |
|
|
| # urls.py |
| from django.urls import path |
| from myapp.views import MyView |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("about/", MyView.as_view()), |
| ] |
|
|
|
|
| It is worth noting that what your method returns is identical to what you |
| return from a function-based view, namely some form of |
| :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`. This means that |
| :doc:`http shortcuts </topics/http/shortcuts>` or |
| :class:`~django.template.response.TemplateResponse` objects are valid to use |
| inside a class-based view. |
|
|
| While a minimal class-based view does not require any class attributes to |
| perform its job, class attributes are useful in many class-based designs, |
| and there are two ways to configure or set class attributes. |
|
|
| The first is the standard Python way of subclassing and overriding attributes |
| and methods in the subclass. So that if your parent class had an attribute |
| ``greeting`` like this:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponse |
| from django.views import View |
|
|
|
|
| class GreetingView(View): |
| greeting = "Good Day" |
|
|
| def get(self, request): |
| return HttpResponse(self.greeting) |
|
|
| You can override that in a subclass:: |
|
|
| class MorningGreetingView(GreetingView): |
| greeting = "Morning to ya" |
|
|
| Another option is to configure class attributes as keyword arguments to the |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.as_view` call in the URLconf:: |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("about/", GreetingView.as_view(greeting="G'day")), |
| ] |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| While your class is instantiated for each request dispatched to it, class |
| attributes set through the |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.as_view` entry point are |
| configured only once at the time your URLs are imported. |
|
|
| Using mixins |
| ============ |
|
|
| Mixins are a form of multiple inheritance where behaviors and attributes of |
| multiple parent classes can be combined. |
|
|
| For example, in the generic class-based views there is a mixin called |
| :class:`~django.views.generic.base.TemplateResponseMixin` whose primary purpose |
| is to define the method |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.TemplateResponseMixin.render_to_response`. |
| When combined with the behavior of the :class:`~django.views.generic.base.View` |
| base class, the result is a :class:`~django.views.generic.base.TemplateView` |
| class that will dispatch requests to the appropriate matching methods (a |
| behavior defined in the ``View`` base class), and that has a |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.TemplateResponseMixin.render_to_response` |
| method that uses a |
| :attr:`~django.views.generic.base.TemplateResponseMixin.template_name` |
| attribute to return a :class:`~django.template.response.TemplateResponse` |
| object (a behavior defined in the ``TemplateResponseMixin``). |
|
|
| Mixins are an excellent way of reusing code across multiple classes, but they |
| come with some cost. The more your code is scattered among mixins, the harder |
| it will be to read a child class and know what exactly it is doing, and the |
| harder it will be to know which methods from which mixins to override if you |
| are subclassing something that has a deep inheritance tree. |
|
|
| Note also that you can only inherit from one generic view - that is, only one |
| parent class may inherit from :class:`~django.views.generic.base.View` and |
| the rest (if any) should be mixins. Trying to inherit from more than one class |
| that inherits from ``View`` - for example, trying to use a form at the top of a |
| list and combining :class:`~django.views.generic.edit.ProcessFormView` and |
| :class:`~django.views.generic.list.ListView` - won't work as expected. |
|
|
|
|
| Handling forms with class-based views |
| ===================================== |
|
|
| A basic function-based view that handles forms may look something like this:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect |
| from django.shortcuts import render |
|
|
| from .forms import MyForm |
|
|
|
|
| def myview(request): |
| if request.method == "POST": |
| form = MyForm(request.POST) |
| if form.is_valid(): |
| # <process form cleaned data> |
| return HttpResponseRedirect("/success/") |
| else: |
| form = MyForm(initial={"key": "value"}) |
|
|
| return render(request, "form_template.html", {"form": form}) |
|
|
| A similar class-based view might look like:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect |
| from django.shortcuts import render |
| from django.views import View |
|
|
| from .forms import MyForm |
|
|
|
|
| class MyFormView(View): |
| form_class = MyForm |
| initial = {"key": "value"} |
| template_name = "form_template.html" |
|
|
| def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs): |
| form = self.form_class(initial=self.initial) |
| return render(request, self.template_name, {"form": form}) |
|
|
| def post(self, request, *args, **kwargs): |
| form = self.form_class(request.POST) |
| if form.is_valid(): |
| # <process form cleaned data> |
| return HttpResponseRedirect("/success/") |
|
|
| return render(request, self.template_name, {"form": form}) |
|
|
| This is a minimal case, but you can see that you would then have the option |
| of customizing this view by overriding any of the class attributes, e.g. |
| ``form_class``, via URLconf configuration, or subclassing and overriding one or |
| more of the methods (or both!). |
|
|
| Decorating class-based views |
| ============================ |
|
|
| The extension of class-based views isn't limited to using mixins. You can also |
| use decorators. Since class-based views aren't functions, decorating them works |
| differently depending on if you're using ``as_view()`` or creating a subclass. |
|
|
| Decorating in URLconf |
| --------------------- |
|
|
| You can adjust class-based views by decorating the result of the |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.as_view` method. The easiest place to do |
| this is in the URLconf where you deploy your view:: |
|
|
| from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required, permission_required |
| from django.views.generic import TemplateView |
|
|
| from .views import VoteView |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("about/", login_required(TemplateView.as_view(template_name="secret.html"))), |
| path("vote/", permission_required("polls.can_vote")(VoteView.as_view())), |
| ] |
|
|
| This approach applies the decorator on a per-instance basis. If you |
| want every instance of a view to be decorated, you need to take a |
| different approach. |
|
|
| .. _decorating-class-based-views: |
|
|
| Decorating the class |
| -------------------- |
|
|
| To decorate every instance of a class-based view, you need to decorate |
| the class definition itself. To do this you apply the decorator to the |
| :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.dispatch` method of the class. |
|
|
| A method on a class isn't quite the same as a standalone function, so you can't |
| just apply a function decorator to the method -- you need to transform it into |
| a method decorator first. The ``method_decorator`` decorator transforms a |
| function decorator into a method decorator so that it can be used on an |
| instance method. For example:: |
|
|
| from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required |
| from django.utils.decorators import method_decorator |
| from django.views.generic import TemplateView |
|
|
|
|
| class ProtectedView(TemplateView): |
| template_name = "secret.html" |
|
|
| @method_decorator(login_required) |
| def dispatch(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| return super().dispatch(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Or, more succinctly, you can decorate the class instead and pass the name |
| of the method to be decorated as the keyword argument ``name``:: |
|
|
| @method_decorator(login_required, name="dispatch") |
| class ProtectedView(TemplateView): |
| template_name = "secret.html" |
|
|
| If you have a set of common decorators used in several places, you can define |
| a list or tuple of decorators and use this instead of invoking |
| ``method_decorator()`` multiple times. These two classes are equivalent:: |
|
|
| decorators = [never_cache, login_required] |
|
|
|
|
| @method_decorator(decorators, name="dispatch") |
| class ProtectedView(TemplateView): |
| template_name = "secret.html" |
|
|
|
|
| @method_decorator(never_cache, name="dispatch") |
| @method_decorator(login_required, name="dispatch") |
| class ProtectedView(TemplateView): |
| template_name = "secret.html" |
|
|
| The decorators will process a request in the order they are passed to the |
| decorator. In the example, ``never_cache()`` will process the request before |
| ``login_required()``. |
|
|
| In this example, every instance of ``ProtectedView`` will have login |
| protection. These examples use ``login_required``, however, the same behavior |
| can be obtained by using |
| :class:`~django.contrib.auth.mixins.LoginRequiredMixin`. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| ``method_decorator`` passes ``*args`` and ``**kwargs`` |
| as parameters to the decorated method on the class. If your method |
| does not accept a compatible set of parameters it will raise a |
| ``TypeError`` exception. |
|
|