Django shortcut functions¶
The package django.shortcuts collects helper functions and classes that “span” multiple levels of MVC. In other words, these functions/classes introduce controlled coupling for convenience’s sake.
render¶
- render(request, template_name[, dictionary][, context_instance][, content_type][, status][, current_app])¶
Combines a given template with a given context dictionary and returns an HttpResponse object with that rendered text.
render() is the same as a call to render_to_response() with a context_instance argument that forces the use of a RequestContext.
Required arguments¶
- request
- The request object used to generate this response.
- template_name
- The full name of a template to use or sequence of template names.
Optional arguments¶
- dictionary
- A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the view will call it just before rendering the template.
- context_instance
- The context instance to render the template with. By default, the template will be rendered with a RequestContext instance (filled with values from request and dictionary).
- content_type
The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
This parameter used to be called mimetype.- status
- The status code for the response. Defaults to 200.
- current_app
- A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.
Example¶
The following example renders the template myapp/index.html with the MIME type application/xhtml+xml:
from django.shortcuts import render
def my_view(request):
# View code here...
return render(request, 'myapp/index.html', {"foo": "bar"},
content_type="application/xhtml+xml")
This example is equivalent to:
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.template import RequestContext, loader
def my_view(request):
# View code here...
t = loader.get_template('myapp/template.html')
c = RequestContext(request, {'foo': 'bar'})
return HttpResponse(t.render(c),
content_type="application/xhtml+xml")
render_to_response¶
- render_to_response(template_name[, dictionary][, context_instance][, content_type])¶
Renders a given template with a given context dictionary and returns an HttpResponse object with that rendered text.
Required arguments¶
- template_name
- The full name of a template to use or sequence of template names. If a sequence is given, the first template that exists will be used. See the template loader documentation for more information on how templates are found.
Optional arguments¶
- dictionary
- A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the view will call it just before rendering the template.
- context_instance
The context instance to render the template with. By default, the template will be rendered with a Context instance (filled with values from dictionary). If you need to use context processors, render the template with a RequestContext instance instead. Your code might look something like this:
return render_to_response('my_template.html', my_data_dictionary, context_instance=RequestContext(request))
- content_type
The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
This parameter used to be called mimetype.
Example¶
The following example renders the template myapp/index.html with the MIME type application/xhtml+xml:
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response
def my_view(request):
# View code here...
return render_to_response('myapp/index.html', {"foo": "bar"},
mimetype="application/xhtml+xml")
This example is equivalent to:
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.template import Context, loader
def my_view(request):
# View code here...
t = loader.get_template('myapp/template.html')
c = Context({'foo': 'bar'})
return HttpResponse(t.render(c),
content_type="application/xhtml+xml")
redirect¶
- redirect(to, [permanent=False, ]*args, **kwargs)¶
Returns an HttpResponseRedirect to the appropriate URL for the arguments passed.
The arguments could be:
- A model: the model’s get_absolute_url() function will be called.
- A view name, possibly with arguments: urlresolvers.reverse() will be used to reverse-resolve the name.
- A URL, which will be used as-is for the redirect location.
By default issues a temporary redirect; pass permanent=True to issue a permanent redirect
Examples¶
You can use the redirect() function in a number of ways.
By passing some object; that object’s get_absolute_url() method will be called to figure out the redirect URL:
from django.shortcuts import redirect def my_view(request): ... object = MyModel.objects.get(...) return redirect(object)
By passing the name of a view and optionally some positional or keyword arguments; the URL will be reverse resolved using the reverse() method:
def my_view(request): ... return redirect('some-view-name', foo='bar')
By passing a hardcoded URL to redirect to:
def my_view(request): ... return redirect('/some/url/')
This also works with full URLs:
def my_view(request): ... return redirect('http://example.com/')
By default, redirect() returns a temporary redirect. All of the above forms accept a permanent argument; if set to True a permanent redirect will be returned:
def my_view(request):
...
object = MyModel.objects.get(...)
return redirect(object, permanent=True)
get_object_or_404¶
- get_object_or_404(klass, *args, **kwargs)¶
Calls get() on a given model manager, but it raises Http404 instead of the model’s DoesNotExist exception.
Required arguments¶
Example¶
The following example gets the object with the primary key of 1 from MyModel:
from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404
def my_view(request):
my_object = get_object_or_404(MyModel, pk=1)
This example is equivalent to:
from django.http import Http404
def my_view(request):
try:
my_object = MyModel.objects.get(pk=1)
except MyModel.DoesNotExist:
raise Http404
Note: As with get(), a MultipleObjectsReturned exception will be raised if more than one object is found.
get_list_or_404¶
- get_list_or_404(klass, *args, **kwargs)¶
Returns the result of filter() on a given model manager, raising Http404 if the resulting list is empty.
Required arguments¶
Example¶
The following example gets all published objects from MyModel:
from django.shortcuts import get_list_or_404
def my_view(request):
my_objects = get_list_or_404(MyModel, published=True)
This example is equivalent to:
from django.http import Http404
def my_view(request):
my_objects = list(MyModel.objects.filter(published=True))
if not my_objects:
raise Http404