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233 lines
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233 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
=============
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Writing views
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=============
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A view function, or *view* for short, is a Python function that takes a
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web request and returns a web response. This response can be the HTML contents
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of a web page, or a redirect, or a 404 error, or an XML document, or an image .
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. . or anything, really. The view itself contains whatever arbitrary logic is
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necessary to return that response. This code can live anywhere you want, as long
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as it's on your Python path. There's no other requirement--no "magic," so to
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speak. For the sake of putting the code *somewhere*, the convention is to
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put views in a file called ``views.py``, placed in your project or
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application directory.
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A simple view
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=============
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Here's a view that returns the current date and time, as an HTML document::
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from django.http import HttpResponse
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import datetime
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def current_datetime(request):
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now = datetime.datetime.now()
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html = "<html><body>It is now %s.</body></html>" % now
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return HttpResponse(html)
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Let's step through this code one line at a time:
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* First, we import the class :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` from the
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:mod:`django.http` module, along with Python's ``datetime`` library.
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* Next, we define a function called ``current_datetime``. This is the view
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function. Each view function takes an :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest`
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object as its first parameter, which is typically named ``request``.
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Note that the name of the view function doesn't matter; it doesn't have to
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be named in a certain way in order for Django to recognize it. We're
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calling it ``current_datetime`` here, because that name clearly indicates
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what it does.
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* The view returns an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` object that
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contains the generated response. Each view function is responsible for
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returning an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` object. (There are
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exceptions, but we'll get to those later.)
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.. admonition:: Django's Time Zone
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Django includes a :setting:`TIME_ZONE` setting that defaults to
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``America/Chicago``. This probably isn't where you live, so you might want
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to change it in your settings file.
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Mapping URLs to views
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=====================
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So, to recap, this view function returns an HTML page that includes the current
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date and time. To display this view at a particular URL, you'll need to create a
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*URLconf*; see :doc:`/topics/http/urls` for instructions.
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Returning errors
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================
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Django provides help for returning HTTP error codes. There are subclasses of
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:class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` for a number of common HTTP status codes
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other than 200 (which means *"OK"*). You can find the full list of available
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subclasses in the :ref:`request/response <ref-httpresponse-subclasses>`
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documentation. Return an instance of one of those subclasses instead of a
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normal :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` in order to signify an error. For
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example::
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from django.http import HttpResponse, HttpResponseNotFound
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def my_view(request):
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# ...
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if foo:
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return HttpResponseNotFound("<h1>Page not found</h1>")
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else:
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return HttpResponse("<h1>Page was found</h1>")
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There isn't a specialized subclass for every possible HTTP response code,
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since many of them aren't going to be that common. However, as documented in
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the :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse` documentation, you can also pass the
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HTTP status code into the constructor for :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`
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to create a return class for any status code you like. For example::
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from django.http import HttpResponse
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def my_view(request):
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# ...
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# Return a "created" (201) response code.
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return HttpResponse(status=201)
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Because 404 errors are by far the most common HTTP error, there's an easier way
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to handle those errors.
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The ``Http404`` exception
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-------------------------
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.. class:: django.http.Http404()
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When you return an error such as :class:`~django.http.HttpResponseNotFound`,
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you're responsible for defining the HTML of the resulting error page::
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return HttpResponseNotFound("<h1>Page not found</h1>")
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For convenience, and because it's a good idea to have a consistent 404 error page
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across your site, Django provides an ``Http404`` exception. If you raise
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``Http404`` at any point in a view function, Django will catch it and return the
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standard error page for your application, along with an HTTP error code 404.
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Example usage::
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from django.http import Http404
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from django.shortcuts import render
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from polls.models import Poll
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def detail(request, poll_id):
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try:
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p = Poll.objects.get(pk=poll_id)
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except Poll.DoesNotExist:
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raise Http404("Poll does not exist")
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return render(request, "polls/detail.html", {"poll": p})
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In order to show customized HTML when Django returns a 404, you can create an
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HTML template named ``404.html`` and place it in the top level of your
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template tree. This template will then be served when :setting:`DEBUG` is set
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to ``False``.
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When :setting:`DEBUG` is ``True``, you can provide a message to ``Http404`` and
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it will appear in the standard 404 debug template. Use these messages for
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debugging purposes; they generally aren't suitable for use in a production 404
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template.
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.. _customizing-error-views:
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Customizing error views
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=======================
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The default error views in Django should suffice for most web applications,
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but can easily be overridden if you need any custom behavior. Specify the
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handlers as seen below in your URLconf (setting them anywhere else will have no
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effect).
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The :func:`~django.views.defaults.page_not_found` view is overridden by
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:data:`~django.conf.urls.handler404`::
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handler404 = "mysite.views.my_custom_page_not_found_view"
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The :func:`~django.views.defaults.server_error` view is overridden by
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:data:`~django.conf.urls.handler500`::
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handler500 = "mysite.views.my_custom_error_view"
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The :func:`~django.views.defaults.permission_denied` view is overridden by
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:data:`~django.conf.urls.handler403`::
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handler403 = "mysite.views.my_custom_permission_denied_view"
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The :func:`~django.views.defaults.bad_request` view is overridden by
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:data:`~django.conf.urls.handler400`::
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handler400 = "mysite.views.my_custom_bad_request_view"
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.. seealso::
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Use the :setting:`CSRF_FAILURE_VIEW` setting to override the CSRF error
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view.
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Testing custom error views
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--------------------------
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To test the response of a custom error handler, raise the appropriate exception
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in a test view. For example::
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from django.core.exceptions import PermissionDenied
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from django.http import HttpResponse
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from django.test import SimpleTestCase, override_settings
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from django.urls import path
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def response_error_handler(request, exception=None):
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return HttpResponse("Error handler content", status=403)
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def permission_denied_view(request):
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raise PermissionDenied
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urlpatterns = [
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path("403/", permission_denied_view),
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]
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handler403 = response_error_handler
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# ROOT_URLCONF must specify the module that contains handler403 = ...
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@override_settings(ROOT_URLCONF=__name__)
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class CustomErrorHandlerTests(SimpleTestCase):
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def test_handler_renders_template_response(self):
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response = self.client.get("/403/")
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# Make assertions on the response here. For example:
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self.assertContains(response, "Error handler content", status_code=403)
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.. _async-views:
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Async views
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===========
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As well as being synchronous functions, views can also be asynchronous
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("async") functions, normally defined using Python's ``async def`` syntax.
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Django will automatically detect these and run them in an async context.
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However, you will need to use an async server based on ASGI to get their
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performance benefits.
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Here's an example of an async view::
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import datetime
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from django.http import HttpResponse
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async def current_datetime(request):
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now = datetime.datetime.now()
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html = "<html><body>It is now %s.</body></html>" % now
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return HttpResponse(html)
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You can read more about Django's async support, and how to best use async
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views, in :doc:`/topics/async`.
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