The most common use for adding custom views to the Wagtail admin is to provide an interface for managing a Django model. Using [](snippets), Wagtail provides ready-made views for listing, creating, and editing Django models with minimal configuration.
For other kinds of admin views that don't fit this pattern, you can write your own Django views and register them as part of the Wagtail admin through [hooks](admin_hooks). In this example, we'll implement a view that displays a calendar for the current year, using [the calendar module](https://docs.python.org/3/library/calendar.html) from Python's standard library.
Within a Wagtail project, create a new `wagtailcalendar` app with `./manage.py startapp wagtailcalendar` and add it to your project's `INSTALLED_APPS`. (In this case, we're using the name 'wagtailcalendar' to avoid clashing with the standard library's `calendar` module - in general, there is no need to use a 'wagtail' prefix.)
At this point, the standard practice for a Django project would be to add a URL route for this view to your project's top-level URL config module. However, in this case, we want the view to only be available to logged-in users, and to appear within the `/admin/` URL namespace which is managed by Wagtail. This is done through the [Register Admin URLs](register_admin_urls) hook.
On startup, Wagtail looks for a `wagtail_hooks` submodule within each installed app. In this submodule, you can define functions to be run at various points in Wagtail's operation, such as building the URL config for the admin and constructing the main menu.
Currently, this view is outputting a plain HTML fragment. Let's insert this into the usual Wagtail admin page furniture, by creating a template that extends Wagtail's base template `"wagtailadmin/base.html"`.
{% include "wagtailadmin/shared/header.html" with title="Calendar" icon="date" %}
<divclass="nice-padding">
{{ calendar_html|safe }}
</div>
{% endblock %}
```
Here we are overriding three of the blocks defined in the base template: `titletag` (which sets the content of the HTML `<title>` tag), `extra_css` (which allows us to provide additional CSS styles specific to this page), and `content` (for the main content area of the page). We're also including the standard header bar component, and setting a title and icon. For a list of the recognised icon identifiers, see the [style guide](styleguide).
Revisiting `/admin/calendar/` will now show the calendar within the Wagtail admin page furniture.
![A calendar, shown within the Wagtail admin interface](../_static/images/adminviews_calendar_template.png)
## Adding a menu item
Our calendar view is now complete, but there's no way to reach it from the rest of the admin backend. To add an item to the sidebar menu, we'll use another hook, [Register Admin Menu Item](register_admin_menu_item). Update `wagtail_hooks.py` as follows:
Finally we can alter our `wagtail_hooks.py` to include a group of custom menu items. This is similar to adding a single item but involves importing two more classes, `Menu` and `SubmenuMenuItem`.
![Wagtail admin sidebar menu, showing an expanded "Calendar" group menu item with a date icon, showing two child menu items, 'Calendar' and 'Month'.](../_static/images/adminviews_menu_group_expanded.png)