- Mention settings on admin customisation page - fixes #9070
8.6 KiB
Customising the editing interface
(customising_the_tabbed_interface)=
Customising the tabbed interface
As standard, Wagtail organises panels for pages into three tabs: 'Content', 'Promote' and 'Settings'. For snippets Wagtail puts all panels into one page. Depending on the requirements of your site, you may wish to customise this for specific page types or snippets - for example, adding an additional tab for sidebar content. This can be done by specifying an edit_handler
attribute on the page or snippet model. For example:
from wagtail.admin.panels import TabbedInterface, ObjectList
class BlogPage(Page):
# field definitions omitted
content_panels = [
FieldPanel('title', classname="title"),
FieldPanel('date'),
FieldPanel('body'),
]
sidebar_content_panels = [
FieldPanel('advert'),
InlinePanel('related_links', heading="Related links", label="Related link"),
]
edit_handler = TabbedInterface([
ObjectList(content_panels, heading='Content'),
ObjectList(sidebar_content_panels, heading='Sidebar content'),
ObjectList(Page.promote_panels, heading='Promote'),
ObjectList(Page.settings_panels, heading='Settings'),
])
(rich-text)=
Rich Text (HTML)
Wagtail provides a general-purpose WYSIWYG editor for creating rich text content (HTML) and embedding media such as images, video, and documents. To include this in your models, use the RichTextField
function when defining a model field:
from wagtail.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.panels import FieldPanel
class BookPage(Page):
body = RichTextField()
content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
FieldPanel('body'),
]
RichTextField
inherits from Django's basic TextField
field, so you can pass any field parameters into RichTextField
as if using a normal Django field. Its max_length
will ignore any rich text formatting. This field does not need a special panel and can be defined with FieldPanel
.
However, template output from RichTextField
is special and needs to be filtered in order to preserve embedded content. See .
(rich_text_features)=
Limiting features in a rich text field
By default, the rich text editor provides users with a wide variety of options for text formatting and inserting embedded content such as images. However, we may wish to restrict a rich text field to a more limited set of features - for example:
- The field might be intended for a short text snippet, such as a summary to be pulled out on index pages, where embedded images or videos would be inappropriate;
- When page content is defined using StreamField, elements such as headings, images and videos are usually given their own block types, alongside a rich text block type used for ordinary paragraph text; in this case, allowing headings and images to also exist within the rich text content is redundant (and liable to result in inconsistent designs).
This can be achieved by passing a features
keyword argument to RichTextField
, with a list of identifiers for the features you wish to allow:
body = RichTextField(features=['h2', 'h3', 'bold', 'italic', 'link'])
The feature identifiers provided on a default Wagtail installation are as follows:
h1
,h2
,h3
,h4
,h5
,h6
- heading elementsbold
,italic
- bold / italic textol
,ul
- ordered / unordered listshr
- horizontal ruleslink
- page, external and email linksdocument-link
- links to documentsimage
- embedded imagesembed
- embedded media (see )
We have few additional feature identifiers as well. They are not enabled by default, but you can use them in your list of identifiers. These are as follows:
code
- inline codesuperscript
,subscript
,strikethrough
- text formattingblockquote
- blockquote
The process for creating new features is described in the following pages:
You can also provide a setting for naming a group of rich text features. See WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS.
(rich_text_image_formats)=
Image Formats in the Rich Text Editor
On loading, Wagtail will search for any app with the file image_formats.py
and execute the contents. This provides a way to customise the formatting options shown to the editor when inserting images in the RichTextField
editor.
As an example, add a "thumbnail" format:
# image_formats.py
from wagtail.images.formats import Format, register_image_format
register_image_format(Format('thumbnail', 'Thumbnail', 'richtext-image thumbnail', 'max-120x120'))
To begin, import the Format
class, register_image_format
function, and optionally unregister_image_format
function. To register a new Format
, call the register_image_format
with the Format
object as the argument. The Format
class takes the following constructor arguments:
name
The unique key used to identify the format. To unregister this format, call unregister_image_format
with this string as the only argument.
label
The label used in the chooser form when inserting the image into the RichTextField
.
classnames
The string to assign to the class
attribute of the generated <img>
tag.
Any class names you provide must have CSS rules matching them written separately, as part of the front end CSS code. Specifying a `classnames` value of `left` will only ensure that class is output in the generated markup, it won't cause the image to align itself left.
filter_spec
The string specification to create the image rendition. For more, see .
To unregister, call unregister_image_format
with the string of the name
of the Format
as the only argument.
Unregistering ``Format`` objects will cause errors viewing or editing pages that reference them.
(custom_edit_handler_forms)=
Customising generated forms
.. class:: wagtail.admin.forms.WagtailAdminModelForm
.. class:: wagtail.admin.forms.WagtailAdminPageForm
Wagtail automatically generates forms using the panels configured on the model.
By default, this form subclasses WagtailAdminModelForm,
or WagtailAdminPageForm. for pages.
A custom base form class can be configured by setting the base_form_class
attribute on any model.
Custom forms for snippets must subclass WagtailAdminModelForm,
and custom forms for pages must subclass WagtailAdminPageForm.
This can be used to add non-model fields to the form, to automatically generate field content, or to add custom validation logic for your models:
from django import forms
from django.db import models
import geocoder # not in Wagtail, for example only - https://geocoder.readthedocs.io/
from wagtail.admin.panels import FieldPanel
from wagtail.admin.forms import WagtailAdminPageForm
from wagtail.models import Page
class EventPageForm(WagtailAdminPageForm):
address = forms.CharField()
def clean(self):
cleaned_data = super().clean()
# Make sure that the event starts before it ends
start_date = cleaned_data['start_date']
end_date = cleaned_data['end_date']
if start_date and end_date and start_date > end_date:
self.add_error('end_date', 'The end date must be after the start date')
return cleaned_data
def save(self, commit=True):
page = super().save(commit=False)
# Update the duration field from the submitted dates
page.duration = (page.end_date - page.start_date).days
# Fetch the location by geocoding the address
page.location = geocoder.arcgis(self.cleaned_data['address'])
if commit:
page.save()
return page
class EventPage(Page):
start_date = models.DateField()
end_date = models.DateField()
duration = models.IntegerField()
location = models.CharField(max_length=255)
content_panels = [
FieldPanel('title'),
FieldPanel('start_date'),
FieldPanel('end_date'),
FieldPanel('address'),
]
base_form_class = EventPageForm
Wagtail will generate a new subclass of this form for the model,
adding any fields defined in panels
or content_panels
.
Any fields already defined on the model will not be overridden by these automatically added fields,
so the form field for a model field can be overridden by adding it to the custom form.