Django Tree View
Organize your view code and templates and in a directory structure, and automatically generate urls for them.
Terminology
"Tree View" refers the actual view function we've created, which processes a request according to code you write inside your "view tree".
Installation
-
pip install django_tree_view
-
In your urls.py file, add in a call to make_tree_view
, passing in the python package name (dotted python path) of your view tree:
from django_tree_view import make_tree_view
urlpatterns = [
make_tree_view('my_view_tree'),
]
Note: we're not using django's path() here, and we didn't specify a url regex. make_tree_view() returns an object which dynamically resolves urls, matching them whenever there is a corresponding directory (with a view_tree_node.py
module) inside of your view tree.
Note: you can use include('some_path/', [make_tree_view()])
if you want a url prefix.
-
Optionally, add the full path to your view tree to the DIRS
option of your DjangoTemplates
backend:
TEMPLATES = [
{
'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates',
'DIRS': [os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'my_view_tree')],
...
},
]
This will allow you to place page-specific templates inside the same directory which holds the view code for that url.
CSRF Protection
Our view uses Django's csrf_exempt
decorator, and selectively applies its own CSRF protection.
Any view tree node can opt-out of CSRF protection by setting CSRF_EXEMPT=True
at the module level.
The CSRF protection we use is not Django's default CSRF protection. We use utilities from django_referer_csrf. You may want to check out the documentation for django_referer_csrf, and use their middleware in place of Django's, but this is not required.
Organizing Your View Tree
TODO
TODO
When DEBUG and reloading, reload empty modules (not sure, but this might already be done).
"Single View Tree" approach
Our path resolver no longer matches when the "path directory" contains no view_tree_node.py
file.
I think we should change how view trees are "installed". The user should define one global VIEW_TREE_ROOT
. You can "install" reusable apps in your view tree by symlinking to them from your view tree.
This makes things easier to understand for the end user. They don't need understand make_tree_view()
. You have a single directory containing your view tree. Period.
The challenge: if an app is distributed on pypi, symlinking to it (in a way that can be copied between server environments), is not trivial.