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django-object-actions-4.1.0


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توضیحات

A Django app for adding object tools for models in the admin
ویژگی مقدار
سیستم عامل -
نام فایل django-object-actions-4.1.0
نام django-object-actions
نسخه کتابخانه 4.1.0
نگهدارنده []
ایمیل نگهدارنده []
نویسنده crccheck
ایمیل نویسنده c@crccheck.com
آدرس صفحه اصلی https://github.com/crccheck/django-object-actions
آدرس اینترنتی https://pypi.org/project/django-object-actions/
مجوز Apache-2.0
Django Object Actions ===================== [![CI](https://github.com/crccheck/django-object-actions/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://github.com/crccheck/django-object-actions/actions/workflows/ci.yml?query=branch%3Amaster) If you've ever tried making admin object tools you may have thought, "why can't this be as easy as making Django Admin Actions?" Well now they can be. Quick-Start Guide ----------------- Install Django Object Actions: ```shell $ pip install django-object-actions ``` Add `django_object_actions` to your `INSTALLED_APPS` so Django can find our templates. In your admin.py: ```python from django_object_actions import DjangoObjectActions, action class ArticleAdmin(DjangoObjectActions, admin.ModelAdmin): @action(label="Publish", description="Submit this article") # optional def publish_this(self, request, obj): publish_obj(obj) change_actions = ('publish_this', ) ``` Usage ----- Defining new &*tool actions* is just like defining regular [admin actions]. The major difference is the functions for `django-object-actions` will take an object instance instead of a queryset (see *Re-using Admin Actions* below). *Tool actions* are exposed by putting them in a `change_actions` attribute in your `admin.ModelAdmin`. You can also add *tool actions* to the main changelist views too. There, you'll get a queryset like a regular [admin action][admin actions]: ```python from django_object_actions import DjangoObjectActions class MyModelAdmin(DjangoObjectActions, admin.ModelAdmin): @action( label="This will be the label of the button", # optional description="This will be the tooltip of the button" # optional ) def toolfunc(self, request, obj): pass def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset): queryset.update(status='p') change_actions = ('toolfunc', ) changelist_actions = ('make_published', ) ``` Just like admin actions, you can send a message with `self.message_user`. Normally, you would do something to the object and return to the same url, but if you return a `HttpResponse`, it will follow it (hey, just like [admin actions]!). If your admin modifies `get_urls`, `change_view`, or `changelist_view`, you'll need to take extra care because `django-object-actions` uses them too. ### Re-using Admin Actions If you would like a preexisting admin action to also be an *object action*, add the `takes_instance_or_queryset` decorator to convert object instances into a queryset and pass querysets: ```python from django_object_actions import DjangoObjectActions, takes_instance_or_queryset class RobotAdmin(DjangoObjectActions, admin.ModelAdmin): # ... snip ... @takes_instance_or_queryset def tighten_lug_nuts(self, request, queryset): queryset.update(lugnuts=F('lugnuts') - 1) change_actions = ['tighten_lug_nuts'] actions = ['tighten_lug_nuts'] ``` [admin actions]: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/contrib/admin/actions/ ### Customizing *Object Actions* To give the action some a helpful title tooltip, you can use the `action` decorator and set the description argument. ```python @action(description="Increment the vote count by one") def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() ``` Alternatively, you can also add a `short_description` attribute, similar to how admin actions work: ```python def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() increment_vote.short_description = "Increment the vote count by one" ``` By default, Django Object Actions will guess what to label the button based on the name of the function. You can override this with a `label` attribute: ```python @action(label="Vote++") def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() ``` or ```python def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() increment_vote.label = "Vote++" ``` If you need even more control, you can add arbitrary attributes to the buttons by adding a Django widget style [attrs](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/forms/widgets/#django.forms.Widget.attrs) attribute: ```python @action(attrs = {'class': 'addlink'}) def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() ``` or ```python def increment_vote(self, request, obj): obj.votes = obj.votes + 1 obj.save() increment_vote.attrs = { 'class': 'addlink', } ``` ### Programmatically Disabling Actions You can programmatically disable registered actions by defining your own custom `get_change_actions()` method. In this example, certain actions only apply to certain object states (e.g. You should not be able to close an company account if the account is already closed): ```python def get_change_actions(self, request, object_id, form_url): actions = super(PollAdmin, self).get_change_actions(request, object_id, form_url) actions = list(actions) if not request.user.is_superuser: return [] obj = self.model.objects.get(pk=object_id) if obj.question.endswith('?'): actions.remove('question_mark') return actions ``` The same is true for changelist actions with `get_changelist_actions`. ### Alternate Installation You don't have to add this to `INSTALLED_APPS`, all you need to to do is copy the template `django_object_actions/change_form.html` some place Django's template loader [will find it](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/settings/#template-dirs). If you don't intend to use the template customizations at all, don't add `django_object_actions` to your `INSTALLED_APPS` at all and use `BaseDjangoObjectActions` instead of `DjangoObjectActions`. More Examples ------------- Making an action that links off-site: ```python def external_link(self, request, obj): from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect return HttpResponseRedirect(f'https://example.com/{obj.id}') ``` Limitations ----------- 1. `django-object-actions` expects functions to be methods of the model admin. While Django gives you a lot more options for their admin actions. 2. If you provide your own custom `change_form.html`, you'll also need to manually copy in the relevant bits of [our change form ](./django_object_actions/templates/django_object_actions/change_form.html). 3. Security. This has been written with the assumption that everyone in the Django admin belongs there. Permissions should be enforced in your own actions irregardless of what this provides. Better default security is planned for the future. Python and Django compatibility ------------------------------- See [`ci.yml`](./.github/workflows/ci.yml) for which Python and Django versions this supports. Demo Admin & Docker images -------------------------- You can try the demo admin against several versions of Django with these Docker images: https://hub.docker.com/r/crccheck/django-object-actions/tags This runs the example Django project in `./example_project` based on the "polls" tutorial. `admin.py` demos what you can do with this app. Development ----------- Getting started: ```shell # get a copy of the code git clone git@github.com:crccheck/django-object-actions.git cd django-object-actions # Install requirements make install make test # run test suite make quickstart # runs 'make resetdb' and some extra steps ``` Various helpers are available as make commands. Type `make help` and view the `Makefile` to see what other things you can do. Some commands assume you are in the virtualenv. If you see "ModuleNotFoundError"s, try running `poetry shell` first. Similar Packages ---------------- If you want an actions menu for each row of your changelist, check out [Django Admin Row Actions](https://github.com/DjangoAdminHackers/django-admin-row-actions). Django Object Actions is very similar to [django-object-tools](https://github.com/praekelt/django-object-tools), but does not require messing with your urls.py, does not do anything special with permissions, and uses the same patterns as making [admin actions].


زبان مورد نیاز

مقدار نام
>=3.7,<4.0 Python


نحوه نصب


نصب پکیج whl django-object-actions-4.1.0:

    pip install django-object-actions-4.1.0.whl


نصب پکیج tar.gz django-object-actions-4.1.0:

    pip install django-object-actions-4.1.0.tar.gz