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drf-gis-1.1


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توضیحات

Geographic add-ons for Django Rest Framework
ویژگی مقدار
سیستم عامل -
نام فایل drf-gis-1.1
نام drf-gis
نسخه کتابخانه 1.1
نگهدارنده []
ایمیل نگهدارنده []
نویسنده Douglas Meehan
ایمیل نویسنده django-rest-framework-gis@googlegroups.com
آدرس صفحه اصلی https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis
آدرس اینترنتی https://pypi.org/project/drf-gis/
مجوز BSD
django-rest-framework-gis ========================= |Build Status| |Coverage Status| |Requirements Status| |PyPI version| |PyPI downloads| |Black| Geographic add-ons for Django Rest Framework - `Mailing List <http://bit.ly/1M4sLTp>`__. Install last stable version from pypi ------------------------------------- .. code-block:: bash pip install djangorestframework-gis Install development version --------------------------- .. code-block:: bash pip install https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis/tarball/master Setup ----- Add ``rest_framework_gis`` in ``settings.INSTALLED_APPS``, after ``rest_framework``: .. code-block:: python INSTALLED_APPS = [ # ... 'rest_framework', 'rest_framework_gis', # ... ] Compatibility with DRF, Django and Python ----------------------------------------- ======================== ============================ ==================== ================================== DRF-gis version DRF version Django version Python version **1.1.x** **3.10** up to **3.14** **2.2 to 4.0** **3.6** to **3.11** **1.0.x** **3.10** up to **3.13** **2.2 to 4.0** **3.6** to **3.9** **0.18.x** **3.10** up to **3.13** **2.2 to 4.0** **3.6** to **3.9** **0.17.x** **3.10** up to **3.12** **2.2 to 3.1** **3.6** to **3.8** **0.16.x** **3.10** **2.2 to 3.1** **3.6** to **3.8** **0.15.x** **3.10** **1.11, 2.2 to 3.0** **3.5** to **3.8** **0.14.x** **3.3** to **3.9** **1.11** to **2.1** **3.4** to **3.7** **0.13.x** **3.3** to **3.8** **1.11** to **2.0** **2.7** to **3.6** **0.12.x** **3.1** to **3.7** **1.11** to **2.0** **2.7** to **3.6** **0.11.x** **3.1** to **3.6** **1.7** to **1.11** **2.7** to **3.6** **0.10.x** **3.1** to **3.3** **1.7** to **1.9** **2.7** to **3.5** **0.9.6** **3.1** to **3.2** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.5** **0.9.5** **3.1** to **3.2** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.4** **0.9.4** **3.1** to **3.2** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.4** **0.9.3** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.4** **0.9.2** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.4** **0.9.1** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6** to **3.4** **0.9** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.9** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.9** **3.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.8.2** **3.0.4** to **3.1.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.8.1** **3.0.4** to **3.1.1** **1.5** to **1.8** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.8** **3.0.4** **1.5** to **1.7** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.7** **2.4.3** **1.5** to **1.7** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.6** **2.4.3** **1.5** to **1.7** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.5** from **2.3.14** to **2.4.2** **1.5** to **1.7** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.4** from **2.3.14** to **2.4.2** **1.5** to **1.7** **2.6**, **2.7**, **3.3**, **3.4** **0.3** from **2.3.14** to **2.4.2** **1.5**, **1.6** **2.6**, **2.7** **0.2** from **2.2.2** to **2.3.13** **1.5**, **1.6** **2.6**, **2.7** ======================== ============================ ==================== ================================== Fields ------ GeometryField ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``GeometryField``, which is a subclass of Django Rest Framework (from now on **DRF**) ``WritableField``. This field handles GeoDjango geometry fields, providing custom ``to_native`` and ``from_native`` methods for GeoJSON input/output. This field takes three optional arguments: - ``precision``: Passes coordinates through Python's builtin ``round()`` function (`docs <https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#round>`_), rounding values to the provided level of precision. E.g. A Point with lat/lng of ``[51.0486, -114.0708]`` passed through a ``GeometryField(precision=2)`` would return a Point with a lat/lng of ``[51.05, -114.07]``. - ``remove_duplicates``: Remove sequential duplicate coordinates from line and polygon geometries. This is particularly useful when used with the ``precision`` argument, as the likelihood of duplicate coordinates increase as precision of coordinates are reduced. - ``auto_bbox``: If ``True``, the GeoJSON object will include a `bounding box <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7946#section-5>`_, which is the smallest possible rectangle enclosing the geometry. **Note:** While ``precision`` and ``remove_duplicates`` are designed to reduce the byte size of the API response, they will also increase the processing time required to render the response. This will likely be negligible for small GeoJSON responses but may become an issue for large responses. **New in 0.9.3:** there is no need to define this field explicitly in your serializer, it's mapped automatically during initialization in ``rest_framework_gis.apps.AppConfig.ready()``. GeometrySerializerMethodField ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``GeometrySerializerMethodField``, which is a subclass of DRF ``SerializerMethodField`` and handles values which are computed with a serializer method and are used as a ``geo_field``. `See example below <https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis#using-geometryserializermethodfield-as-geo_field>`__. Serializers ----------- GeoModelSerializer (DEPRECATED) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ **Deprecated, will be removed in 1.0**: Using this serializer is not needed anymore since 0.9.3, if you add ``rest_framework_gis`` in ``settings.INSTALLED_APPS`` the serialization will work out of the box with DRF. Refer `Issue #156 <https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis#using-geometryserializermethodfield-as-geo_field>`__. Provides a ``GeoModelSerializer``, which is a subclass of DRF ``ModelSerializer``. This serializer updates the field\_mapping dictionary to include field mapping of GeoDjango geometry fields to the above ``GeometryField``. For example, the following model: .. code-block:: python class Location(models.Model): """ A model which holds information about a particular location """ address = models.CharField(max_length=255) city = models.CharField(max_length=100) state = models.CharField(max_length=100) point = models.PointField() By default, the DRF ModelSerializer **ver < 0.9.3** will output: .. code-block:: javascript { "id": 1, "address": "742 Evergreen Terrace", "city": "Springfield", "state": "Oregon", "point": "POINT(-123.0208 44.0464)" } In contrast, the ``GeoModelSerializer`` will output: .. code-block:: javascript { "id": 1, "address": "742 Evergreen Terrace", "city": "Springfield", "state": "Oregon", "point": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [-123.0208, 44.0464], } } **Note:** For ``ver>=0.9.3``: The DRF model serializer will give the same output as above, if; - ``rest_framework_gis`` is set in ``settings.INSTALLED_APPS`` or - the field in the serializer is set explicitly as ``GeometryField``. GeoFeatureModelSerializer ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ``GeoFeatureModelSerializer`` is a subclass of ``rest_framework.ModelSerializer`` which will output data in a format that is **GeoJSON** compatible. Using the above example, the ``GeoFeatureModelSerializer`` will output: .. code-block:: javascript { "id": 1, "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [-123.0208, 44.0464], }, "properties": { "address": "742 Evergreen Terrace", "city": "Springfield", "state": "Oregon" } } If you are serializing an object list, ``GeoFeatureModelSerializer`` will create a ``FeatureCollection``: .. code-block:: javascript { "type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [ { "id": 1 "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [-123.0208, 44.0464], }, "properties": { "address": "742 Evergreen Terrace", "city": "Springfield", "state": "Oregon", } } { "id": 2, "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [-123.0208, 44.0489], }, "properties": { "address": "744 Evergreen Terrace", "city": "Springfield", "state": "Oregon" } } } Specifying the geometry field: "geo_field" ########################################## ``GeoFeatureModelSerializer`` requires you to define a ``geo_field`` to be serialized as the "geometry". For example: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): """ A class to serialize locations as GeoJSON compatible data """ class Meta: model = Location geo_field = "point" # you can also explicitly declare which fields you want to include # as with a ModelSerializer. fields = ('id', 'address', 'city', 'state') Using GeometrySerializerMethodField as "geo_field" ################################################## ``geo_field`` may also be an instance of ``GeometrySerializerMethodField``. In this case you can compute its value during serialization. For example: .. code-block:: python from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer, GeometrySerializerMethodField class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): """ A class to serialize locations as GeoJSON compatible data """ # a field which contains a geometry value and can be used as geo_field other_point = GeometrySerializerMethodField() def get_other_point(self, obj): return Point(obj.point.lat / 2, obj.point.lon / 2) class Meta: model = Location geo_field = 'other_point' Serializer for ``geo_field`` may also return ``None`` value, which will translate to ``null`` value for geojson ``geometry`` field. Specifying the ID: "id_field" ############################# The primary key of the model (usually the "id" attribute) is automatically used as the ``id`` field of each `GeoJSON Feature Object <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-butler-geojson#section-2.2>`_. The default behaviour follows the `GeoJSON RFC <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-butler-geojson>`_, but it can be disabled by setting ``id_field`` to ``False``: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): class Meta: model = Location geo_field = "point" id_field = False fields = ('id', 'address', 'city', 'state') The ``id_field`` can also be set to use some other unique field in your model, eg: ``slug``: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): class Meta: model = Location geo_field = 'point' id_field = 'slug' fields = ('slug', 'address', 'city', 'state') Bounding Box: "auto_bbox" and "bbox_geo_field" ############################################## The GeoJSON specification allows a feature to contain a `boundingbox of a feature <http://geojson.org/geojson-spec.html#geojson-objects>`__. ``GeoFeatureModelSerializer`` allows two different ways to fill this property. The first is using the ``geo_field`` to calculate the bounding box of a feature. This only allows read access for a REST client and can be achieved using ``auto_bbox``. Example: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): class Meta: model = Location geo_field = 'geometry' auto_bbox = True The second approach uses the ``bbox_geo_field`` to specify an additional ``GeometryField`` of the model which will be used to calculate the bounding box. This allows boundingboxes differ from the exact extent of a features geometry. Additionally this enables read and write access for the REST client. Bounding boxes send from the client will be saved as Polygons. Example: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.serializers import GeoFeatureModelSerializer class LocationSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): class Meta: model = BoxedLocation geo_field = 'geometry' bbox_geo_field = 'bbox_geometry' Custom GeoJSON properties source ################################ In GeoJSON each feature can have a ``properties`` member containing the attributes of the feature. By default this field is filled with the attributes from your Django model, excluding the id, geometry and bounding box fields. It's possible to override this behaviour and implement a custom source for the ``properties`` member. The following example shows how to use a PostgreSQL HStore field as a source for the ``properties`` member: .. code-block:: python # models.py class Link(models.Model): """ Metadata is stored in a PostgreSQL HStore field, which allows us to store arbitrary key-value pairs with a link record. """ metadata = HStoreField(blank=True, null=True, default=dict) geo = models.LineStringField() objects = models.GeoManager() # serializers.py class NetworkGeoSerializer(GeoFeatureModelSerializer): class Meta: model = models.Link geo_field = 'geo' auto_bbox = True def get_properties(self, instance, fields): # This is a PostgreSQL HStore field, which django maps to a dict return instance.metadata def unformat_geojson(self, feature): attrs = { self.Meta.geo_field: feature["geometry"], "metadata": feature["properties"] } if self.Meta.bbox_geo_field and "bbox" in feature: attrs[self.Meta.bbox_geo_field] = Polygon.from_bbox(feature["bbox"]) return attrs When the serializer renders GeoJSON, it calls the method ``get_properties`` for each object in the database. This function should return a dictionary containing the attributes for the feature. In the case of a HStore field, this function is easily implemented. The reverse is also required: mapping a GeoJSON formatted structure to attributes of your model. This task is done by ``unformat_geojson``. It should return a dictionary with your model attributes as keys, and the corresponding values retrieved from the GeoJSON feature data. Pagination ---------- We provide a ``GeoJsonPagination`` class. GeoJsonPagination ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Based on ``rest_framework.pagination.PageNumberPagination``. Code example: .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.pagination import GeoJsonPagination # --- other omitted imports --- # class GeojsonLocationList(generics.ListCreateAPIView): # -- other omitted view attributes --- # pagination_class = GeoJsonPagination Example result response (cut to one element only instead of 10): .. code-block:: javascript { "type": "FeatureCollection", "count": 25, "next": "http://localhost:8000/geojson/?page=2", "previous": null, "features": [ { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [ 42.0, 50.0 ] }, "properties": { "name": "test" } } ] } Filters ------- **note**: this feature has been tested up to django-filter 1.0. We provide a ``GeometryFilter`` field as well as a ``GeoFilterSet`` for usage with ``django_filter``. You simply provide, in the query string, one of the textual types supported by ``GEOSGeometry``. By default, this includes WKT, HEXEWKB, WKB (in a buffer), and GeoJSON. GeometryFilter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.filterset import GeoFilterSet from rest_framework_gis.filters import GeometryFilter from django_filters import filters class RegionFilter(GeoFilterSet): slug = filters.CharFilter(name='slug', lookup_expr='istartswith') contains_geom = GeometryFilter(name='geom', lookup_expr='contains') class Meta: model = Region We can then filter in the URL, using GeoJSON, and we will perform a ``__contains`` geometry lookup, e.g. ``/region/?contains_geom={ "type": "Point", "coordinates": [ -123.26436996459961, 44.564178042345375 ] }``. GeoFilterSet ~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ``GeoFilterSet`` provides a ``django_filter`` compatible ``FilterSet`` that will automatically create ``GeometryFilters`` for ``GeometryFields``. InBBoxFilter ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``InBBoxFilter``, which is a subclass of DRF ``BaseFilterBackend``. Filters a queryset to only those instances within a certain bounding box. ``views.py:`` .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.filters import InBBoxFilter class LocationList(ListAPIView): queryset = models.Location.objects.all() serializer_class = serializers.LocationSerializer bbox_filter_field = 'point' filter_backends = (InBBoxFilter,) bbox_filter_include_overlapping = True # Optional We can then filter in the URL, using Bounding Box format (min Lon, min Lat, max Lon, max Lat), and we can search for instances within the bounding box, e.g.: ``/location/?in_bbox=-90,29,-89,35``. By default, InBBoxFilter will only return those instances entirely within the stated bounding box. To include those instances which overlap the bounding box, include ``bbox_filter_include_overlapping = True`` in your view. Note that if you are using other filters, you'll want to include your other filter backend in your view. For example: ``filter_backends = (InBBoxFilter, DjangoFilterBackend,)`` TMSTileFilter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``TMSTileFilter``, which is a subclass of ``InBBoxFilter``. Filters a queryset to only those instances within a bounding box defined by a `TMS tile <http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/TMS>`__ address. ``views.py:`` .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.filters import TMSTileFilter class LocationList(ListAPIView): queryset = models.Location.objects.all() serializer_class = serializers.LocationSerializer bbox_filter_field = 'point' filter_backends = (TMSTileFilter,) bbox_filter_include_overlapping = True # Optional We can then filter in the URL, using TMS tile addresses in the zoom/x/y format, eg:. ``/location/?tile=8/100/200`` which is equivalent to filtering on the bbox (-39.37500,-71.07406,-37.96875,-70.61261). For more information on configuration options see InBBoxFilter. Note that the tile address start in the upper left, not the lower left origin used by some implementations. DistanceToPointFilter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``DistanceToPointFilter``, which is a subclass of DRF ``BaseFilterBackend``. Filters a queryset to only those instances within a certain distance of a given point. ``views.py:`` .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.filters import DistanceToPointFilter class LocationList(ListAPIView): queryset = models.Location.objects.all() serializer_class = serializers.LocationSerializer distance_filter_field = 'geometry' filter_backends = (DistanceToPointFilter,) We can then filter in the URL, using a distance and a point in (lon, lat) format. The distance can be given in meters or in degrees. eg:. ``/location/?dist=4000&point=-122.4862,37.7694&format=json`` which is equivalent to filtering within 4000 meters of the point (-122.4862, 37.7694). By default, DistanceToPointFilter will pass the 'distance' in the URL directly to the database for the search. The effect depends on the srid of the database in use. If geo data is indexed in meters (srid 3875, aka 900913), a distance in meters can be passed in directly without conversion. For lat-lon databases such as srid 4326, which is indexed in degrees, the 'distance' will be interpreted as degrees. Set the flag, 'distance_filter_convert_meters' to 'True' in order to convert an input distance in meters to degrees. This conversion is approximate, and the errors at latitudes > 60 degrees are > 25%. DistanceToPointOrderingFilter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Provides a ``DistanceToPointOrderingFilter``, **available on Django >= 3.0**, which is a subclass of ``DistanceToPointFilter``. Orders a queryset by distance to a given point, from the nearest to the most distant point. ``views.py:`` .. code-block:: python from rest_framework_gis.filters import DistanceToPointOrderingFilter class LocationList(ListAPIView): queryset = models.Location.objects.all() serializer_class = serializers.LocationSerializer distance_ordering_filter_field = 'geometry' filter_backends = (DistanceToPointOrderingFilter,) We can then order the results by passing a point in (lon, lat) format in the URL. eg:. ``/location/?point=-122.4862,37.7694&format=json`` will order the results by the distance to the point (-122.4862, 37.7694). We can also reverse the order of the results by passing ``order=desc``: ``/location/?point=-122.4862,37.7694&order=desc&format=json`` Schema Generation ----------------- Note: Schema generation support is available only for DRF >= 3.12. Simplest Approach would be, change ``DEFAULT_SCHEMA_CLASS`` to ``rest_framework_gis.schema.GeoFeatureAutoSchema``: .. code-block:: python REST_FRAMEWORK = { ... 'DEFAULT_SCHEMA_CLASS': 'rest_framework_gis.schema.GeoFeatureAutoSchema', ... } If you do not want to change default schema generator class: - You can pass this class as an argument to ``get_schema_view`` function `[Ref] <https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/schemas/#generating-a-dynamic-schema-with-schemaview>`__. - You can pass this class as an argument to the ``generateschema`` command `[Ref] <https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/schemas/#generating-a-static-schema-with-the-generateschema-management-command>`__. Running the tests ----------------- Required setup ============== You need one of the `Spatial Database servers supported by GeoDjango <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/contrib/gis/db-api/#module-django.contrib.gis.db.backends>`__, and create a database for the tests. The following can be used with PostgreSQL: .. code-block:: bash createdb django_restframework_gis psql -U postgres -d django_restframework_gis -c "CREATE EXTENSION postgis" You might need to tweak the DB settings according to your DB configuration. You can copy the file ``local_settings.example.py`` to ``local_settings.py`` and change the ``DATABASES`` and/or ``INSTALLED_APPS`` directives there. This should allow you to run the tests already. For reference, the following steps will setup a development environment for contributing to the project: - create a spatial database named "django\_restframework\_gis" - create ``local_settings.py``, eg: ``cp local_settings.example.py local_settings.py`` - tweak the ``DATABASES`` configuration directive according to your DB settings - uncomment ``INSTALLED_APPS`` - run ``python manage.py syncdb`` - run ``python manage.py collectstatic`` - run ``python manage.py runserver`` Using tox ========= The recommended way to run the tests is by using `tox <https://tox.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>`__, which can be installed using `pip install tox`. You can use ``tox -l`` to list the available environments, and then e.g. use the following to run all tests with Python 3.6 and Django 1.11: .. code-block:: bash tox -e py36-django111 By default Django's test runner is used, but there is a variation of tox's envlist to use pytest (using the ``-pytest`` suffix). You can pass optional arguments to the test runner like this: .. code-block:: bash tox -e py36-django111-pytest -- -k test_foo Running tests manually ====================== Please refer to the ``tox.ini`` file for reference/help in case you want to run tests manually / without tox. To run tests in docker use .. code-block:: bash docker-compose build docker-compose run --rm test Running QA-checks ================= Install the test requirements: .. code-block:: shell pip install -r requirements-test.txt Reformat the code according to `our coding style conventions with <https://openwisp.io/docs/developer/contributing.html#coding-style-conventions>`_: .. code-block:: shell openwisp-qa-format Run the QA checks by using .. code-block:: shell ./run-qa-checks In docker testing, QA checks are executed automatically. Contributing ------------ 1. Join the `Django REST Framework GIS Mailing List <https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/django-rest-framework-gis>`__ and announce your intentions 2. Follow the `PEP8 Style Guide for Python Code <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/>`__ 3. Fork this repo 4. Write code 5. Write tests for your code 6. Ensure all tests pass 7. Ensure test coverage is not under 90% 8. Document your changes 9. Send pull request .. |Build Status| image:: https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis/workflows/Django%20Rest%20Framework%20Gis%20CI%20Build/badge.svg?branch=master :target: https://github.com/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis/actions?query=workflow%3A%22Django+Rest+Framework+Gis+CI+Build%22 .. |Coverage Status| image:: https://coveralls.io/repos/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis/badge.svg :target: https://coveralls.io/r/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis .. |Requirements Status| image:: https://img.shields.io/librariesio/release/github/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis :target: https://libraries.io/github/openwisp/django-rest-framework-gis#repository_dependencies :alt: Dependency monitoring .. |PyPI version| image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/djangorestframework-gis.svg :target: http://badge.fury.io/py/djangorestframework-gis .. |PyPI downloads| image:: https://pepy.tech/badge/djangorestframework-gis/month :target: https://pepy.tech/project/djangorestframework-gis .. |Black| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-black-000000.svg :target: https://pypi.org/project/black/


نیازمندی

مقدار نام
- djangorestframework


نحوه نصب


نصب پکیج whl drf-gis-1.1:

    pip install drf-gis-1.1.whl


نصب پکیج tar.gz drf-gis-1.1:

    pip install drf-gis-1.1.tar.gz