Django datatables view
Project description
About
django-datatables-view is a base view for handling server side processing for the awesome datatables 1.9.x, 1.10.x (http://datatables.net).
django-datatables-view simplifies handling of sorting, filtering and creating JSON output, as defined at: http://datatables.net/examples/server_side/
Example
Example project that uses django-datatables-view is available at: https://bitbucket.org/pigletto/django-datatables-view-example/
Usage
1. Install django-datatables-view
pip install django-datatables-view
2. Edit views.py
django_datatables_view uses GenericViews, so your view should just inherit from base class: BaseDatatableView, and override few things (there is also a DatatableMixin - pure datatables handler that can be used with the mixins of your choice, eg. django-braces). These are:
model - the model that should be used to populate the datatable
columns - the columns that are going to be displayed
order_columns - list of column names used for sorting (eg. if user sorts by second column then second column name from this list will be used with order by clause).
filter_queryset - if you want to filter your datatable then override this method
For more advanced customisation you might want to override:
get_initial_queryset - method that should return queryset used to populate datatable
prepare_results - this method should return list of lists (rows with columns) as needed by datatables
escape_values - you can set this attribute to False in order to not escape values returned from render_column method
The code is rather simple so do not hesitate to have a look at it. Method that is executed first (and that calls other methods) is get_context_data
See example below:
from django_datatables_view.base_datatable_view import BaseDatatableView
from django.utils.html import escape
class OrderListJson(BaseDatatableView):
# The model we're going to show
model = MyModel
# define the columns that will be returned
columns = ['number', 'user', 'state', 'created', 'modified']
# define column names that will be used in sorting
# order is important and should be same as order of columns
# displayed by datatables. For non sortable columns use empty
# value like ''
order_columns = ['number', 'user', 'state', '', '']
# set max limit of records returned, this is used to protect our site if someone tries to attack our site
# and make it return huge amount of data
max_display_length = 500
def render_column(self, row, column):
# We want to render user as a custom column
if column == 'user':
# escape HTML for security reasons
return escape('{0} {1}'.format(row.customer_firstname, row.customer_lastname))
else:
return super(OrderListJson, self).render_column(row, column)
def filter_queryset(self, qs):
# use parameters passed in GET request to filter queryset
# simple example:
search = self.request.GET.get(u'search[value]', None)
if search:
qs = qs.filter(name__istartswith=search)
# more advanced example using extra parameters
filter_customer = self.request.GET.get(u'customer', None)
if filter_customer:
customer_parts = filter_customer.split(' ')
qs_params = None
for part in customer_parts:
q = Q(customer_firstname__istartswith=part)|Q(customer_lastname__istartswith=part)
qs_params = qs_params | q if qs_params else q
qs = qs.filter(qs_params)
return qs
3. Edit urls.py
Add typical django’s urlconf entry:
url(r'^my/datatable/data/$', login_required(OrderListJson.as_view()), name='order_list_json'),
4. Define HTML + JavaScript
Example JS:
$(document).ready(function() {
var oTable = $('.datatable').dataTable({
// ...
"processing": true,
"serverSide": true,
"ajax": "{% url 'order_list_json' %}"
});
// ...
});
Another example of views.py customisation
from django_datatables_view.base_datatable_view import BaseDatatableView
from django.utils.html import escape
class OrderListJson(BaseDatatableView):
order_columns = ['number', 'user', 'state']
def get_initial_queryset(self):
# return queryset used as base for futher sorting/filtering
# these are simply objects displayed in datatable
# You should not filter data returned here by any filter values entered by user. This is because
# we need some base queryset to count total number of records.
return MyModel.objects.filter(something=self.kwargs['something'])
def filter_queryset(self, qs):
# use request parameters to filter queryset
# simple example:
search = self.request.GET.get(u'search[value]', None)
if search:
qs = qs.filter(name__istartswith=search)
# more advanced example
filter_customer = self.request.GET.get(u'customer', None)
if filter_customer:
customer_parts = filter_customer.split(' ')
qs_params = None
for part in customer_parts:
q = Q(customer_firstname__istartswith=part)|Q(customer_lastname__istartswith=part)
qs_params = qs_params | q if qs_params else q
qs = qs.filter(qs_params)
return qs
def prepare_results(self, qs):
# prepare list with output column data
# queryset is already paginated here
json_data = []
for item in qs:
json_data.append([
escape(item.number), # escape HTML for security reasons
escape("{0} {1}".format(item.customer_firstname, item.customer_lastname)), # escape HTML for security reasons
item.get_state_display(),
item.created.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"),
item.modified.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
])
return json_data
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