Skip to main content

A Django app for adding modal actions to the admin interface

Project description

Django Modal Actions

Django Modal Actions is a reusable Django app that provides a convenient way to add modal-based actions to your Django admin interface. It allows you to create custom actions that open in a modal dialog, enhancing the user experience and functionality of your Django admin.

Features

  • Easy integration with Django admin
  • Support for both list-view and object-view actions
  • Customizable modal forms
  • AJAX-based form submission

Requirements

  • Python (>= 3.7)
  • Django (>= 3.2)

Installation

  1. Install the package using pip:

    pip install django-modal-actions
    
  2. Add 'django_modal_actions' to your INSTALLED_APPS setting:

    INSTALLED_APPS = [
        ...
        'django_modal_actions',
        ...
    ]
    

Usage

  1. In your admin.py, import the necessary components:

    from django.contrib import admin
    from django_modal_actions import ModalActionMixin, modal_action
    
  2. Create a custom admin class that inherits from ModalActionMixin and your base admin class:

    @admin.register(YourModel)
    class YourModelAdmin(ModalActionMixin, admin.ModelAdmin):
        list_display = ['name', 'status']
        modal_actions = ["approve"]
        list_modal_actions = ["bulk_approve"]
    
        @modal_action(
            modal_header="Approve Item",
            modal_description="Are you sure you want to approve this item?"
        )
        def approve(self, request, obj, form_data=None):
            obj.status = 'approved'
            obj.save()
            return f"{obj} has been approved."
    
        @modal_action(
            modal_header="Bulk Approve",
            modal_description="Are you sure you want to approve the selected items?"
        )
        def bulk_approve(self, request, queryset, form_data=None):
            count = queryset.update(status='approved')
            return f"{count} items have been approved."
    
  3. If you need a custom form for your action, create a form class:

    from django import forms
    
    class ApprovalForm(forms.Form):
        reason = forms.CharField(label="Approval Reason", required=True, widget=forms.Textarea)
    
        def clean_reason(self):
            reason = self.cleaned_data["reason"]
            if len(reason) < 10:
                raise forms.ValidationError("Reason must be at least 10 characters long")
            return reason
    

    Then, use it in your action:

    @modal_action(
        modal_header="Approve with Reason",
        modal_description="Please provide a reason for approval",
        form_class=ApprovalForm
    )
    def approve_with_reason(self, request, obj, form_data=None):
        obj.status = 'approved'
        obj.approval_reason = form_data['reason']
        obj.save()
        return f"{obj} has been approved with reason: {form_data['reason']}"
    

Permissions Example

You can add custom permission checks to your modal actions using the permissions parameter of the modal_action decorator. Here's an example:

from django.contrib import admin
from django_modal_actions import ModalActionMixin, modal_action
from .models import YourModel

def can_approve(request, obj=None):
    return request.user.has_perm('yourapp.can_approve_items')

@admin.register(YourModel)
class YourModelAdmin(ModalActionMixin, admin.ModelAdmin):
    list_display = ['name', 'status']
    modal_actions = ['approve']

    @modal_action(
        modal_header="Approve Item",
        modal_description="Are you sure you want to approve this item?",
        permissions=can_approve
    )
    def approve(self, request, obj, form_data=None):
        obj.status = 'approved'
        obj.save()
        return f"{obj} has been approved."

In this example, the can_approve function checks if the user has the can_approve_items permission. The approve action will only be available to users who have this permission.

You can also use multiple permission checks by passing a list of functions:

def is_staff(request, obj=None):
    return request.user.is_staff

@modal_action(
    modal_header="Approve Item",
    modal_description="Are you sure you want to approve this item?",
    permissions=[can_approve, is_staff]
)
def approve(self, request, obj, form_data=None):
    obj.status = 'approved'
    obj.save()
    return f"{obj} has been approved."

In this case, the user must both have the can_approve_items permission and be a staff member to see and use the approve action.

Custom Admin Templates

If you need to customize the admin templates while still using the modal actions, you can override the change_form_template and change_list_template in your ModelAdmin class. Here's how to do it:

  1. In your admin.py, add the change_form_template or change_list_template attribute to your ModelAdmin class:

    @admin.register(YourModel)
    class YourModelAdmin(ModalActionMixin, admin.ModelAdmin):
        change_form_template = 'admin/yourapp/yourmodel/change_form.html'
        change_list_template = 'admin/yourapp/yourmodel/change_list.html'
        # ... rest of your ModelAdmin code
    
  2. Create the custom template files in your app's template directory. For example:

    yourapp/
    └── templates/
        └── admin/
            └── yourapp/
                └── yourmodel/
                    ├── change_form.html
                    └── change_list.html
    
  3. In your custom templates, extend the default admin templates and add the modal action buttons. Here's an example for change_form.html:

    {% extends "admin/change_form.html" %}
    {% load i18n admin_urls %}
    
    {% block object-tools %}
        <ul class="object-tools">
            {% block object-tools-items %}
                {{ block.super }}
                {% if modal_action_buttons %}
                    <li>{{ modal_action_buttons }}</li>
                {% endif %}
            {% endblock %}
        </ul>
    {% endblock %}
    

    And for change_list.html:

    {% extends "admin/change_list.html" %}
    {% load i18n admin_urls %}
    
    {% block object-tools %}
        <ul class="object-tools">
            {% block object-tools-items %}
                {{ block.super }}
                {% if list_modal_action_buttons %}
                    <li>{{ list_modal_action_buttons }}</li>
                {% endif %}
            {% endblock %}
        </ul>
    {% endblock %}
    

These custom templates will include the modal action buttons while allowing you to make other customizations to your admin interface.

Testing

To run the tests, execute:

python -m unittest discover django_modal_actions/tests

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-modal-actions-0.1.3.tar.gz (15.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

django_modal_actions-0.1.3-py3-none-any.whl (16.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file django-modal-actions-0.1.3.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django-modal-actions-0.1.3.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 15.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.8.19

File hashes

Hashes for django-modal-actions-0.1.3.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 48ed3090152c0c7e94f34f1dc1fcf93f758360ec40e6a7a25ef1af65b8748291
MD5 29407769292d536e08e4279ec078e1db
BLAKE2b-256 8ea9bbb03c9bda0812f7d5318d284c5a3243ffaed7f9d17129efa827732202a6

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file django_modal_actions-0.1.3-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for django_modal_actions-0.1.3-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a8b155fe87421be895c0bec6a6e47cae00f464d4d9b189ce179dc78b8bb9c6ff
MD5 5bcdd66215570fa3fe6a6b5e218b9dea
BLAKE2b-256 036bccb30f596a89427e23c2bd95f7efdbb4cd53ee9d348fa74387e47860c72a

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page