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A Django app to track book reading, movie viewing, gig going, play watching, etc.

Project description

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Two Django apps:

  • One to track book and periodical reading, including start and end dates, authors.

  • One to track events attended (movie, plays, gigs, exhibitions, comedy, dance, classical), including date, venue, and people/organisations involved.

For Django 1.11 or Django 2.0 running on Python 3.5 or 3.6.

It has URLs, views and templates to create a site displaying all the data, and Django admin screens to add and edit them. The templates use Bootstrap v4-beta.

There are also template tags for displaying data in your own templates (see below).

Installation

Install with pip:

pip install django-spectator

Add the apps to your project’s INSTALLED_APPS in settings.py:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'spectator.core',
    'spectator.events',
    'spectator.reading',
]

While spectator.core is required, you can omit either spectator.events or spectator.reading if you only want to use one of them.

Run migrations:

./manage.py migrate

Add to your project’s urls.py:

urlpatterns = [
    # ...

    url(r'^spectator/', include('spectator.core.urls')),
]

You can change the initial path (r'^spectator/') to whatever suits you. e.g. use r'^' to have Spectator’s home page be the front page of your site.

Then, go to Django Admin to add your data.

Settings

Optionally get a Google Maps JavaScript API key and add it to your settings.py like this:

SPECTATOR_GOOGLE_MAPS_API_KEY = 'YOUR-API-KEY'

This will enable using a map in the Django Admin to set the location of Venues, and the displaying of Venues’ maps in the public templates.

URLs for all objects include automatically-generated slugs, which are based on [Hashids](http://hashids.org) of the object’s ID. You can change which characters are used in these slugs with this setting:

SPECTATOR_SLUG_ALPHABET = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890'

The default is 'abcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz23456789'.

You can also change the salt value used to encode the slugs. While the slugs don’t provide complete security (i.e. it’s not impossible to determine the ID on which a slug is based), using your own salt value can’t hurt:

SPECTATOR_SLUG_SALT = 'My special salt value is here'

The default is 'Django Spectator'.

Overview

There are two main parts to Spectator: Reading and Events (movies, gigs, etc). They both share Creators.

Creators

Creators are the authors of books, directors of movies, actors in plays, groups who perfom at gigs, etc.

A Creator has a name and a kind, of either “individual” (e.g. “Anthony Sher”) or “group” (e.g. “Royal Shakespeare Company”).

A Creator is associated with books, movies, events, etc. through roles, which include an optional role_name such as “Author”, “Illustrator”, “Director”, “Playwright”, “Company”, etc. The roles can be given an order so that the creators of a thing will be listed in the appropriate order (such as the director before a movie’s actors).

See spectator/models/core.py for these models.

Reading

A Publication is a thing that’s been read, and has a kind of either “book” or “periodical”. A Publication can optionally be part of a PublicationSeries. e.g. a Publication “Vol. 3 No. 7 September 2005” could be part of the “The Believer” PublicationSeries.

A Publication can have zero or more Readings. A Reading can have a start_date and end_date. If the start_date is set but the end_date isn’t, the Publication is currently being read. When a Reading has been completed, and an end_date added, it can be marked as is_finished or not. If not, it’s because you gave up on the Publication before getting to the end.

Both start_date and end_date indicates a specific day by default. If you don’t know the day, or the month, a granularity can be specified indicating whether the reading started/ended sometime during the month or year.

See spectator/models/reading.py for these models.

Events

An Event specifies a date on which you saw a thing at a particular Venue.

A Venue has a name and, optionally, location details.

Each Event can have zero or more Creators associated directly with it. e.g. the performers at a gig, the comedians at a comedy event. These can be in a specific order, and each with an optional role. e.g:

  • The Wedding Present
    • Role: Headliner

    • Order: 1

  • Buffalo Tom
    • Role: Support

    • Order: 2

Events can be different kinds, e.g. “gig”, “cinema”, “theatre”. This is only used for categorising Events into different lists - it doesn’t restrict the kinds of Works that can be associated with it. You could have a “cinema” Event that has a movie, play and dance piece associated with it.

Each Event can have zero or more Works associated with it: movies, plays, classical works or dance pieces. Each Work can have zero or more Creators, each with optional roles, associated directly with it. e.g. “Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Composer)”, “William Shakespeare (Playwright)” or “Steven Spielberg (Director)”:

Events can be given an optional title (e.g. “Glastonbury Festival”). If a title isn’t specified one is created automatically when needed, based on any Works associated with it, or else any Creators associated with it.

Template tags

Each app, core, events and reading, has some template tags.

Events template tags

To use any of these in a template, first:

{% load spectator_events %}

Recent Events

To get a QuerySet of Events that happened recently:

{% recent_events num=3 as events %}

{% for event in events %}
    <p>
        {{ event }}<br>
        {{ event.venue.name }}
    </p>
{% endfor %}

If num is not specified, 10 are returned by default.

Or to display as a Boostrap card:

{% recent_events_card num=3 %}

Events on a day

To get a QuerySet of Events that happened on a particular day, use day_events. If my_date is a python date object:

{% day_events date=my_date as events %}

And display the results as in the above example.

Or to display as a Bootstrap card:

{% day_events_card date=my_date %}

Years of Events

To get a QuerySet of the years in which Events happened:

{% events_years as years %}

{% for year in years %}
    {{ year|date:"Y" }}<br>
{% endfor %}

Or to display as a Bootstrap card, with each year linking to the EventYearArchiveView:

{% events_years_card current_year=year %}

Here, year is a date object indicating a year which shouldn’t be linked.

Reading template tags

To use any of these in a template, first:

{% load spectator_reading %}

In-progress Publications

To get a QuerySet of Publications currently being read use in_progress_publications:

{% in_progress_publications as publications %}

{% for pub in publications %}
    <p>{{ pub }}<br>
    {% for role in pub.roles.all %}
        {{ role.creator.name }}
        {% if role.role_name %}({{ role.role_name }}){% endif %}
        <br>
    {% endfor %}
    </p>
{% endfor %}

Or to display as a Bootstrap card:

{% in_progress_publications_card %}

Publications being read on a day

To get a QuerySet of Publications that were being read on a particular day use day_publications. If my_date is a python date object:

{% day_publications date=my_date as publications %}

And display the results as in the above example.

Or to display as a Bootstrap card:

{% day_publications_card date=my_date %}

Years of reading

To get a QuerySet of the years in which Publications were being read:

{% reading_years as years %}

{% for year in years %}
    {{ year|date:"Y" }}<br>
{% endfor %}

Or to display as a Bootstrap card, with each year linking to the ReadingYearArchiveView:

{% reading_years_card current_year=year %}

Here, year is a date object indicating a year which shouldn’t be linked.

Local development

devproject/ is a basic Django project to use the app locally. Use it like:

$ pip install -r devproject/requirements.txt
$ python setup.py develop
$ ./devproject/manage.py migrate
$ ./devproject/manage.py runserver

Run tests with tox. Install it with:

$ pip install tox

Run all tests in all environments like:

$ tox

To run tests in only one environment, specify it. In this case, Python 3.6 and Django 2.0:

$ tox -e py36-django20

To run a specific test, add its path after --, eg:

$ tox -e py36-django20 -- tests.core.test_models.CreatorTestCase.test_ordering

Running the tests in all environments will generate coverage output. There will also be an htmlcov/ directory containing an HTML report. You can also generate these reports without running all the other tests:

$ tox -e coverage

Making a new release

So I don’t forget…

  1. Put new changes on master.

  2. Update the __version__ in spectator.__init__.py.

  3. Update CHANGES.rst.

  4. Do python setup.py tag.

  5. Do python setup.py publish.

Adding a new event type

If it’s simple (like, Gigs, Comedy, etc.) and doesn’t require any specific kind of Works, then:

  • In spectator.events.models.Event add it in KIND_CHOICES and KIND_SLUGS.

  • Possibly add a special case for it in Event.get_kind_name_plural().

  • Add a simple factory for it in spectator.events.factories.

  • In tests.events.test_models.EventTestCase:
    • Add it to:
      • test_get_kind()

      • test_valid_kind_slugs()

      • test_kind_slug()

      • test_kind_name()

      • test_kind_name_plural()

      • test_get_kinds_data()

    • Add a test_absolute_url_*() test for this kind.

To add a new kind of Work:

  • In spectator.events.models.Work add it in KIND_CHOICES and KIND_SLUGS.

  • On the Event model add a new method similar to get_classical_works() for this new kind of Work.

  • On the spectator.core.models.Creator model add a new method similar to get_classical_works() for this new kind of Work.

  • In spectator/events/templates/spectator_events/event_detail.html add an include to list the works.

  • In spectator/core/templates/spectator_core/creator_detail.html add an include to list the works.

  • Add tests.

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