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Yet Another App Settings for Django

Project description

Yet Another App Settings - manage settings for your reusable app

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Features

  • Easy to install and use

  • Provide defaults and validate user settings before use

  • Works with Django’s settings overrides in tests

Version 0.1.2; supports Django 1.8, 1.11 and 2.0 on Python 2.7 and 3.4 upwards.

Installation

Install from pip:

pip install django-yaa-settings

Usage

In your app, create a local app_settings.py:

from yaa_settings import AppSettings

class MySettings(AppSettings):
    prefix = 'MYAPP'

    # Can be overridden in Django settings as MYAPP_ATTRIBUTE
    ATTRIBUTE = 'a static value defined at class creation'

    @property
    def PROPERTY(self):
        """
        Return a value calculated whenever it is accessed

        Can be overridden in Django settings as MYAPP_PROPERTY
        """
        return 'a value calculated when accessed'

    def CALLABLE(self, value):
        """
        Always called, passed the MYAPP_CALLABLE value from Django settings
        (or passed None if that is not defined)
        """
        if value is None:
            raise ValueError('MYAPP_CALLABLE must be configured')
        return value
  • Import and subclass AppSettings

  • Only define one AppSettings subclass per file

  • Set the prefix attribute if you want to give your settings a prefix in Django’s settings.

  • Settings should be uppercase for consistency with main Django settings.

Now you can access your app’s settings directly on the class, without the prefix:

from . import app_settings

def some_method(request):
    if app_settings.ATTRIBUTE == 1:
        return app_settings.PROPERTY
    return app_settings.CALLABLE

You can override these settings in your main Django settings, using the prefix:

MYAPP_ATTRIBUTE = 'value available as app_settings.ATTRIBUTE'
MYAPP_PROPERTY = 'value available as app_settings.PROPERTY'
MYAPP_CALLABLE = 'value passed to MySettings.CALLABLE'

Why?

Use the prefix to namespace your settings

It’s always a good idea to namespace your settings based on your app’s name to avoid collisions with other apps. By using the prefix attribute you can omit the prefix throughout your app, making your code neater.

The prefix is optional and you can manually namespace your settings if you’d prefer the consistency of using the same full setting throughout your project.

Namespace settings while retaining test support

Using the prefix mimicks the simpler settings.py that you find in some projects:

from django.conf import settings
SETTING = getattr(settings, 'MYAPP_SETTINGS', 'default')

but unlike that simpler pattern, Yaa-Settings still works with standard setting overrides for tests - see the Django documentation for more details.

Create dynamic defaults using properties

A property on your AppSettings subclass will be evaluated every time you access it, unless you override it in Django’s settings. This allows you to generate dynamic defaults at runtime.

Validate or standardise settings using methods

A method on your AppSettings subclass will be called every time you access it, and will be passed the value you have defined in Django’s settings. This allows you to validate settings, or process them ready for use.

Changelog

  • 1.0.0, 2018-06-24: Released as stable

  • 0.1.0, 2018-06-24: Initial release

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