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Dynamic Form Class

Nutshell: Subclass this form with the required fields defined to automatically generate a form based on a model in a similar fashion to how form_for_model works, but in a way that tries to be a little easier if you want to customize the form. It handles updates and creations automatically as long as any database field requirements are met. This is something I made while trying to understand newforms, and is my own attempt at something between the simplicity of a stock form_for_model form, and a full blown custom form. The proper way is to use a callback function to customize form_for_model, but that felt cumbersome so I did it my way :) It works for me, but I'm relatively new to both python and Django so please test yourself before trusting.

  • dynamic
  • forms
  • subclass
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Random-image template tag

This tag makes it easy to have a random rotation of images on a page. Don't forget to set your MEDIA_URL.

  • template
  • image
  • random
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Author: pbx
  • 3
  • 12

Filter on Multiple M2M Objects Simultaneously

This snippet should allow you to do queries not before possible using Django's ORM. It allows you to "Split" up the m2m object you are filtering on. This is best described by example: Suppose you have `Article` and `Tag`, where `Article` has a m2m relation with `Tag` (`related_name = 'tag'`). If I run: from django.db.models.query import Q Article.objects.filter(Q(tag__value = 'A') & Q(tag__value = 'B')) > # no results I would expect to get no results (there are no tags with both a value of 'A' and 'B'). However, I *would* like to somehow get a list of articles with tags meeting that criteria. Using this snippet, you can: from django.db.models.query import Q from path.to.qsplit import QSplit Article.objects.filter(QSplit(Q(tag__value = 'A')) & QSplit(Q(tag__value = 'B'))) > # articles with both tags So now they are split into different `Tag` entries. Notice how the `QSplit()` constructor takes a `Q` object---it's possible to give this any complicated Q-type expression.

  • models
  • q
  • m2m
  • db
  • orm
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Avoid IE Brokenness When using Vary and Attachments

Apparently Internet Explorer (6 and 7) have a bug whereby if you blindly attach a PDF or some other file, it will choke. The problem lies in the Vary header (bug described in http://support.microsoft.com/kb/824847/en-us?spid=8722&sid=global). To use, just add to the beginning of your middleware classes.

  • middleware
  • ie
  • vary
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Password Reset Form Newforms

A Change Password form that asks the user for the old password and checks the two new passwords. Whenever you instantiate the form you must pass a User object to it. ex. theform = forms.PasswordReset(request.user,request.POST)

  • newforms
  • password-reset
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Simple admin list thumbnail view

This is a very simple way to display images within the admin list view. It is not efficient in the sense that the images are being downloaded in original format, however for cases where the images are not regularly accessed it may be a straightforward option. Can also be tied into WYSIWYG editors like TinyMCE by adding an appropriate href link in the return value.

  • image
  • admin
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truncate

Truncates a string after a given number of chars

  • filter
  • templatetags
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FieldsetForm

This is FieldsetForm for rendering forms with fieldsets. This is not in anyway final version of this snippet. This is preliminary version which just works. One can easilly implement the `as_ul`, `as_p` at the end with just looking the `as_table` definition. > Content developers should group information where natural and appropriate. When form controls can be grouped into logical units, use the FIELDSET element and label those units with the LEGEND element... - [Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0](http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10-HTML-TECHS/#forms-grouping) **Notice**: Since this uses *real* fieldset elements of HTML we had to define `form.as_table` the way it *includes* the `table` element around it. **Usage in template** {{ form }} and **not** `<table>{{ form }}</table>` **Usage in view** Following usage example is for *django.contrib.flatpage*, but naturally you can use it to whatever you want. Example assumes user knows about newforms and basics to how to use `form_for_*` functions from THIS-SNIPPETS-POSITION-IN-PYTHON-PATH import form_fieldsets ... fieldsets = form_fieldsets( (None, {'fields': ('url','title','content',)} ), ("Advanced options", {'fields': ('sites', 'template_name', 'registration_required',), 'classes':'collapse'}) ) ... ... forms.models.form_for_instance(flatpage, **fieldsets) ... forms.models.form_for_model(FlatPage, **fieldsets) ... Above creates two fieldsets: 1. "None" named fieldset (meaning no name is given) with fields 'url', 'title' and 'content'. 2. "Advanced options" named fieldset with fields 'sites', 'template_name' and 'registration_required' and collapse class in place. Syntax of form_fieldsets function is identical with models `class Admin: fields = (...)`, actually you can use admins exact line here with adding it like `form_fieldsets(*FlatPage.Admin.fields)` if you prefer that, although it wrecks the point of having newforms admin, if one does identical forms as in admin part. Purpose of this is not to create identical forms as in admin but to provide easy fieldsets for all views and forms. To follow DRY principle this should be part of Django and Django's newforms-admin branch should start to use some subclassing of this. But even if the newforms-admin branch never take this in, it is more DRY than without to use this in own projects, with this in place you can forget all template hazzles defining fieldset manually. **Some "counter" statemets for having this** > **S**: "But I want to define the table tag myself in template!" **A**: Well, you understod something wrong; First of all, for example, if there is something missing from the output of this table tag, you can feel free and subclass from FieldsetForm and define own as_table. Second of all, for having own table tag there can be only one reason to that, you want extra arguments, and that is TODO, but it is also easy piece. I haven't just needed extra stuff yet so they are not implemented. > **S**: "But, oh my! (newforms) admin does this already!" **A**: For the **last time** this is not meant for only newforms admin, you can use this on **any** given view or form renderition, since currently django does not give a simple way to use that handy fieldset automation in own views. And currently (9th of April, 2007) newforms admin does not do it this way. > **S**: "But, I want to use as_p, as_ul ..." **A**: Go ahead and fix them below... Should be pretty easy stuff. > **S**: "Each model should have only one fieldsets setting." **A**: I don't believe that; even if I did that is not convincing, since there are views that are not based on models, just bunch of fields, how would you define their fieldsets if it is not defined in the form renderition at the first place? This is the right place to define fieldsets. And the point of *FieldsetForm* is not just having multiple fieldsets per model, it is about *where* and *how* to render them.

  • newforms
  • admin
  • fieldset
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use oldforms validators in newforms forms

Using the `run_oldforms_validators` function, you can run oldforms validators in your newforms `clean_XXX` methods. Usage example: class PasswordForm(forms.Form): password = forms.CharField(widget=forms.PasswordInput()) def clean_password(self): validator_list = [ isStrongPassword, isValidLength, SomeValidators( num_required=3, validator_list=[hasLower, hasUpper, hasNumeric, hasSpecial], error_message="Password must contain at least 3 of: lowercase, uppercase, numeric, and/or special characters." ) ] run_oldforms_validators('password', self, validator_list) return self.clean_data['password'] Above, `isStrongPassword`, `isValidLength`, etc. are oldforms validators. If you are interested in seeing the implementation of `isStrongPassword`, please see my [Using CrackLib to require stronger passwords](http://gdub.wordpress.com/2006/08/26/using-cracklib-to-require-stronger-passwords/) blog post.

  • newforms
  • validators
  • oldforms
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Slugify alternative

I prefer to use this slugification function rather than the one included with Django. It uses underscores instead of dashes for spaces, and allows dashes and periods to occur normally in the string. I decided on this when considering reasonable slugified titles such as... object-relational_mapper_2.5 ten_reasons_web-2.0_rocks django-trunk_0.99_updated

  • filter
  • slugs
  • slug
  • slugify
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Sanitize text field HTML (here from the Dojo Toolkit Editor2 widget)

When using a JavaScript WYSIWYG editor widget for text area content, the resulting HTML should be sanitized so no unallowed HTML tags (esp. script tags) are present. The [BeautifulSoup](http://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/) library handles HTML processing in the solution presented above, so you should place it in the Python path. The snippet also assumes that you have [the Dojo Toolkit](http://dojotoolkit.org/) and its Editor2 widget loaded on your page. **Note**: this snippet was originally written for use with Dojo Toolkit 0.4, and it hasn't been updated for 0.9 or 1.0.

  • forms
  • html
  • wysiwyg
  • dojo
  • security
  • sanitize
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media_url context variable

with this you can have context variables which know the media url and the urls of all your applications, if you need it. save the code as myapp/context_processors.py and add the following line to `TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS` setting "mysite.myapp.context_processors.url_info", For each application you need to know the url set `MYAPP_URL` and add it to dict.

  • url
  • media
  • context
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prettify html

with this middleware you can use tidy to prettify your html, just add the class to the `MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` setting. tidy has an enormous number of options, se [Tidy Options Reference](http://tidy.sourceforge.net/docs/quickref.html) . you must have [µTidylib](http://utidylib.berlios.de/) installed.

  • html
  • xhtml
  • tidy
  • standard
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Save disk space by hard-linking multiple Django installations

If you work with Django like I do, you have a separate installation or Subversion check-out of Django for each of your projects. Currently each one of them eats 22 MB of disk space. This utility hard-links all identical files between copies of Django. They can even be different versions or svn revisions, and you'll still be able to free a good amount of disk space. Run this every now and then if you update installed copies of Django or add new ones. This utility is available also [here](http://trac.ambitone.com/ambidjangolib/browser/trunk/hardlink_django_instances/hardlink_django_instances.py).

  • disk
  • disk-space
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