This reusable app helps to create arbitrary-depth Clean URLs which correspond to MPTT tree hierarchy of model instances, like these:
http://best-photographer.com/gallery/weddings/Dexter-and-Rita/
http://best-photographer.com/gallery/my-pets/dogs/husky/
As you can see, the links are quite different - they have different depth of hierarchy. When users see these URLs they can easily discover where they are located. They can either delete some part of the URL and thus move up in the hierarchy.
Django-mptt-urls is just a simple view that knows how to resolve hierarchical urls.
The simpliest way to understand how django_mptt_urls works is to clone this GitHub project, create virtual environment and run test_project (no extra settings required, except sqlite3 database support):
git clone https://github.com/c0ntribut0r/django-mptt-urls.git
pyvenv django-mptt-urls
source django-mptt-urls/bin/activate
pip install django-mptt-urls/
python django-mptt-urls/test_project/manage.py runserver
And visit 127.0.0.1:8000 in your browser.
django-mptt-urls uses django-mptt. It will be automatically installed as a requirement.
First of all, you should already be using django-mptt, something like this:
from mptt.models import MPTTModel, TreeForeignKey
class Category(MPTTModel):
...
parent = TreeForeignKey('self', null=True, blank=True)
slug = models.SlugField()
class Meta:
unique_together = ('slug', 'parent')
Install django-mptt-urls:
pip install django-mptt-urls
Then, in your urls.py
, replace one or more views with special mptt_urls.view
:
# urls.py
...
import mptt_urls
urlpatterns = patterns('',
...
url(r'^gallery/(?P<path>.*)', mptt_urls.view(model='gallery.models.Category', view='gallery.views.category', slug_field='slug', trailing_slash=True), {'extra': 'You may also pass extra options as usual!'}, name='gallery'),
...
)
Here is what we've done:
- We are capturing
(?P<path>.*)
, which will be passed tomptt_urls.view
when url resolution is fired. You can definepath
whatever you like (for example(?P<path>[\d/]+)
), but don't forget to include '/' in the regex. - Replace your view with special
mptt_urls.view
.
mptt-urls.view
works like a decorator to a view: it gets fired when url resolution is performed, calculates an instance the path
is poining to, and passes it to original view.
So, if you write
url(r'^gallery/(?P<path>.*)', 'gallery.views.category', name='gallery'),
the gallery.views.category
view will receive path
variable and will have to make object resolution.
With mptt_urls.view
, you will get the resolved object automatically - gallery.views.category
view will receive path
and instance
variables:
url(r'^gallery/(?P<path>.*)', mptt_urls.view(model='gallery.models.Category', view='gallery.views.category', slug_field='slug'), name='gallery'),
mptt_urls.view
options are:
model
- your model derived from MPTTModel.view
- a view which will process the request. Don't forget to capturepath
andinstance
(def category(request, path, instance):
). If resolution fails,instance
will be None.slug_field
- the field where model instance's slug is stored
Well, url(...) defines direct url resolution. To define reverse url resolution, add to your model:
class Category(MPTTModel):
...
def get_absolute_url(self):
return reverse('gallery', kwargs={'path': self.get_path()})
Here, we use Category.get_path()
which is available since using mptt_urls.view
.
If you use namespaced url routing, don't forget to add namespace specifier like this:
return reverse('namespace:gallery', kwargs={'path': self.get_path()})
MIT. Do whatever you like. View license file for details.