308
votes

Inspired by the question series 'Hidden features of ...', I am curious to hear about your favorite Django tips or lesser known but useful features you know of.

  • Please, include only one tip per answer.
  • Add Django version requirements if there are any.
30

30 Answers

221
votes

I'm just going to start with a tip from myself :)

Use os.path.dirname() in settings.py to avoid hardcoded dirnames.

Don't hardcode path's in your settings.py if you want to run your project in different locations. Use the following code in settings.py if your templates and static files are located within the Django project directory:

# settings.py
import os
PROJECT_DIR = os.path.dirname(__file__)
...
STATIC_DOC_ROOT = os.path.join(PROJECT_DIR, "static")
...
TEMPLATE_DIRS = (
    os.path.join(PROJECT_DIR, "templates"),
)

Credits: I got this tip from the screencast 'Django From the Ground Up'.

128
votes

Install Django Command Extensions and pygraphviz and then issue the following command to get a really nice looking Django model visualization:

./manage.py graph_models -a -g -o my_project.png
119
votes

Use django-annoying's render_to decorator instead of render_to_response.

@render_to('template.html')
def foo(request):
    bars = Bar.objects.all()
    if request.user.is_authenticated():
        return HttpResponseRedirect("/some/url/")
    else:
        return {'bars': bars}

# equals to
def foo(request):
    bars = Bar.objects.all()
    if request.user.is_authenticated():
        return HttpResponseRedirect("/some/url/")
    else:
        return render_to_response('template.html',
                              {'bars': bars},
                              context_instance=RequestContext(request))

Edited to point out that returning an HttpResponse (such as a redirect) will short circuit the decorator and work just as you expect.

101
votes

There's a set of custom tags I use all over my site's templates. Looking for a way to autoload it (DRY, remember?), I found the following:

from django import template
template.add_to_builtins('project.app.templatetags.custom_tag_module')

If you put this in a module that's loaded by default (your main urlconf for instance), you'll have the tags and filters from your custom tag module available in any template, without using {% load custom_tag_module %}.

The argument passed to template.add_to_builtins() can be any module path; your custom tag module doesn't have to live in a specific application. For example, it can also be a module in your project's root directory (eg. 'project.custom_tag_module').

96
votes

Virtualenv + Python = life saver if you are working on multiple Django projects and there is a possibility that they all don't depend on the same version of Django/an application.

87
votes

Don't hard-code your URLs!

Use url names instead, and the reverse function to get the URL itself.

When you define your URL mappings, give names to your URLs.

urlpatterns += ('project.application.views'
   url( r'^something/$', 'view_function', name="url-name" ),
   ....
)

Make sure the name is unique per URL.

I usually have a consistent format "project-appplication-view", e.g. "cbx-forum-thread" for a thread view.

UPDATE (shamelessly stealing ayaz's addition):

This name can be used in templates with the url tag.

81
votes

Use django debug toolbar. For example, it allows to view all SQL queries performed while rendering view and you can also view stacktrace for any of them.

79
votes

Don't write your own login pages. If you're using django.contrib.auth.

The real, dirty secret is that if you're also using django.contrib.admin, and django.template.loaders.app_directories.load_template_source is in your template loaders, you can get your templates free too!

# somewhere in urls.py
urlpatterns += patterns('django.contrib.auth',
    (r'^accounts/login/$','views.login', {'template_name': 'admin/login.html'}),
    (r'^accounts/logout/$','views.logout'),
)
66
votes

Context processors are awesome.

Say you have a different user model and you want to include that in every response. Instead of doing this:

def myview(request, arg, arg2=None, template='my/template.html'):
    ''' My view... '''
    response = dict()
    myuser = MyUser.objects.get(user=request.user)
    response['my_user'] = myuser
    ...
    return render_to_response(template,
                              response,
                              context_instance=RequestContext(request))

Context processes give you the ability to pass any variable to your templates. I typically put mine in 'my_project/apps/core/context.py:

def my_context(request):
    try:
        return dict(my_user=MyUser.objects.get(user=request.user))
    except ObjectNotFound:
        return dict(my_user='')

In your settings.py add the following line to your TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS

TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
    'my_project.apps.core.context.my_context',
    ...
)

Now every time a request is made it includes the my_user key automatically.

Also signals win.

I wrote a blog post about this a few months ago so I'm just going to cut and paste:

Out of the box Django gives you several signals that are incredibly useful. You have the ability to do things pre and post save, init, delete, or even when a request is being processed. So lets get away from the concepts and demonstrate how these are used. Say we’ve got a blog

from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
class Post(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(_('title'), max_length=255)
    body = models.TextField(_('body'))
    created = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)

So somehow you want to notify one of the many blog-pinging services we’ve made a new post, rebuild the most recent posts cache, and tweet about it. Well with signals you have the ability to do all of this without having to add any methods to the Post class.

import twitter

from django.core.cache import cache
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
from django.conf import settings

def posted_blog(sender, created=None, instance=None, **kwargs):
    ''' Listens for a blog post to save and alerts some services. '''
    if (created and instance is not None):
        tweet = 'New blog post! %s' instance.title
        t = twitter.PostUpdate(settings.TWITTER_USER,
                               settings.TWITTER_PASSWD,
                               tweet)
        cache.set(instance.cache_key, instance, 60*5)
       # send pingbacks
       # ...
       # whatever else
    else:
        cache.delete(instance.cache_key)
post_save.connect(posted_blog, sender=Post)

There we go, by defining that function and using the post_init signal to connect the function to the Post model and execute it after it has been saved.

58
votes

When I was starting out, I didn't know that there was a Paginator, make sure you know of its existence!!

46
votes

Use IPython to jump into your code at any level and debug using the power of IPython. Once you have installed IPython just put this code in wherever you want to debug:

from IPython.Shell import IPShellEmbed; IPShellEmbed()()

Then, refresh the page, go to your runserver window and you will be in an interactive IPython window.

I have a snippet set up in TextMate so I just type ipshell and hit tab. I couldn't live without it.

43
votes

Run a development SMTP server that will just output whatever is sent to it (if you don't want to actually install SMTP on your dev server.)

command line:

python -m smtpd -n -c DebuggingServer localhost:1025
41
votes

From the django-admin documentation:

If you use the Bash shell, consider installing the Django bash completion script, which lives in extras/django_bash_completion in the Django distribution. It enables tab-completion of django-admin.py and manage.py commands, so you can, for instance...

  • Type django-admin.py.
  • Press [TAB] to see all available options.
  • Type sql, then [TAB], to see all available options whose names start with sql.
40
votes

The ./manage.py runserver_plus facilty which comes with django_extensions is truly awesome.

It creates an enhanced debug page that, amongst other things, uses the Werkzeug debugger to create interactive debugging consoles for each point in the stack (see screenshot). It also provides a very useful convenience debugging method dump() for displaying information about an object/frame.

enter image description here

To install, you can use pip:

pip install django_extensions
pip install Werkzeug

Then add 'django_extensions' to your INSTALLED_APPS tuple in settings.py and start the development server with the new extension:

./manage.py runserver_plus

This will change the way you debug.

37
votes

I like to use the Python debugger pdb to debug Django projects.

This is a helpful link for learning how to use it: http://www.ferg.org/papers/debugging_in_python.html

37
votes

When trying to exchange data between Django and another application, request.raw_post_data is a good friend. Use it to receive and custom-process, say, XML data.

Documentation: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/request-response/

36
votes

Use Jinja2 alongside Django.

If you find the Django template language extremely restricting (like me!) then you don't have to be stuck with it. Django is flexible, and the template language is loosely coupled to the rest of the system, so just plug-in another template language and use it to render your http responses!

I use Jinja2, it's almost like a powered-up version of the django template language, it uses the same syntax, and allows you to use expressions in if statements! no more making a custom if-tags such as if_item_in_list! you can simply say %{ if item in list %}, or {% if object.field < 10 %}.

But that's not all; it has many more features to ease template creation, that I can't go though all of them in here.

35
votes

Add assert False in your view code to dump debug information.

34
votes

This adds to the reply above about Django URL names and reverse URL dispatching.

The URL names can also be effectively used within templates. For example, for a given URL pattern:

url(r'(?P<project_id>\d+)/team/$', 'project_team', name='project_team')

you can have the following in templates:

<a href="{% url project_team project.id %}">Team</a>
27
votes

Since Django "views" only need to be callables that return an HttpResponse, you can easily create class-based views like those in Ruby on Rails and other frameworks.

There are several ways to create class-based views, here's my favorite:

from django import http

class RestView(object):
    methods = ('GET', 'HEAD')

    @classmethod
    def dispatch(cls, request, *args, **kwargs):
        resource = cls()
        if request.method.lower() not in (method.lower() for method in resource.methods):
            return http.HttpResponseNotAllowed(resource.methods)
        try:
            method = getattr(resource, request.method.lower())
        except AttributeError:
            raise Exception("View method `%s` does not exist." % request.method.lower())
        if not callable(method):
            raise Exception("View method `%s` is not callable." % request.method.lower())
        return method(request, *args, **kwargs)

    def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        return http.HttpResponse()

    def head(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        response = self.get(request, *args, **kwargs)
        response.content = ''
        return response

You can add all sorts of other stuff like conditional request handling and authorization in your base view.

Once you've got your views setup your urls.py will look something like this:

from django.conf.urls.defaults import *
from views import MyRestView

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    (r'^restview/', MyRestView.dispatch),
)
21
votes

Instead of using render_to_response to bind your context to a template and render it (which is what the Django docs usually show) use the generic view direct_to_template. It does the same thing that render_to_response does but it also automatically adds RequestContext to the template context, implicitly allowing context processors to be used. You can do this manually using render_to_response, but why bother? It's just another step to remember and another LOC. Besides making use of context processors, having RequestContext in your template allows you to do things like:

<a href="{{MEDIA_URL}}images/frog.jpg">A frog</a> 

which is very useful. In fact, +1 on generic views in general. The Django docs mostly show them as shortcuts for not even having a views.py file for simple apps, but you can also use them inside your own view functions:

from django.views.generic import simple

def article_detail(request, slug=None):
    article = get_object_or_404(Article, slug=slug)
    return simple.direct_to_template(request, 
        template="articles/article_detail.html",
        extra_context={'article': article}
    )
20
votes

I don't have enough reputation to reply to the comment in question, but it's important to note that if you're going to use Jinja, it does NOT support the '-' character in template block names, while Django does. This caused me a lot of problems and wasted time trying to track down the very obscure error message it generated.

19
votes

The webdesign app is very useful when starting to design your website. Once imported, you can add this to generate sample text:

{% load webdesign %}
{% lorem 5 p %}
19
votes

django.db.models.get_model does allow you to retrieve a model without importing it.

James shows how handy it can be: "Django tips: Write better template tags — Iteration 4 ".

19
votes

Everybody knows there is a development server you can run with "manage.py runserver", but did you know that there is a development view for serving static files (CSS / JS / IMG) as well ?

Newcomers are always puzzled because Django doesn't come with any way to serve static files. This is because the dev team think it is the job for a real life Web server.

But when developing, you may not want to set up Apache + mod_wisgi, it's heavy. Then you can just add the following to urls.py:

(r'^site_media/(?P<path>.*)$', 'django.views.static.serve',
        {'document_root': '/path/to/media'}),

Your CSS / JS / IMG will be available at www.yoursite.com/site_media/.

Of course, don't use it in a production environment.

18
votes

I learned this one from the documentation for the sorl-thumbnails app. You can use the "as" keyword in template tags to use the results of the call elsewhere in your template.

For example:

{% url image-processor uid as img_src %}
<img src="{% thumbnail img_src 100x100 %}"/>

This is mentioned in passing in the Django templatetag documentation, but in reference to loops only. They don't call out that you can use this elsewhere (anywhere?) as well.

16
votes

django.views.generic.list_detail.object_list -- It provides all the logic & template variables for pagination (one of those I've-written-that-a-thousand-times-now drudgeries). Wrapping it allows for any logic you need. This gem has saved me many hours of debugging off-by-one errors in my "Search Results" pages and makes the view code cleaner in the process.

16
votes

PyCharm IDE is a nice environment to code and especially debug, with built-in support for Django.

14
votes

Use xml_models to create Django models that use an XML REST API backend (instead of a SQL one). This is very useful especially when modelling third party APIs - you get all the same QuerySet syntax that you're used to. You can install it from PyPI.

XML from an API:

<profile id=4>
    <email>[email protected]</email>
    <first_name>Joe</first_name>
    <last_name>Example</last_name>
    <date_of_birth>1975-05-15</date_of_birth>
</profile>

And now in python:

class Profile(xml_models.Model):
    user_id = xml_models.IntField(xpath='/profile/@id')
    email = xml_models.CharField(xpath='/profile/email')
    first = xml_models.CharField(xpath='/profile/first_name')
    last = xml_models.CharField(xpath='/profile/last_name')
    birthday = xml_models.DateField(xpath='/profile/date_of_birth')

    finders = {
        (user_id,):  settings.API_URL +'/api/v1/profile/userid/%s',
        (email,):  settings.API_URL +'/api/v1/profile/email/%s',
    }

profile = Profile.objects.get(user_id=4)
print profile.email
# would print '[email protected]'

It can also handle relationships and collections. We use it every day in heavily used production code, so even though it's beta it's very usable. It also has a good set of stubs that you can use in your tests.

(Disclaimer: while I'm not the author of this library, I am now a committer, having made a few minor commits)

14
votes

Use database migrations. Use South.