Generic views

Changed in Django 1.3: Please see the release notes

Note

From Django 1.3, function-based generic views have been deprecated in favor of a class-based approach, described in the class-based views topic guide and detailed reference.

Writing Web applications can be monotonous, because we repeat certain patterns again and again. In Django, the most common of these patterns have been abstracted into “generic views” that let you quickly provide common views of an object without actually needing to write any Python code.

A general introduction to generic views can be found in the topic guide.

This reference contains details of Django’s built-in generic views, along with a list of all keyword arguments that a generic view expects. Remember that arguments may either come from the URL pattern or from the extra_context additional-information dictionary.

Most generic views require the queryset key, which is a QuerySet instance; see Making queries for more information about QuerySet objects.

“Simple” generic views

The django.views.generic.simple module contains simple views to handle a couple of common cases: rendering a template when no view logic is needed, and issuing a redirect.

django.views.generic.simple.direct_to_template

Description:

Renders a given template, passing it a {{ params }} template variable, which is a dictionary of the parameters captured in the URL.

Required arguments:

  • template: The full name of a template to use.

Optional arguments:

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.

Example:

Given the following URL patterns:

from django.views.generic.simple import direct_to_template

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    (r'^foo/$',             direct_to_template, {'template': 'foo_index.html'}),
    (r'^foo/(?P<id>\d+)/$', direct_to_template, {'template': 'foo_detail.html'}),
)

... a request to /foo/ would render the template foo_index.html, and a request to /foo/15/ would render the foo_detail.html with a context variable {{ params.id }} that is set to 15.

django.views.generic.simple.redirect_to

Description:

Redirects to a given URL.

The given URL may contain dictionary-style string formatting, which will be interpolated against the parameters captured in the URL. Because keyword interpolation is always done (even if no arguments are passed in), any "%" characters in the URL must be written as "%%" so that Python will convert them to a single percent sign on output.

If the given URL is None, Django will return an HttpResponseGone (410).

Required arguments:

  • url: The URL to redirect to, as a string. Or None to raise a 410 (Gone) HTTP error.

Optional arguments:

  • permanent: Whether the redirect should be permanent. The only difference here is the HTTP status code returned. If True, then the redirect will use status code 301. If False, then the redirect will use status code 302. By default, permanent is True.
  • query_string: Whether to pass along the GET query string to the new location. If True, then the query string is appended to the URL. If False, then the query string is discarded. By default, query_string is False.
New in Django 1.3: The query_string keyword argument is new in Django 1.3.

Example:

This example issues a permanent redirect (HTTP status code 301) from /foo/<id>/ to /bar/<id>/:

from django.views.generic.simple import redirect_to

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ('^foo/(?P<id>\d+)/$', redirect_to, {'url': '/bar/%(id)s/'}),
)

This example issues a non-permanent redirect (HTTP status code 302) from /foo/<id>/ to /bar/<id>/:

from django.views.generic.simple import redirect_to

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ('^foo/(?P<id>\d+)/$', redirect_to, {'url': '/bar/%(id)s/', 'permanent': False}),
)

This example returns a 410 HTTP error for requests to /bar/:

from django.views.generic.simple import redirect_to

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ('^bar/$', redirect_to, {'url': None}),
)

This example shows how "%" characters must be written in the URL in order to avoid confusion with Python's string formatting markers. If the redirect string is written as "%7Ejacob/" (with only a single %), an exception would be raised:

from django.views.generic.simple import redirect_to

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ('^bar/$', redirect_to, {'url': '%%7Ejacob.'}),
)

Date-based generic views

Date-based generic views (in the module django.views.generic.date_based) are views for displaying drilldown pages for date-based data.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_index

Description:

A top-level index page showing the "latest" objects, by date. Objects with a date in the future are not included unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • queryset: A QuerySet of objects for which the archive serves.
  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the date-based archive should use to determine the objects on the page.

Optional arguments:

  • num_latest: The number of latest objects to send to the template context. By default, it's 15.
  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is True.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'latest'.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_archive.html by default, where:

  • <model_name> is your model's name in all lowercase. For a model StaffMember, that'd be staffmember.
  • <app_label> is the right-most part of the full Python path to your model's app. For example, if your model lives in apps/blog/models.py, that'd be blog.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • date_list: A DateQuerySet object containing all years that have have objects available according to queryset, represented as datetime.datetime objects. These are ordered in reverse. This is equivalent to queryset.dates(date_field, 'year')[::-1].

  • latest: The num_latest objects in the system, ordered descending by date_field. For example, if num_latest is 10, then latest will be a list of the latest 10 objects in queryset.

    This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'latest' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_year

Description:

A yearly archive page showing all available months in a given year. Objects with a date in the future are not displayed unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • year: The four-digit year for which the archive serves.
  • queryset: A QuerySet of objects for which the archive serves.
  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the date-based archive should use to determine the objects on the page.

Optional arguments:

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is False.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'. The view will append '_list' to the value of this parameter in determining the variable's name.
  • make_object_list: A boolean specifying whether to retrieve the full list of objects for this year and pass those to the template. If True, this list of objects will be made available to the template as object_list. (The name object_list may be different; see the docs for object_list in the "Template context" section below.) By default, this is False.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_archive_year.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • date_list: A DateQuerySet object containing all months that have have objects available according to queryset, represented as datetime.datetime objects, in ascending order.

  • year: The given year, as a four-character string.

  • object_list: If the make_object_list parameter is True, this will be set to a list of objects available for the given year, ordered by the date field. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo_list.

    If make_object_list is False, object_list will be passed to the template as an empty list.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_month

Description:

A monthly archive page showing all objects in a given month. Objects with a date in the future are not displayed unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • year: The four-digit year for which the archive serves (a string).
  • month: The month for which the archive serves, formatted according to the month_format argument.
  • queryset: A QuerySet of objects for which the archive serves.
  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the date-based archive should use to determine the objects on the page.

Optional arguments:

  • month_format: A format string that regulates what format the month parameter uses. This should be in the syntax accepted by Python's strftime(). It's set to "%b" by default, which is a three-letter month abbreviation. To change it to use numbers, use "%m".
  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is False.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'. The view will append '_list' to the value of this parameter in determining the variable's name.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_archive_month.html by default.

Template context:

New in Django 1.2: The inclusion of date_list in the template's context is new.

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • date_list: A DateQuerySet object containing all days that have have objects available in the given month, according to queryset, represented as datetime.datetime objects, in ascending order.
  • month: A datetime.date object representing the given month.
  • next_month: A datetime.date object representing the first day of the next month. If the next month is in the future, this will be None.
  • previous_month: A datetime.date object representing the first day of the previous month. Unlike next_month, this will never be None.
  • object_list: A list of objects available for the given month. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo_list.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_week

Description:

A weekly archive page showing all objects in a given week. Objects with a date in the future are not displayed unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • year: The four-digit year for which the archive serves (a string).
  • week: The week of the year for which the archive serves (a string). Weeks start with Sunday.
  • queryset: A QuerySet of objects for which the archive serves.
  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the date-based archive should use to determine the objects on the page.

Optional arguments:

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is True.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'. The view will append '_list' to the value of this parameter in determining the variable's name.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_archive_week.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • week: A datetime.date object representing the first day of the given week.
  • object_list: A list of objects available for the given week. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo_list.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_day

Description:

A day archive page showing all objects in a given day. Days in the future throw a 404 error, regardless of whether any objects exist for future days, unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • year: The four-digit year for which the archive serves (a string).
  • month: The month for which the archive serves, formatted according to the month_format argument.
  • day: The day for which the archive serves, formatted according to the day_format argument.
  • queryset: A QuerySet of objects for which the archive serves.
  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the date-based archive should use to determine the objects on the page.

Optional arguments:

  • month_format: A format string that regulates what format the month parameter uses. This should be in the syntax accepted by Python's strftime(). It's set to "%b" by default, which is a three-letter month abbreviation. To change it to use numbers, use "%m".
  • day_format: Like month_format, but for the day parameter. It defaults to "%d" (day of the month as a decimal number, 01-31).
  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is False.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'. The view will append '_list' to the value of this parameter in determining the variable's name.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.
  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_archive_day.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • day: A datetime.date object representing the given day.
  • next_day: A datetime.date object representing the next day. If the next day is in the future, this will be None.
  • previous_day: A datetime.date object representing the previous day. Unlike next_day, this will never be None.
  • object_list: A list of objects available for the given day. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo_list.

django.views.generic.date_based.archive_today

Description:

A day archive page showing all objects for today. This is exactly the same as archive_day, except the year/month/day arguments are not used, and today's date is used instead.

django.views.generic.date_based.object_detail

Description:

A page representing an individual object. If the object has a date value in the future, the view will throw a 404 error by default, unless you set allow_future to True.

Required arguments:

  • year: The object's four-digit year (a string).

  • month: The object's month , formatted according to the month_format argument.

  • day: The object's day , formatted according to the day_format argument.

  • queryset: A QuerySet that contains the object.

  • date_field: The name of the DateField or DateTimeField in the QuerySet's model that the generic view should use to look up the object according to year, month and day.

  • Either object_id or (slug and slug_field) is required.

    If you provide object_id, it should be the value of the primary-key field for the object being displayed on this page.

    Otherwise, slug should be the slug of the given object, and slug_field should be the name of the slug field in the QuerySet's model. By default, slug_field is 'slug'.

Optional arguments:

  • month_format: A format string that regulates what format the month parameter uses. This should be in the syntax accepted by Python's strftime(). It's set to "%b" by default, which is a three-letter month abbreviation. To change it to use numbers, use "%m".

  • day_format: Like month_format, but for the day parameter. It defaults to "%d" (day of the month as a decimal number, 01-31).

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).

  • template_name_field: The name of a field on the object whose value is the template name to use. This lets you store template names in the data. In other words, if your object has a field 'the_template' that contains a string 'foo.html', and you set template_name_field to 'the_template', then the generic view for this object will use the template 'foo.html'.

    It's a bit of a brain-bender, but it's useful in some cases.

  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.

  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.

  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'.

  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.

  • allow_future: A boolean specifying whether to include "future" objects on this page, where "future" means objects in which the field specified in date_field is greater than the current date/time. By default, this is False.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_detail.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • object: The object. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo.

List/detail generic views

The list-detail generic-view framework (in the django.views.generic.list_detail module) is similar to the date-based one, except the former simply has two views: a list of objects and an individual object page.

django.views.generic.list_detail.object_list

Description:

A page representing a list of objects.

Required arguments:

  • queryset: A QuerySet that represents the objects.

Optional arguments:

  • paginate_by: An integer specifying how many objects should be displayed per page. If this is given, the view will paginate objects with paginate_by objects per page. The view will expect either a page query string parameter (via GET) or a page variable specified in the URLconf. See Notes on pagination below.
  • page: The current page number, as an integer, or the string 'last'. This is 1-based. See Notes on pagination below.
  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).
  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.
  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.
  • allow_empty: A boolean specifying whether to display the page if no objects are available. If this is False and no objects are available, the view will raise a 404 instead of displaying an empty page. By default, this is True.
  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.
  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'. The view will append '_list' to the value of this parameter in determining the variable's name.
  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_list.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • object_list: The list of objects. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo_list.
  • is_paginated: A boolean representing whether the results are paginated. Specifically, this is set to False if the number of available objects is less than or equal to paginate_by.

If the results are paginated, the context will contain these extra variables:

  • paginator: An instance of django.core.paginator.Paginator.
  • page_obj: An instance of django.core.paginator.Page.

Notes on pagination

If paginate_by is specified, Django will paginate the results. You can specify the page number in the URL in one of two ways:

  • Use the page parameter in the URLconf. For example, this is what your URLconf might look like:

    (r'^objects/page(?P<page>[0-9]+)/$', 'object_list', dict(info_dict))
    
  • Pass the page number via the page query-string parameter. For example, a URL would look like this:

    /objects/?page=3
  • To loop over all the available page numbers, use the page_range variable. You can iterate over the list provided by page_range to create a link to every page of results.

These values and lists are 1-based, not 0-based, so the first page would be represented as page 1.

For more on pagination, read the pagination documentation.

As a special case, you are also permitted to use last as a value for page:

/objects/?page=last

This allows you to access the final page of results without first having to determine how many pages there are.

Note that page must be either a valid page number or the value last; any other value for page will result in a 404 error.

django.views.generic.list_detail.object_detail

A page representing an individual object.

Description:

A page representing an individual object.

Required arguments:

  • queryset: A QuerySet that contains the object.

  • Either object_id or (slug and slug_field) is required.

    If you provide object_id, it should be the value of the primary-key field for the object being displayed on this page.

    Otherwise, slug should be the slug of the given object, and slug_field should be the name of the slug field in the QuerySet's model. By default, slug_field is 'slug'.

Optional arguments:

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).

  • template_name_field: The name of a field on the object whose value is the template name to use. This lets you store template names in the data. In other words, if your object has a field 'the_template' that contains a string 'foo.html', and you set template_name_field to 'the_template', then the generic view for this object will use the template 'foo.html'.

    It's a bit of a brain-bender, but it's useful in some cases.

  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.

  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.

  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'.

  • mimetype: The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE setting.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_detail.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • object: The object. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo.

Create/update/delete generic views

The django.views.generic.create_update module contains a set of functions for creating, editing and deleting objects.

django.views.generic.create_update.create_object

Description:

A page that displays a form for creating an object, redisplaying the form with validation errors (if there are any) and saving the object.

Required arguments:

  • Either form_class or model is required.

    If you provide form_class, it should be a django.forms.ModelForm subclass. Use this argument when you need to customize the model's form. See the ModelForm docs for more information.

    Otherwise, model should be a Django model class and the form used will be a standard ModelForm for model.

Optional arguments:

  • post_save_redirect: A URL to which the view will redirect after saving the object. By default, it's object.get_absolute_url().

    post_save_redirect may contain dictionary string formatting, which will be interpolated against the object's field attributes. For example, you could use post_save_redirect="/polls/%(slug)s/".

  • login_required: A boolean that designates whether a user must be logged in, in order to see the page and save changes. This hooks into the Django authentication system. By default, this is False.

    If this is True, and a non-logged-in user attempts to visit this page or save the form, Django will redirect the request to /accounts/login/.

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).

  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.

  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_form.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • form: A django.forms.ModelForm instance representing the form for creating the object. This lets you refer to form fields easily in the template system.

    For example, if the model has two fields, name and address:

    <form action="" method="post">
    <p>{{ form.name.label_tag }} {{ form.name }}</p>
    <p>{{ form.address.label_tag }} {{ form.address }}</p>
    </form>

    See the forms documentation for more information about using Form objects in templates.

django.views.generic.create_update.update_object

Description:

A page that displays a form for editing an existing object, redisplaying the form with validation errors (if there are any) and saving changes to the object. This uses a form automatically generated from the object's model class.

Required arguments:

  • Either form_class or model is required.

    If you provide form_class, it should be a django.forms.ModelForm subclass. Use this argument when you need to customize the model's form. See the ModelForm docs for more information.

    Otherwise, model should be a Django model class and the form used will be a standard ModelForm for model.

  • Either object_id or (slug and slug_field) is required.

    If you provide object_id, it should be the value of the primary-key field for the object being displayed on this page.

    Otherwise, slug should be the slug of the given object, and slug_field should be the name of the slug field in the QuerySet's model. By default, slug_field is 'slug'.

Optional arguments:

  • post_save_redirect: A URL to which the view will redirect after saving the object. By default, it's object.get_absolute_url().

    post_save_redirect may contain dictionary string formatting, which will be interpolated against the object's field attributes. For example, you could use post_save_redirect="/polls/%(slug)s/".

  • login_required: A boolean that designates whether a user must be logged in, in order to see the page and save changes. This hooks into the Django authentication system. By default, this is False.

    If this is True, and a non-logged-in user attempts to visit this page or save the form, Django will redirect to LOGIN_URL (which defaults to /accounts/login/).

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).

  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.

  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.

  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_form.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • form: A django.forms.ModelForm instance representing the form for editing the object. This lets you refer to form fields easily in the template system.

    For example, if the model has two fields, name and address:

    <form action="" method="post">
    <p>{{ form.name.label_tag }} {{ form.name }}</p>
    <p>{{ form.address.label_tag }} {{ form.address }}</p>
    </form>

    See the forms documentation for more information about using Form objects in templates.

  • object: The original object being edited. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo.

django.views.generic.create_update.delete_object

Description:

A view that displays a confirmation page and deletes an existing object. The given object will only be deleted if the request method is POST. If this view is fetched via GET, it will display a confirmation page that should contain a form that POSTs to the same URL.

Required arguments:

  • model: The Django model class of the object that the form will delete.

  • Either object_id or (slug and slug_field) is required.

    If you provide object_id, it should be the value of the primary-key field for the object being displayed on this page.

    Otherwise, slug should be the slug of the given object, and slug_field should be the name of the slug field in the QuerySet's model. By default, slug_field is 'slug'.

  • post_delete_redirect: A URL to which the view will redirect after deleting the object.

Optional arguments:

  • login_required: A boolean that designates whether a user must be logged in, in order to see the page and save changes. This hooks into the Django authentication system. By default, this is False.

    If this is True, and a non-logged-in user attempts to visit this page or save the form, Django will redirect to LOGIN_URL (which defaults to /accounts/login/).

  • template_name: The full name of a template to use in rendering the page. This lets you override the default template name (see below).

  • template_loader: The template loader to use when loading the template. By default, it's django.template.loader.

  • extra_context: A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the generic view will call it just before rendering the template.

  • context_processors: A list of template-context processors to apply to the view's template.

  • template_object_name: Designates the name of the template variable to use in the template context. By default, this is 'object'.

Template name:

If template_name isn't specified, this view will use the template <app_label>/<model_name>_confirm_delete.html by default.

Template context:

In addition to extra_context, the template's context will be:

  • object: The original object that's about to be deleted. This variable's name depends on the template_object_name parameter, which is 'object' by default. If template_object_name is 'foo', this variable's name will be foo.