So in my Django URLS I want to be able to support:
mysite.com/section
mysite.com/section/
mysite.com/section/sectionAlphaNum
mysite.com/section/sectionAlphaNum/
I currently have as the URL pattern:
(r'^section/(?P<id>\s?)?', section)
Which should make section/ required and anything after optional, but it never seems to catch whatever sectionAlphaNum I enter in. In my views.py file I have
def section(request,id):
if id == '':
# Do something with id
else:
# Do default action
But it never seems to get into the top if branch where it does something with the id
Can you try the following syntax: (r'^section/(?P<id>\w+)/$', section)?
In regular expressions the ^ and $ represent the start and end of the string respectively.
Hence the URL to display /section/ would be:
(r'^section/$', section_view)
while the URL to display a specific section /section/section-id/ would be :
(r'^section/(?P<section_id>\w+)$', section_detail_view)
Ideally you have separate views in your views.py:
def section_view(request):
# show page about the various sections
def section_detail_view(request, section_id):
# show page about specific section by section_id
urls.py:
...
(r'^section/$', section),
(r'^section/(?P<id>\w+)/$', section),
...
views.py:
def section(request, id=None):
if id is None:
...
else:
...
To append just slash (from /section to /section/) enable CommonMiddleware in Your settings' MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES.
(r'^section(?:/(?P<id>\w+))?/$', section)
Notice the last ? to make the whole (?:/(?P<id>\w+)) optional.
Other answers are missing the ? or they don't make one of the slashes (/) optional like I do with the first one in (?:/( ...
r'^section/(?:(?P<id>\w+)/)?$' # same result, last '/' optional.
And make the parameter optional in the function as well:
def section(request, id=None):
# ...
I'm getting ready to move an old Classic ASP site to a new Django system. As part of the move we have to setup some of the old URLs to point to the new ones.
For example,
http://www.domainname.com/category.asp?categoryid=105 should 301 to http://www.domainname.com/some-category/
Perhaps I'm regex stupid or something, but for this example, I've included in my URLconf this:
(r'^asp/category\.asp\?categoryid=105$', redirect_to, {'url': '/some-category/'}),
My thinking is that I have to escape the . and the ? but for some reason when I go to test this, it does not redirect to /some-category/, it just 404s the URL as entered.
Am I doing it wrong? Is there a better way?
To elaborate on Daniel Roseman's answer, the query string is not part of the URL, so you'll probably want to write a view function that will grab the category from the query string and redirect appropriately. You can have a URL like:
(r'^category\.asp', category_redirect),
And a view function like:
def category_redirect(request):
if 'categoryid' not in request.GET:
raise Http404
cat_id = request.GET['category']
try:
cat = Category.objects.get(old_id=cat_id)
except Category.DoesNotExist:
raise Http404
else:
return HttpResponsePermanentRedirect('/%s/' % cat.slug)
(Altered to your own tastes and needs, of course.)
Everything after the ? is not part of the URL. It's part of the GET parameters.
I'm just learning Django, and am getting stuck with some url logic. I'm trying to allow either a category name or id in the url:
...
url(r'^(?P<booze_q>\w+|\d+)/$','glasses.views.booze'),
...
And then in thew view, only deal with that result once. However, if the url is a string - in this case, Whiskey, I get an error for trying to pass a string where an int is expected. This is the closest I've gotten so far:
def booze(request, booze_q):
booze = get_object_or_404(Booze,Q(pk=booze_q)|Q(name=booze_q))
return render_to_response('booze/detail.html', {'booze': booze})
But this returns an error: invalid literal for int() with base 10: 'Whiskey'
I'm sure it's a pretty easy thing, but this is my first Django app, so any help would be appreciated.
tl;dr: End result, I'd like mysite.com/1/ or mysite.com/Whiskey/ to both call the glasses.views.booze view, and get the object with id=1 or name=Whiskey
This is a common scenario you'll encounter quite often, which is typically handled by resorting to multiple arguments and having views behave differently based on which of the view arguments are then present or not.
What you do is first define a URL pattern that uniquely matches each specific case and then let Django's URL resolver set the arguments accordingly based on which of the patterns was matched.
Here's an example with a class based view, that performs two different queries based on which of the two keyword arguments, booze_id or booze_name, is set:
url(r'^(?P<booze_id>\d+)/$', BoozeDetailView.as_view()),
url(r'^(?P<booze_name>\w+)/$', BoozeDetailView.as_view()),
class BoozeDetailView(DetailView):
model = Booze
def get_object(self):
booze_id = self.kwargs.get('booze_id', None)
booze_name = self.kwargs.get('booze_name', None)
if booze_id:
return self.model.objects.get(id=booze_id)
else:
return self.model.objects.get(name=booze_name)
You will always get a string, even if the string contains a number.
1) You should not have a parameter that could be either an id or something else. One day you will enter an item whose name is a number and your app will fail.
2) When querying for pk with a string django automatically tries to convert it into an integer. You'll have to handle the non-pk case before constructing that query.
I want to make the arguments i pass through the urls as optional.
url(r'^dashboard/forms/(\w+)|/create/$','dashboard_message_create'),
url(r'^dashboard/forms/(\w+)/delete/$', 'delete'),
The problem with using "|" is that django cannot distinguish between the above 2 urls.
I am new to django . So any pointers in this direction will be very useful. Thanks in advance
You can try associating both with the same view
url(r'^dashboard/forms/create/$','dashboard_message_create'),
url(r'^dashboard/forms/(\w+)/create/$','dashboard_message_create'),
Then, make sure dashboard_message_create works without the argument
def dashboard_message_create(request, name=None):
# Body
You can do better, using full re-superpowers (well, almost super, no lookahead in urlpatterns...):
url(r'^dashboard/forms/((?P<name>\w+)/)?create/$','dashboard_message_create'),
url(r'^dashboard/forms/(?P<name>\w+)/delete/$', 'delete'),
Add named args to your view and ignore the unnamed ones:
def dashboard_message_create(request, name, *args, **kwargs):
pass
The name arg will be None when the ((?P<name>\w+)/)? token matches the empty string.
I am currently defining regular expressions in order to capture parameters in a URL, as described in the tutorial. How do I access parameters from the URL as part the HttpRequest object?
My HttpRequest.GET currently returns an empty QueryDict object.
I'd like to learn how to do this without a library, so I can get to know Django better.
When a URL is like domain/search/?q=haha, you would use request.GET.get('q', '').
q is the parameter you want, and '' is the default value if q isn't found.
However, if you are instead just configuring your URLconf**, then your captures from the regex are passed to the function as arguments (or named arguments).
Such as:
(r'^user/(?P<username>\w{0,50})/$', views.profile_page,),
Then in your views.py you would have
def profile_page(request, username):
# Rest of the method
To clarify camflan's explanation, let's suppose you have
the rule url(regex=r'^user/(?P<username>\w{1,50})/$', view='views.profile_page')
an incoming request for http://domain/user/thaiyoshi/?message=Hi
The URL dispatcher rule will catch parts of the URL path (here "user/thaiyoshi/") and pass them to the view function along with the request object.
The query string (here message=Hi) is parsed and parameters are stored as a QueryDict in request.GET. No further matching or processing for HTTP GET parameters is done.
This view function would use both parts extracted from the URL path and a query parameter:
def profile_page(request, username=None):
user = User.objects.get(username=username)
message = request.GET.get('message')
As a side note, you'll find the request method (in this case "GET", and for submitted forms usually "POST") in request.method. In some cases, it's useful to check that it matches what you're expecting.
Update: When deciding whether to use the URL path or the query parameters for passing information, the following may help:
use the URL path for uniquely identifying resources, e.g. /blog/post/15/ (not /blog/posts/?id=15)
use query parameters for changing the way the resource is displayed, e.g. /blog/post/15/?show_comments=1 or /blog/posts/2008/?sort_by=date&direction=desc
to make human-friendly URLs, avoid using ID numbers and use e.g. dates, categories, and/or slugs: /blog/post/2008/09/30/django-urls/
Using GET
request.GET["id"]
Using POST
request.POST["id"]
Someone would wonder how to set path in file urls.py, such as
domain/search/?q=CA
so that we could invoke query.
The fact is that it is not necessary to set such a route in file urls.py. You need to set just the route in urls.py:
urlpatterns = [
path('domain/search/', views.CityListView.as_view()),
]
And when you input http://servername:port/domain/search/?q=CA. The query part '?q=CA' will be automatically reserved in the hash table which you can reference though
request.GET.get('q', None).
Here is an example (file views.py)
class CityListView(generics.ListAPIView):
serializer_class = CityNameSerializer
def get_queryset(self):
if self.request.method == 'GET':
queryset = City.objects.all()
state_name = self.request.GET.get('q', None)
if state_name is not None:
queryset = queryset.filter(state__name=state_name)
return queryset
In addition, when you write query string in the URL:
http://servername:port/domain/search/?q=CA
Do not wrap query string in quotes. For example,
http://servername:port/domain/search/?q="CA"
def some_view(request, *args, **kwargs):
if kwargs.get('q', None):
# Do something here ..
For situations where you only have the request object you can use request.parser_context['kwargs']['your_param']
You have two common ways to do that in case your URL looks like that:
https://domain/method/?a=x&b=y
Version 1:
If a specific key is mandatory you can use:
key_a = request.GET['a']
This will return a value of a if the key exists and an exception if not.
Version 2:
If your keys are optional:
request.GET.get('a')
You can try that without any argument and this will not crash.
So you can wrap it with try: except: and return HttpResponseBadRequest() in example.
This is a simple way to make your code less complex, without using special exceptions handling.
I would like to share a tip that may save you some time.
If you plan to use something like this in your urls.py file:
url(r'^(?P<username>\w+)/$', views.profile_page,),
Which basically means www.example.com/<username>. Be sure to place it at the end of your URL entries, because otherwise, it is prone to cause conflicts with the URL entries that follow below, i.e. accessing one of them will give you the nice error: User matching query does not exist.
I've just experienced it myself; hope it helps!
These queries are currently done in two ways. If you want to access the query parameters (GET) you can query the following:
http://myserver:port/resource/?status=1
request.query_params.get('status', None) => 1
If you want to access the parameters passed by POST, you need to access this way:
request.data.get('role', None)
Accessing the dictionary (QueryDict) with 'get()', you can set a default value. In the cases above, if 'status' or 'role' are not informed, the values are None.
If you don't know the name of params and want to work with them all, you can use request.GET.keys() or dict(request.GET) functions
This is not exactly what you asked for, but this snippet is helpful for managing query_strings in templates.
If you only have access to the view object, then you can get the parameters defined in the URL path this way:
view.kwargs.get('url_param')
If you only have access to the request object, use the following:
request.resolver_match.kwargs.get('url_param')
Tested on Django 3.
views.py
from rest_framework.response import Response
def update_product(request, pk):
return Response({"pk":pk})
pk means primary_key.
urls.py
from products.views import update_product
from django.urls import path
urlpatterns = [
...,
path('update/products/<int:pk>', update_product)
]
You might as well check request.META dictionary to access many useful things like
PATH_INFO, QUERY_STRING
# for example
request.META['QUERY_STRING']
# or to avoid any exceptions provide a fallback
request.META.get('QUERY_STRING', False)
you said that it returns empty query dict
I think you need to tune your url to accept required or optional args or kwargs
Django got you all the power you need with regrex like:
url(r'^project_config/(?P<product>\w+)/$', views.foo),
more about this at django-optional-url-parameters
This is another alternate solution that can be implemented:
In the URL configuration:
urlpatterns = [path('runreport/<str:queryparams>', views.get)]
In the views:
list2 = queryparams.split("&")
url parameters may be captured by request.query_params
It seems more recommended to use request.query_params. For example,
When a URL is like domain/search/?q=haha, you would use request.query_params.get('q', None)
https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/requests/
"request.query_params is a more correctly named synonym for request.GET.
For clarity inside your code, we recommend using request.query_params instead of the Django's standard request.GET. Doing so will help keep your codebase more correct and obvious - any HTTP method type may include query parameters, not just GET requests."