I started using django-tables2 (which I can highly recommend from the first impression) and I m asking myself how to implement column filtering. I do not find the appropriate documentation for it, but I m sure it is somewhere out there.
A little late answer but anyway ... I also couldn't find any appropriate documentation for column filtering. There are many methods to do it:
A. By hand: I add a form containing the fields I'd like to filter with and then I do something like this in my view:
data = models.MyClass.all() form = forms.MyFilterForm(request.GET) if request.GET.get('field1'): data = data.filter(field1=request.GET.get('field1') ) if request.GET.get('field2'): data = data.filter(field2=request.GET.get('field2') ) ... table = tables.MyTable(data)
This works very nice however it's not so DRY because it is hard coded in the view.
B. Using a SingleTableView: Another way is to add a SingleTableView that contains the form:
from django_tables2 import SingleTableView class FilteredSingleTableView(SingleTableView): def get_table_data(self): data= models.MyClass.objects.all if self.request.GET.get('field1'): data = data.filter(field1=self.request.GET.get('field1') ) if self.request.GET.get('field1'): data = data.filter(field1=self.request.GET.get('field1') ) return data def get_context_data(self, **kwargs): context = super(FilteredSingleTableView, self).get_context_data(**kwargs) context['form'] = forms.MyFilterForm(self.request.user, self.request.GET) return context
This is more DRY :)
C. Using SingleTableView and django_filters: This probably is the most DRY way :) Here's how to do it:
First define a filter:
class MyFilter(django_filters.FilterSet): field1 = django_filters.CharFilter() field2 = django_filters.CharFilter() ...
(or you can add a model filter in Meta ( model = MyModel)
Now, create a SingleTableView like this
class FilteredSingleTableView(SingleTableView): def get_table_data(self): f = filters.MyFilter(self.request.GET, queryset =models.MyClass.objects.all() , request=self.request ) return f def get_context_data(self, **kwargs): context = super(FilteredSingleTableView, self).get_context_data(**kwargs) f = filters.MyFilter(self.request.GET, queryset =models.MyClass.objects.all() , request=self.request ) context['form'] = f.form return context
(probably there is a problem with the line f =... but I couldn't make it work otherwise.
Finally, you can call the SingleTableView from your urls.py like this
url(r'^$', views.FilteredSingleTableView.as_view( table_class = tables.MyTable, model=models.MyClass, template_name ='mytemplate.html', table_pagination={ "per_page":50 } )) , name='filtered_single_table_view' ),
D. Using a generic class: This is an even more DRY and django-generic-class-views like way! This is actually the next step from C: Just declare your FilteredSingleTableView like this:
class FilteredSingleTableView(django_tables2.SingleTableView): filter_class = None def get_table_data(self): self.filter = self.filter_class(self.request.GET, queryset =super(FilteredSingleTableView, self).get_table_data() ) return self.filter.qs def get_context_data(self, **kwargs): context = super(FilteredSingleTableView, self).get_context_data(**kwargs) context['filter'] = self.filter return context
Now the FilteredSingleTableView has a parameter for the class of the filter so you may pass it in your urls.py among the other parameters:
url(r'^$', ships.views.FilteredSingleTableView.as_view( model=models.MyModel, table_class=tables.MyTable, template_name='mytemplate.html' , filter_class = filters.MyFilter, ) , name='myview'),
So you can use FilteredSingleTableView without modifications for filtering any of your models !!
Also notice that I've now saved the filter as an instance variable and removed the repetitive code f=filters.MyFilter(...)
that I had in C (get_table_data is called before get_context_data - if that was not always the case then we could add an get_filter
instance method that would do the trick) !
Update 23/04/2016: After popular demand, I've created a simple Django project that uses the generic FilteredSingleTableView class to filter a table of books. You may find it out at: https://github.com/spapas/django_table_filtering
Update 05/07/2016: Please notice that you should use return self.filter.qs
for the get_table_data
return in D (I've alread updated the answer with this) or else the view will take too long to render for big tables -- more info can be found on https://github.com/spapas/django_table_filtering/issues/1
There is an easier and DRYer way to build a generic view do this:
from django_filters.views import FilterView
from django_tables2 import SingleTableView
class FilterTableView(FilterView, SingleTableView):
def get_table_data(self):
return self.object_list
So you can do this:
class MyTableView(FilterTableView):
model = MyModel
table_class = MyTable
filterset_class = MyFilter
This is a complete working example from an app I'm writing using Django 2, Crispy Forms and Bootstrap 4:
urls.py:
from django.urls import path
from .views import ASTodasView
urlpatterns = [
path("asignatura/todas", ASTodasView.as_view(), name="as-todas"),
]
views.py:
from .filters import AsignaturaListFilter
from .forms import AsignaturaFilterFormHelper
from .models import Asignatura, Calendario
from .tables import AsignaturasTable
from .utils import PagedFilteredTableView
class ASTodasView(PagedFilteredTableView):
filter_class = AsignaturaListFilter
model = Asignatura
table_class = AsignaturasTable
template_name = "asignatura/todas.html"
formhelper_class = AsignaturaFilterFormHelper
def get_queryset(self):
anyo_academico = Calendario.get_anyo_academico_actual()
return Asignatura.objects.filter(anyo_academico=anyo_academico)
filters.py:
import django_filters
from .models import Asignatura
class AsignaturaListFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
class Meta:
model = Asignatura
fields = {
"nombre_estudio": ["icontains"],
"nombre_centro": ["icontains"],
"asignatura_id": ["exact"],
"nombre_asignatura": ["icontains"],
"cod_grupo_asignatura": ["exact"],
}
order_by = ["asignatura_id"]
forms.py:
from django import forms
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from crispy_forms.bootstrap import FormActions, InlineField
from crispy_forms.helper import FormHelper
from crispy_forms.layout import Div, Fieldset, Layout, Submit
class AsignaturaFilterFormHelper(FormHelper):
# See https://django-crispy-forms.readthedocs.io/en/latest/form_helper.html
form_class = "form form-inline"
form_id = "asignatura-search-form"
form_method = "GET"
form_tag = True
html5_required = True
layout = Layout(
Div(
Fieldset(
"<span class='fa fa-search'></span> " + str(_("Buscar asignatura")),
Div(
InlineField("nombre_estudio__icontains", wrapper_class="col-4"),
InlineField("nombre_centro__icontains", wrapper_class="col-4"),
InlineField("asignatura_id", wrapper_class="col-4"),
InlineField("nombre_asignatura__icontains", wrapper_class="col-4"),
InlineField("cod_grupo_asignatura", wrapper_class="col-4"),
css_class="row",
),
css_class="col-10 border p-3",
),
FormActions(
Submit("submit", _("Filtrar")),
css_class="col-2 text-right align-self-center",
),
css_class="row",
)
)
tables.py:
import django_tables2 as tables
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from .models import Asignatura
class AsignaturasTable(tables.Table):
class Meta:
attrs = {"class": "table table-striped table-hover cabecera-azul"}
model = Asignatura
fields = (
"nombre_estudio",
"nombre_centro",
"asignatura_id",
"nombre_asignatura",
"cod_grupo_asignatura",
)
empty_text = _(
"No hay ninguna asignatura que satisfaga los criterios de búsqueda."
)
template_name = "django_tables2/bootstrap4.html"
per_page = 20
utils.py:
from django_tables2 import SingleTableView
class PagedFilteredTableView(SingleTableView):
filter_class = None
formhelper_class = None
context_filter_name = "filter"
def get_table_data(self):
self.filter = self.filter_class(
self.request.GET, queryset=super().get_table_data()
)
self.filter.form.helper = self.formhelper_class()
return self.filter.qs
def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):
context = super(PagedFilteredTableView, self).get_context_data(**kwargs)
context[self.context_filter_name] = self.filter
return context
todas.html:
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% load crispy_forms_tags i18n %}
{% load render_table from django_tables2 %}
{% block title %}{% trans "Todas las asignaturas" %}{% endblock title %}
{% block content %}
<div class="container-blanco">
<h1>{% trans "Todas las asignaturas" %}</h1>
<hr />
<br />
{% crispy filter.form filter.form.helper %}
<br />
{% render_table table %}
</div>
{% endblock content %}
Hope it helps. Improvements are welcome.
If you prefer to use django_tables2.views.SingleTableMixin
in concert with Django's ListView
or a subclass thereof (rather than SingleTableView
) I suggest the following:
class FilteredListViewMixin(object):
""" Uses django-filter to filter a ListView. """
filter_class = None
def get_queryset(self):
qs = super(FilteredListViewMixin, self).get_queryset()
self.filter = self.filter_class(self.request.GET,
queryset=qs)
return self.filter.qs
def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):
context = super(FilteredListViewMixin, self).get_context_data(**kwargs)
context['filter'] = self.filter
return context
It has the added benefit of not being coupled to django-tables2
(DRY FTW) meaning it can be used with generic ListViews
also.
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