Are there any purposes for the management folder in Django other than commands?
Asked Answered
A

3

14

Why are management commands not in their own app-level folder? Are there other items which can be added to the management directory or is this structure purely vestigial?

Attraction answered 29/4, 2011 at 18:47 Comment(0)
R
4

I don't know the history, but it seems semi-vestigial to me. As for other stuff that can be put in the management dir, the comment about signals above hints at one answer.

One thing I do when trying to answer such questions is to look at the contrib apps to see what they do. Some interesting bits to be found:

Note that in the second one, the management module is a .py file rather than a directory.

Radioluminescence answered 13/5, 2011 at 16:26 Comment(0)
S
3

Another thing that needs to be placed in the management module (either in management/__init__.py or management.py) is any listeners to the django.db.models.signals.post_sync signal.

Shortsighted answered 29/4, 2011 at 18:47 Comment(0)
D
-2

It is a skeleton of django's general design. Almost every project will contain multiple apps, so the project is really a container of apps with a shared configuration.

You can add other items to the project level folder, but the design suggests only high level cross-app items should be. Examples are urls and settings.

Denitrify answered 2/5, 2011 at 6:8 Comment(0)

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