A cool, modern and responsive django admin application based on bootstrap 5
Documentation: readthedocs
Live Demo
Now you can try django-baton using the new shining live demo!
Login with user demo
and password demo
https://django-baton-demo.herokuapp.com/
- Features
- Installation
- Configuration
- Page Detection
- Signals
- Js Utilities
- Js Translations
- List Filters
- Changelist Includes
- Changelist Filters Includes
- Changelist Row Attributes
- Form Tabs
- Form Includes
- Collapsable stacked inlines entries
- Customization
- Tests
- Contributing
- Screenshots
Supports Django >= 2.1. For older versions of Django, please use django-baton@1.13.2.
This application was written with one concept in mind: overwrite as few django templates as possible. Everything is styled through CSS and when required, JS is used.
- Based on Bootstrap 5 and FontAwesome Free 5
- Fully responsive
- Custom and flexible sidebar menu
- Configurable search field
- Text input filters and dropdown list filters facilities
- Form tabs out of the box
- Easy way to include templates in the change form and change list pages
- Easy way to add attributes to change list table rows/cells
- Collapsable stacked inline entries
- Lazy loading of uploaded images
- Optional display of changelist filters in a modal
- Optional use of changelist filters as a form (combine some filters at once and perform the search action)
- Optional index page filled with google analytics widgets
- Customization available for recompiling the js app provided
- IT translations provided
The following packages are required to manage the Google Analytics index:
- google-auth
- google-auth-httplib2
- google-api-python-client
- requests
Baton is based on the following frontend technologies:
- Bootstrap 5
- FontAwesome 5 (solid and brands)
Flexbox is used to accomplish responsiveness. jQuery is used for DOM manipulations.
All JS, fonts and CSS are compiled, and produce a single JS file which is included in the base_site
template.
A custom menu is provided, the menu is rendered through JS, and data is fetched in JSON format through an AJAX request.
Install the last stable release
$ pip install django-baton
ℹ️ In order to use the Google Analytics index, install baton along the optional dependencies with
$ pip install django-baton[analytics]
or clone the repo inside your project
$ git clone https://github.com/otto-torino/django-baton.git
Add baton
and baton.autodiscover
to your INSTALLED_APPS
:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
# ...
'baton',
'django.contrib.admin',
# ... (place baton.autodiscover at the very end)
'baton.autodiscover',
)
Replace django.contrib.admin
in your project urls, and add baton urls:
# from django.contrib import admin
from baton.autodiscover import admin
from django.urls import path, include
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
path('baton/', include('baton.urls')),
]
If you get a "No crypto library available" when using the Google Analytics index, install this package:
$ pip install PyOpenSSL
Well, first baton
has to be placed before the django.contrib.admin
app, because it overrides 3 templates and resets all CSS.
The baton.autodiscover
entry is needed as the last installed app in order to register all applications for the admin.
I decided to create a custom AdminSite
class, to allow the customization of some variables the Django way (site_header
, index_title
, ...). I think it's a good approach to customize these vars instead of overwriting the orignal templates. The problem is that when creating a custom AdminSite, you have to register all the apps manualy. I didn't like
that so I wrote this autodiscover
module which automatically registers all the apps registered with the Django's default AdminSite. For this to work, all the apps must be already registered so this app should be the last in INSTALLED_APPS
.
The configuration dictionary must be defined inside your settings:
BATON = {
'SITE_HEADER': 'Baton',
'SITE_TITLE': 'Baton',
'INDEX_TITLE': 'Site administration',
'SUPPORT_HREF': 'https://github.com/otto-torino/django-baton/issues',
'COPYRIGHT': 'copyright © 2020 <a href="https://www.otto.to.it">Otto srl</a>', # noqa
'POWERED_BY': '<a href="https://www.otto.to.it">Otto srl</a>',
'CONFIRM_UNSAVED_CHANGES': True,
'SHOW_MULTIPART_UPLOADING': True,
'ENABLE_IMAGES_PREVIEW': True,
'CHANGELIST_FILTERS_IN_MODAL': True,
'CHANGELIST_FILTERS_ALWAYS_OPEN': False,
'CHANGELIST_FILTERS_FORM': True,
'MENU_ALWAYS_COLLAPSED': False,
'MENU_TITLE': 'Menu',
'MESSAGES_TOASTS': False,
'GRAVATAR_DEFAULT_IMG': 'retro',
'LOGIN_SPLASH': '/static/core/img/login-splash.png',
'SEARCH_FIELD': {
'label': 'Search contents...',
'url': '/search/',
},
'MENU': (
{ 'type': 'title', 'label': 'main', 'apps': ('auth', ) },
{
'type': 'app',
'name': 'auth',
'label': 'Authentication',
'icon': 'fa fa-lock',
'models': (
{
'name': 'user',
'label': 'Users'
},
{
'name': 'group',
'label': 'Groups'
},
)
},
{ 'type': 'title', 'label': 'Contents', 'apps': ('flatpages', ) },
{ 'type': 'model', 'label': 'Pages', 'name': 'flatpage', 'app': 'flatpages' },
{ 'type': 'free', 'label': 'Custom Link', 'url': 'http://www.google.it', 'perms': ('flatpages.add_flatpage', 'auth.change_user') },
{ 'type': 'free', 'label': 'My parent voice', 'default_open': True, 'children': [
{ 'type': 'model', 'label': 'A Model', 'name': 'mymodelname', 'app': 'myapp' },
{ 'type': 'free', 'label': 'Another custom link', 'url': 'http://www.google.it' },
] },
),
'ANALYTICS': {
'CREDENTIALS': os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'credentials.json'),
'VIEW_ID': '12345678',
}
}
SITE_HEADER
,COPYRIGHT
andPOWERED_BY
are marked as safe, so you can include img tags and links.SUPPORT_HREF
is the URL of the support link. For instance, you can usemailto:info@blabla.com
.CONFIRM_UNSAVED_CHANGES
: if set toTrue
a confirmation modal appears when leaving a change form or add form with unsaved changes. The check of a dirty form relies on the jQuery serialize method, so it's not 100% safe. Disabled inputs, particular widgets (ckeditor) can not be detected. Default value isTrue
.SHOW_MULTIPART_UPLOADING
: if set toTrue
an overlay with a spinner appears when submitting amultipart/form-data
form.ENABLE_IMAGES_PREVIEW
: if set toTrue
a preview is displayed above all input file fields which contain images. You can control how the preview is displayed by overriding the class.baton-image-preview
. By default, previews have 100px height and with a box shadow (on "hover").CHANGELIST_FILTERS_IN_MODAL
: if set toTrue
the changelist filters are opened in a centered modal above the document, useful when you set many filters. By default, its value isFalse
and the changelist filters appears from the right side of the changelist table.CHANGELIST_FILTERS_ALWAYS_OPEN
: if set toTrue
the changelist filters are opened by default. By default, its value isFalse
and the changelist filters can be expanded clicking a toggler button. This option is considered only ifCHANGELIST_FILTERS_IN_MODAL
isFalse
.CHANGELIST_FILTERS_FORM
: if set toTrue
the changelist filters are treated as in a form, you can set many of them and then press a filter button. With such option all standard filters are displayed as dropdowns.COLLAPSABLE_USER_AREA
: if set toTrue
the sidebar user area is collapsed and can be expanded to show links.MENU_ALWAYS_COLLAPSED
: if set toTrue
the menu is hidden at page load, and the navbar toggler is always visible, just click it to show the sidebar menu.MENU_TITLE
: the menu title shown in the sidebar. If an empty string, the menu title is hidden and takes no space on larger screens, the default menu voice will still be visible in the mobile menu.MESSAGES_TOASTS
: you can decide to show all or specific level admin messages in toasts. Set it toTrue
to show all message in toasts. set it to['warning', 'error']
to show only warning and error messages in toasts.GRAVATAR_DEFAULT_IMG
: the default gravatar image displayed if the user email is not associated to any gravatar image. Possible values: 404, mp, identicon, monsterid, wavatar, retro, robohash, blank (see http://en.gravatar.com/site/implement/images/).LOGIN_SPLASH
: an image used as body background in the login page. The image is centered and covers the whole viewport.
MENU
, SEARCH_FIELD
and ANALYTICS
configurations in detail:
Currently four kind of voices are supported: title, app, model and free.
Title and free voices can have children, which follow the following rules:
- children voices' children are ignored (do not place an app voice as a child)
Voices with children (title, app, free) can specify a default_open
key to expand the submenu by default.
If you don't define a MENU key in the configuration dictionary, the default MENU is shown.
Like MAIN and CONTENTS in the screenshot, it represents a menu section. You should set a label and optionally apps or perms key, used for visualization purposes.
If the title voice should act as a section title for a group of apps, you'd want to specify these apps, because if the user can't operate over them, then the voice is not shown. You can also define some perms (OR condition), like this:
{ 'type': 'title', 'label': 'main', 'perms': ('auth.add_user', ) },
Free voices can have children and so you can specify the default_open key.
You must specify the type and name keys. Optionally, an icon key (you can use FontAwesome classes which are included by default), a default_open key and a models key. If you don't define the models key, the default app models are listed under your app.
You must specify the type, name and app keys. Optionally, an icon key.
You can specify free voices. You must define a url and if you want some visibility permissions (OR clause). Free voices can have children and so you can specify the default_open key. Free voices also accept a re property, which specifies a regular expression used to decide whether to highlight the voice or not (the regular expression is evaluated against the document location pathname).
{
'type': 'free',
'label': 'Categories',
'url': '/admin/news/category/',
're': '^/admin/news/category/(\d*)?'
}
With Baton you can optionally configure a search field in the sidebar above the menu.
With this functionality, you can configure a sidebar input search field with autocomplete functionality that can let you surf easily and quickly to any page you desire.
'SEARCH_FIELD': {
'label': 'Label shown as placeholder',
'url': '/api/path/',
},
The autocomplete field will call a custom api at every keyup event. Such api receives the text
param in the querystring and should return a json response including the search results in the form:
{
length: 2,
data: [
{ label: 'My result #1', icon: 'fa fa-edit', url: '/admin/myapp/mymodel/1/change' },
// ...
]
}
In order to activate this functionality you should add the BATON configuration:
You should provide the results length and the data as an array of objects which must contain the label
and url
keys. The icon
key is optional and is treated as css class given to an i
element.
Let's see an example:
@staff_member_required
def admin_search(request):
text = request.GET.get('text', None)
res = []
news = News.objects.all()
if text:
news = news.filter(title__icontains=text)
for n in news:
res.append({
'label': str(n) + ' edit',
'url': '/admin/news/news/%d/change' % n.id,
'icon': 'fa fa-edit',
})
if text.lower() in 'Lucio Dalla Wikipedia'.lower():
res.append({
'label': 'Lucio Dalla Wikipedia',
'url': 'https://www.google.com',
'icon': 'fab fa-wikipedia-w'
})
return JsonResponse({
'length': len(res),
'data': res
})
You can move between the results using the keyboard up and down arrows, and you can browse to the voice url pressing Enter.
ℹ️ In order to use the Google Analytics index, install baton along the optional dependencies with
$ pip install django-baton[analytics]
You can create a cool index page displaying some statistics widgets using the Google Analytics API just by defining the ANALYTICS
setting.
It requires two keys:
CREDENTIALS
: it is the path to the credentials json fileVIEW_ID
: ID of the view from which to display data
You can add contents before and after the analytics dashboard by extending the baton/analytics.html
template and filling the baton_before_analytics
and baton_after_analytics
blocks.
Follow the steps in the Google Identity Platform documentation to create a service account from the Google Developer Console.
Once the service account is created, you can click the Generate New JSON Key button to create and download the key and add it to your project.
Add the service account as a user in Google Analytics. The service account you created in the previous step has an email address that you can add to any of the Google Analytics views you'd like to request the data from. It's generally best to only grant the service account read-only access.
Baton triggers some of its functionalities basing upon the current page. For example, it will trigger the tab functionality only when the current page is an add form or change form page.
Baton understands which page is currently displayed performing some basic regular expressions against the location pathname. There may be cases in which you'd like to serve such contents at different and custom urls, in such cases you need a way to tell Baton which kind of page is tied to that url.
For this reason you can inject your custom hook, a javascript function which should return the page type and that receives as first argument the Baton's default function to use as fallback, i.e.
<!-- admin/base_site.html -->
<script>
(function ($, undefined) {
$(document).ready(function () {
Baton.detectPageHook = fn => /newschange/.test(location.pathname) ? 'change_form' : fn()
Baton.init(JSON.parse(document.getElementById('baton-config').textContent));
})
})(jQuery, undefined)
</script>
In this case we tell Baton that when the location pathname includes the string newschange
, then the page should be considered a change_form
, otherwise we let Baton guess the page type.
So, in order to hook into the Baton page detection system, just define a Baton.detectPageHook
function which receives the default function as first argument and should return the page type.
The available page types are the following: dashboard
, admindocs
, login
, logout
, passowrd_change
, password_change_success
, add_form
, change_form
, changelist
, filer
, default
.
Baton provides a dispatcher that can be used to register function that will be called when some events occurr. Currently, Baton emits four types of events:
onNavbarReady
: dispatched when the navbar is fully renderedonMenuReady
: dispatched when the menu is fully rendered (probably the last event fired, since the menu contents are retrieved async)onTabsReady
: dispatched when the changeform tabs are fully renderedonMenuError
: dispatched if the request sent to retrieve menu contents failsonReady
: dispatched when Baton JS has finished its sync job
To use these, just override the baton admin/base_site.html
template and register your listeners before calling Baton.init
, i.e.
<!-- ... -->
<script>
(function ($, undefined) {
// init listeners
Baton.Dispatcher.register('onReady', function () { console.log('BATON IS READY') })
Baton.Dispatcher.register('onMenuReady', function () { console.log('BATON MENU IS READY') })
Baton.Dispatcher.register('onNavbarReady', function () { console.log('BATON NAVBAR IS READY') })
// end listeners
$(document).ready(function () {
Baton.init(JSON.parse(document.getElementById('baton-config').textContent));
})
})(jQuery, undefined)
</script>
<!-- ... -->
Baton comes with a number of exported js modules you can use to enhance your admin application.
Baton Dispatcher singleton module lets you subscribe to event and dispatch them, making use of the Mediator pattern.
Example:
// register a callback tied to the event
Baton.Dispatcher.register('myAppLoaded', function (evtName, s) { console.log('COOL ' + s) })
// emit the event
Baton.Dispatcher.emit('myAppLoaded', 'STUFF!')
Baton Modal class lets you insert some content on a bootstrap modal without dealing with all the markup.
Usage:
// modal configuration:
//
// let config = {
// title: 'My modal title',
// subtitle: 'My subtitle', // optional
// content: '<p>my html content</p>', // alternative to url
// url: '/my/url', // url used to perform an ajax request, the response is put inside the modal body. Alternative to content.
// hideFooter: false, // optional
// showBackBtn: false, // show a back button near the close icon, optional
// backBtnCb: function () {}, // back button click callback (useful to have a multi step modal), optional
// actionBtnLabel: 'save', // action button label, default 'save', optional
// actionBtnCb: null, // action button callback, optional
// onUrlLoaded: function () {}, // callback called when the ajax request has completed, optional
// size: 'lg', // modal size: sm, md, lg, xl, optional
// onClose: function () {} // callback called when the modal is closed, optional
// }
//
// constructs a new modal instance
// let myModal = new Baton.Modal(config)
let myModal = new Baton.Modal({
title: 'My modal title',
content: '<p>my html content</p>',
size: 'lg'
})
myModal.open();
myModal.close();
myModal.update({
title: 'Step 2',
content: '<p>cool</p>'
})
myModal.toggle();
There are some circustamces in which Baton will print to screen some js message. Baton detects the user locale and will localize such messages, but it comes with just en
and it
translations provided.
Baton retrieves the current user locale from the
lang
attribute of thehtml
tag.
However you can provide or add your own translations by attaching an object to the Baton
namespace:
// these are the default translations, you can just edit the one you need, or add some locales. Baton engione will always
// pick up your custom translation first, if it find them.
// you can define the object before Baton.init in the base_site template
Baton.translations = {
unsavedChangesAlert: 'You have some unsaved changes.',
uploading: 'Uploading...',
filter: 'Filter',
close: 'Close',
save: 'Save',
search: 'Search',
cannotCopyToClipboardMessage: 'Cannot copy to clipboard, please do it manually: Ctrl+C, Enter',
retrieveDataError: 'There was an error retrieving the data'
}
Baton.init(JSON.parse(document.getElementById('baton-config').textContent));
If Baton can't find the translations for the user locale, it will default to en
. Keep in mind that Baton will use en
translations for all en-xx
locales, but of course you can specify your custom translations!
Taken from this medium article
Baton defines a custom InputFilter class that you can use to create text input filters and use them as any other list_filters
, for example:
# your app admin
from baton.admin import InputFilter
class IdFilter(InputFilter):
parameter_name = 'id'
title = 'id'
def queryset(self, request, queryset):
if self.value() is not None:
search_term = self.value()
return queryset.filter(
id=search_term
)
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filters = (
'my_field',
IdFilter,
'my_other_field',
)
Taken from the github app django-admin-list-filter-dropdown
Baton provides a dropdown form of the following list filters:
Django admin filter name | Baton name |
---|---|
SimpleListFilter | SimpleDropdownFilter |
AllValuesFieldListFilter | DropdownFilter |
ChoicesFieldListFilter | ChoicesDropdownFilter |
RelatedFieldListFilter | RelatedDropdownFilter |
RelatedOnlyFieldListFilter | RelatedOnlyDropdownFilter |
The dropdown is visible only if the filter contains at least three options, otherwise the default template is used.
Usage:
from baton.admin import DropdownFilter, RelatedDropdownFilter, ChoicesDropdownFilter
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
# ...
list_filter = (
# for ordinary fields
('a_charfield', DropdownFilter),
# for choice fields
('a_choicefield', ChoiceDropdownFilter),
# for related fields
('a_foreignkey_field', RelatedDropdownFilter),
)
In order for this feature to work, the user browser must support html template tags.
Baton lets you include templates directly inside the change list page, in any position you desire. It's as simple as specifying the template path and the position of the template:
@admin.register(News)
class NewsAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
#...
baton_cl_includes = [
('news/admin_include_top.html', 'top', ),
('news/admin_include_below.html', 'below', )
]
In this case, Baton will place the content of the admin_include_top.html
template at the top of the changelist section (above the search field), and the content of the admin_include_below.html
below the changelist form.
You can specify the following positions:
Position | Description |
---|---|
top |
the template is placed inside the changelist form, at the top |
bottom |
the template is placed inside the changelist form, at the bottom |
above |
the template is placed above the changelist form |
below |
the template is placed below the changelist form |
And, of course, you can access the all the changelist view context variables inside your template.
In order for this feature to work, the user browser must support html template tags.
Baton lets you include templates directly inside the change list filter container, at the top or the bottom. It's as simple as specifying the template path and the position of the template:
@admin.register(News)
class NewsAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
#...
baton_cl_filters_includes = [
('news/admin_filters_include_top.html', 'top', ),
('news/admin_filters_include_bottom.html', 'bottom', )
]
You can specify the following positions:
Position | Description |
---|---|
top |
the template is placed inside the changelist filter container, at the top |
bottom |
the template is placed inside the changelist filter container, at the bottom |
And, of course, you can access the all the changelist view context variables inside your template.
In order for this feature to work, the user browser must support html template tags.
With Baton you can add every kind of html attribute (including css classes) to any element in the changelist table (cell, rows, ...)
It's a bit tricky, let's see how:
- Add a
baton_cl_rows_attributes
function to yourModelAdmin
class, which takesrequest
andcl
(changelist view) as parameters. - Return a json dictionary where the keys are used to match an element and the values specifies the attributes and other rules to select the element.
Better to see an example:
class NewsModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
# ...
def get_category(self, instance):
return mark_safe('<span class="span-category-id-%d">%s</span>' % (instance.id, str(instance.category)))
get_category.short_description = 'category'
def baton_cl_rows_attributes(self, request, cl):
data = {}
for news in cl.queryset.filter(category__id=2):
data[news.id] = {
'class': 'table-info',
}
data[news.id] = {
'class': 'table-success',
'data-lol': 'lol',
'title': 'A fantasctic tooltip!',
'selector': '.span-category-id-%d' % 1,
'getParent': 'td',
}
return json.dumps(data)
In such case we're returning a dictionary with possibly many keys (each key is an id of a news instance).
The first kind of dictionary elements will add a table-info
class to the tr
(rows) containing the news respecting the rule category__id=2
The second kind of element instead uses some more options to customize the element selection: you can specify a css selector, and you can specify if Baton should then take one of its parents, and in such case you can give a parent selector also.
In the example provided Baton will add the class table-success
, data-attribute
and the title
attribute to the cell which contains the element .span-category-id-1
.
So these are the rules:
- the default
selector
is#result_list tr input[name=_selected_action][value=' + key + ']
, meaning that it can work only if the model is editable (you have the checkox inputs for selecting a row), and selects the row of the instance identified bykey
. If you use a custom selector the dictionarykey
is unuseful. - the default
getParent
istr
. You can change it at you will, or set it toFalse
, in such case the element to which apply the given attributes will be the one specified byselector
. - Every other key different from
selector
andgetParent
will be considered an attribute and added to the element.
How much I loved django-suit form tabs? Too much. So, this was a feature I couldn't live without.
There are three types of tabs:
- fieldset tab: a tab containing a fieldset
- inline tab: a tab containing an inline
- group tab: a tab which can contain fieldsets and inlines in the order you specify
Tabs' titles are retrieved automatically. For fieldset and inline tabs, it's the fieldset's title and the inline related verbose name plural. For group tabs the first title is taken (either of an inline or fieldset section).
Using group tabs you can mix inlines with fields just by splitting fields into fieldsets and arranging them in your preferred order.
Let's see how to define tabs in your admin forms (everything is done through js, no templatetags or templates overriden):
class AttributeInline(admin.StackedInline):
model = Attribute
extra = 1
class FeatureInline(admin.StackedInline):
model = Feature
extra = 1
class ItemAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('label', 'description', 'main_feature', )
inlines = [AttributeInline, FeatureInline, ]
fieldsets = (
('Main', {
'fields': ('label', ),
'classes': ('order-0', 'baton-tabs-init', 'baton-tab-inline-attribute', 'baton-tab-fs-content', 'baton-tab-group-fs-tech--inline-feature', ),
'description': 'This is a description text'
}),
('Content', {
'fields': ('text', ),
'classes': ('tab-fs-content', ),
'description': 'This is another description text'
}),
('Tech', {
'fields': ('main_feature', ),
'classes': ('tab-fs-tech', ),
'description': 'This is another description text'
}),
)
As you can see these are the rules:
- Inline classes remain the same, no action needed
- On the first fieldset, define a
baton-tabs-init
class which enables tabs - On the first fieldset, you can add an
order-[NUMBER]
class, which will be used to determined in which position to place the first fieldset. The order starts from 0, and if omitted, the first fieldset has order 0. If you assign for example the classorder-2
to the first fieldset, then the first fieldset will be the third tab, while all other tabs will respect the order of declaration. - For every inline you want to put in a separate tab, add a class
baton-tab-inline-MODELNAME
orbaton-tab-inline-RELATEDNAME
if you've specified a related name in the model foreign key field - For every fieldset you want to put in a separate tab, add a class
baton-tab-fs-CUSTOMNAME
, and add a classtab-fs-CUSTOMNAME
on the fieldset - For every group you want to put in a separate tab, add a class
baton-tab-group-ITEMS
, where items can be inlines (inline-RELATEDNAME
) and/or fieldsets (fs-CUSTOMNAME
) separated by a double hypen--
. Also add a classtab-fs-CUSTOMNAME
on the fieldset items. - Tabs order respects the defined classes order
- Fieldsets without a specified tab will be added to the main tab. If you want the fieldset to instead display outside of any tabs, add a class
tab-fs-none
to the fieldset. The fieldset will then always be visible regardless of the current tab.
Other features:
- When a field has an error, the first tab containing errors is opened automatically
- You can open a tab on page load just by adding an hash to the url, i.e.
#inline-feature
,#fs-content
,#group-fs-tech--inline-feature
In order for this feature to work, the user browser must support html template tags.
Baton lets you include templates directly inside the change form page, in any position you desire. It's as simple as specifying the template path, the field name used as anchor and the position of the template:
@admin.register(News)
class NewsAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
#...
baton_form_includes = [
('news/admin_datetime_include.html', 'datetime', 'top', ),
('news/admin_content_include.html', 'content', 'above', )
]
In this case, Baton will place the content of the admin_datetime_include.html
template at the top of the datetime field row, and the content of the admin_content_include.html
above the content field row.
You can specify the following positions:
Position | Description |
---|---|
top |
the template is placed inside the form row, at the top |
bottom |
the template is placed inside the form row, at the bottom |
above |
the template is placed above the form row |
below |
the template is placed below the form row |
right |
the template is placed inline at the input field right side |
And, of course, you can access the {{ original }}
object variable inside your template.
It works seamlessly with the tab facility, if you include content related to a field inside one tab, then the content will be placed in the same tab.
Baton lets you collapse single stacked inline entries, just add a collapse-entry
class to the inline, with or without the entire collapse class:
class VideosInline(admin.StackedInline):
model = Video
extra = 1
classes = ('collapse-entry', ) # or ('collapse', 'collapse-entry', )
And if you want the first entry to be initially expanded, add also the expand-first
class:
class VideosInline(admin.StackedInline):
model = Video
extra = 1
classes = ('collapse-entry', 'expand-first', )
It's easy to heavily customize the appeareance of baton. All the stuff is compiled from a modern JS app which resides in baton/static/baton/app
.
You just need to change the SASS variables values (and you can also overwrite Bootstrap variables), re-compile, get the compiled JS file, place it in the static folder of your main app,
and place your main app (ROOTAPP) before baton in the INSTALLED_APPS
.
So:
$ git clone https://github.com/otto-torino/django-baton.git
$ cd django-baton/baton/static/baton/app/
$ npm install
$ vim src/styles/_variables.scss
$ npm run compile
$ cp dist/baton.min.js ROOTAPP/static/baton/app/dist/
If you want to test your live changes, just start the webpack dev server:
$ cd django-baton/baton/static/baton/app/
$ npm run dev
And inside the base_site.html
template, make these changes:
<!-- <script src="{% static 'baton/app/dist/baton.min.js' %}"></script> comment the compiled src and uncomment the webpack served src -->
<script src="http://localhost:8080/static/baton/app/dist/baton.min.js"></script>
Now while you make your changes to the JS app (CSS included), webpack will update the bundle automatically, so just refresh the page and you'll see your changes.
Starting from the release 1.7.1, django baton is provided with a set of unit and e2e tests. Testing baton is not so easy, because it almost do all the stuff with css rules and by manipulating the DOM. So the e2e tests are performed using selenium and inspecting the test application inside a real browser. In order to have them run properly, you need to have the test application running on localhost:8000
.
Start the test app (login admin:admin):
$ cd testapp
$ python3 -m venv .virtualenv
$ cd app
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ python manage.py runserver
Switch the baton js path in base_site.html
<!-- <script src="{% static 'baton/app/dist/baton.min.js' %}"></script> comment the compiled src and uncomment the webpack served src -->
<script src="http://localhost:8080/static/baton/app/dist/baton.min.js"></script>
Start the js app in watch mode
$ cd baton/static/baton/app
$ npm install
$ npm run dev
Now you'll see live all your changes in the testapp.
Install invoke
and sphinx_rtd_theme
$ pip install invoke sphinx_rtd_theme
Now you can generate the documentation in order to check it. Inside the root dir:
$ invoke docs
Read CONTRIBUTING.md