This Django app makes it easier to create custom filters in the change list of
Django Admin and supplies a TreeFilter
and a DateRangeFilter
too. Se below.
Install with:
pip install git+git://github.com/runekaagaard/django-admin-filtrate@8811bebb0f1985dfef599f65bcab923ba92ac9cc
Thanks user zxl634 for python3 support!
There are no release yet, but a version tested with 1.4 and 1.7 can be installed with pip like:
pip install git+git://github.com/runekaagaard/django-admin-filtrate@19f56144bfff2180cdc4e3f89770d7423c2b0318
I still need to test it with 1.5 and 1.6, update the documentation and then coax PyPi into making a release. Help could be great :) Major differences in this version is:
lookup_allowed()
no longer needed.- Uses the new builtin Django Filter classes.
- No need to register with
filtrate.register_filter
.
I will write proper docs, things are getting messy here, but here is the lowdown.
As I found out, you can't reliably convert the django date formats to Datepicker formats. So this commit introduces these two new settings:
FILTRATE = {
# See http://jqueryui.com/demos/datepicker/#localization.
'datepicker_region': 'en-GB',
# See http://docs.jquery.com/UI/Datepicker/formatDate.
'datepicker_date_format': 'yy-mm-dd',
}
So if the above defaults does not suit you, you have to change them your self. Check out the Datepicker documentation to see how to use them.
Django 1.2.4 introduces restrictions on which lookups that can be queried in the url, so at the moment the end user are responsible for checking for those, as in this example:
class CaseAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = ['client']
def lookup_allowed(self, key, *args, **kwargs):
if 'client__start_date' in key:
return True
else:
return super(CaseAdmin, self).lookup_allowed(key, *args, **kwargs)
Time and my Python meta-fu is running out, and I couldn't fix it so its not neccessary to define an empty Media() class as in:
class CaseAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
class Media():
pass
The base class that adds support for custom html in the content of the filter
and for using Media()
classes.
A recursive tree filter using the excellent library http://www.jstree.com/.
# The Filter.
from filtrate.filters import TreeFilter
from itertools import groupby
class CompanyDepartmentFilter(TreeFilter):
field_name = "client__department__id__in"
def get_title(self):
return 'By Department'
def get_tree(self):
from company.models import Department
qs = Department.objects.all().order_by('company_order', 'company')
return groupby(qs, lambda obj: getattr(obj, 'company'))
# The model.
from filtrate import register_filter
class Case(Model):
...
client = models.ForeignKey(Client)
register_filter(client, CompanyDepartmentFilter)
...
Filters results in a given date range using the jQueryUI datepicker plugin.
# The Filter.
from filtrate.filters import DateRangeFilter
class CaseLicenseStartDateFilter(DateRangeFilter):
field_name = 'caselicense__start_date'
def get_title(self):
return "By license start date"
# The model.
from filtrate import register_filter
class Case(Model):
...
caselicense = models.ForeignKey(Licence)
register_filter(caselicense, CaseLicenseStartDateFilter)
...
- Clone the repo and symlink or copy the "filtrate" folder to your apps folder.
- Add
filtrate
to your installed apps, beforedjango.contrib.admin
. - Add the "filtrate/templates" folder to your template folders.
FlexSelect requires "django.contrib.staticfiles" installed to work out of the box. If it is not then the js and css files must be installed manually. Read more about "django.contrib.staticfiles" at https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.3/ref/contrib/staticfiles/.