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FieldAccessForm (per-field user access for forms derived from models)

=== version 2 === > Parts of this code are based off of source from *davidcramer* on #django and I'd like to thank him for his assistance. Example: # forms.py ... class ForumPostForm(FieldAccessForm): class Meta: model = ForumPost class FieldAccess: moderator = FieldAccessLevel( lambda user, instance: user.get_profile().is_moderator, enable = ('approve', 'delete', 'edit') member = FieldAccessLevel( lambda user, instance: user.is_active, enable = ('edit',), exclude = ('approve', 'delete') ... # template ... <form action="" method="POST"> <table> {% for field in form %} <tr><th>{{ field.label_tag }}</th><td> {% if not field.field.disabled %} {{ field }} {% else %} {{ field.field.value }} {% endif %} </td></tr> {% endfor %} </table> <p><input type="submit" value="Update" /></p> </form> ... This class will grant or deny access to individual fields according to simple rules. The first argument must be a user object, but otherwise, this class is instantiated the same as a ModelForm. To utilize this code, inherit your form from FieldAccessForm, and create an inner class on your form called FieldAccess. Variables added to this inner class must have the same structure as that provided by the FieldAccessLevel class, which defines an access level, and the fields which apply to that access level. FieldAccessLevel takes as it's first argument a callable rule that validates this access level. That rule will be called with two arguments: 'user' (current user requesting access) and 'instance' (model instance in question). The keyword arguments to FieldAccessLevel are field groups which are used to determine which fields on this form are to be enabled and/or excluded, when the current user matches this access level. The term exclude indicates fields which are not to be rendered in the form at all. Any fields not grouped in either 'enable' or 'exclude' will be disabled by default. Superusers are always assumed to have full access. Otherwise, if a field is not specified with the FieldAccess inner class, then it is disabled by default. In other words, all users (except superusers) are denied access to all fields, unless they are specifically given access on a per-field basis. It is worth mentioning that multiple access levels can apply simultaneously, giving a user access to fields from all levels for which he matches the rule. If a user is denied access to a field, then the widget for that field is flagged as disabled and readonly. The field is also given two new attributes: a boolean 'disabled', and a 'value' containing the instanced model field. These two attributes allow a template author to have great control over the display of the form. For example, she may render the plain text value of a field instead of the disabled widget. The FieldAccess inner class also allows one to conditionally exclude fields from being rendered by the form. These exclusions operate very similarly to the standard Meta exclude option, except that they apply only to the access level in question. Note: The FieldAccess inner class may be used on both the form and the model; however, generally it makes more sense on the form. If you do use FieldAccess on both the form and model, be aware that both definitions will apply simultaneously. All access levels for which the user passes the rule will be processed, regardless of whether they were found on the form or the model.

  • form
  • field
  • permission
  • modelform
  • access
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GoogleAdmin: GMaps base layer in Geographic Admin (GeoDjango)

This GeoDjango subclass substitutes in the Google Maps base layer instead of the default one provided by Open Street Map. Requires the [google.html](http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/1145/) and [google.js](http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/1146/) templates (must be placed in `gis/admin` somewhere in your template path). Requires a Google Maps API key -- please abide by Google's [terms of service](http://code.google.com/apis/maps/terms.html).

  • gis
  • google
  • map
  • gmaps
  • layer
  • openlayers
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Message exception

This exception is util when you want to raise an exception but want its message be shown as a message to the user, with no error 500 or 404 pages. To use it, just append the middleware in the MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES setting and raises HttpMessage when necessary.

  • http
  • redirect
  • message
  • exception
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SizeAndTimeMiddleware

Used for showing size of the page in human readable format and time taken to generate the page on the server. To use it, in your base template, somewhere put the line: `<!-- ____SIZE_AND_DATE_PLACEHOLDER____ -->`. May be used on production.

  • middleware
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minimal nginx conf to split get/post requests

After a point the sql server becomes the bottleneck in lots of web application, and to scale, master-slave replication with single master, multiple slave is recommended. This setup with nginx can be used to accomplish traffic distribution between master and slave based on request method.

  • middleware
  • nginx
  • loadbalancing
  • master-slave
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better paginator template tag

This is slight improvement over [Paginator|Snippet 73](http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/73/). That used to not work properly if querystring already contains other parameters, like search result page. website/paginator.html: <br /><center> <span class="lbottom"> {% if has_previous %}<a href="{{ path }}page={{ previous }}"><< Previous </a>{% else %}<span>Previous </span>{% endif %} {% if show_first %}<a href="{{ path }}page=1">First </a>{% endif %} {% for page_no in page_numbers %} {% ifnotequal page_no page %} <a href="{{ path }}page={{ page_no }}">{{ page_no }} </a> {% else %} {{ page_no }} {% endifnotequal %} {% endfor %} {% if show_last %}<a href="{{ path }}page={{ pages }}">Last </a>{% endif %} {% if has_next %}<a href="{{ path }}page={{ next }}">Next >></a>{% else %}<span>Next </span>{% endif %} </span> <br /></center>

  • templatetag
  • paginator
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set_paths

To make all scripts relocatable. The layout of my project is: /some/path/myproject/ /some/path/myproject/some_script /some/path/myproject/some_other_script /some/path/myproject/set_paths.py /some/path/myproject/setttings.py /some/path/myproject/lib/ # some external libraries/apps checked in with my project. /some/path/myproject/myapp/ # my apps etc. This way myproject folder can be moved anywhere on the file system, and calling right path, settings.py is used.

  • django
  • cron
  • scripts
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send_html_mail

There are many versions, this is the one I like. This is quite generic, can auto generate text version of the mail if required.

  • html-mail
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ajax_validator generic view

Sample jQuery javascript to use this view: $(function(){ $("#id_username, #id_password, #id_password2, #id_email").blur(function(){ var url = "/ajax/validate-registration-form/?field=" + this.name; var field = this.name; $.ajax({ url: url, data: $("#registration_form").serialize(), type: "post", dataType: "json", success: function (response){ if(response.valid) { $("#"+field+"_errors").html("Sounds good"); } else { $("#"+field+"_errors").html(response.errors); } } }); }); }); For each field you will have to put a div/span with id like fieldname_errors where the error message will be shown.

  • ajax
  • javascript
  • view
  • generic
  • jquery
  • validation
  • form
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View and StatefulView classes

This snippet provides two view classes. The two reason I wanted to write this are, 1) Not have to import all the boilerplate code for each view and 2) so I could have the same URL handle loading a persons profile, or handle an OpenID login request without having to write two separate views. (Yes I know it isnt to hard to write my view, check the header and pass it off to the proper handler view, but I think it looks better code wise to have the handler methods all in one class) The first one is just for normal views conveniently called *View*. The *View* class that lets you do at least 90% of what you can do in a normal view function, but without having to import all the normal boilerplate code first since this class wraps methods around most if not all the *HttpResponse* types. The second class *StatefulView* maintains its state across page loads This is especialy useful for ajax type calls where you wish to maintain some form of state while the user is doing something but do not wish to make DB calls and do not wish to polute the session with trivial things **Note:** On my system it maintains state across browsers and computers as it is not tied to the session, BUT for this to happen all requests must be handled by the same proccess. So requests going to a differing process with not have the state maintained.

  • views
  • class
  • stateful
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django_stateful

this snippet provides a class that can be subclassed for creating views that retain state between requests, you can read more here http://code.google.com/p/django-stateful/ your comments are welcome!

  • django
  • stateful
  • seaside
  • continuations
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Cachable Class Method Decorator

This decorator does automatic key generation and simplifies caching. Can be used with any class, not just model subclasses. Also see [Stales Cache Decorator](http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/1131/).

  • cache
  • decorator
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