A clean, elegant URL scheme is an important detail in a high-quality Web application. Django lets you design URLs however you want, with no framework limitations.
There’s no .php
or .cgi
required, and certainly none of that
0,2097,1-1-1928,00
nonsense.
See Cool URIs don’t change, by World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee, for excellent arguments on why URLs should be clean and usable.
To design URLs for an app, you create a Python module informally called a URLconf (URL configuration). This module is pure Python code and is a simple mapping between URL patterns (as simple regular expressions) to Python callback functions (your views).
This mapping can be as short or as long as needed. It can reference other mappings. And, because it’s pure Python code, it can be constructed dynamically.
When a user requests a page from your Django-powered site, this is the algorithm the system follows to determine which Python code to execute:
ROOT_URLCONF
setting, but if the incoming
HttpRequest
object has an attribute called urlconf
(set by
middleware request processing), its value
will be used in place of the ROOT_URLCONF
setting.urlpatterns
. This should be a Python list, in the format returned by
the function django.conf.urls.patterns()
.HttpRequest
as its first argument and any values
captured in the regex as remaining arguments.Here’s a sample URLconf:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^articles/2003/$', 'news.views.special_case_2003'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/$', 'news.views.year_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/$', 'news.views.month_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/(\d+)/$', 'news.views.article_detail'),
)
Notes:
^articles
, not ^/articles
.'r'
in front of each regular expression string is optional but
recommended. It tells Python that a string is “raw” – that nothing in
the string should be escaped. See Dive Into Python’s explanation.Example requests:
/articles/2005/03/
would match the third entry in the
list. Django would call the function
news.views.month_archive(request, '2005', '03')
./articles/2005/3/
would not match any URL patterns, because the
third entry in the list requires two digits for the month./articles/2003/
would match the first pattern in the list, not the
second one, because the patterns are tested in order, and the first one
is the first test to pass. Feel free to exploit the ordering to insert
special cases like this./articles/2003
would not match any of these patterns, because each
pattern requires that the URL end with a slash./articles/2003/03/03/
would match the final pattern. Django would call
the function news.views.article_detail(request, '2003', '03', '03')
.The above example used simple, non-named regular-expression groups (via parenthesis) to capture bits of the URL and pass them as positional arguments to a view. In more advanced usage, it’s possible to use named regular-expression groups to capture URL bits and pass them as keyword arguments to a view.
In Python regular expressions, the syntax for named regular-expression groups
is (?P<name>pattern)
, where name
is the name of the group and
pattern
is some pattern to match.
Here’s the above example URLconf, rewritten to use named groups:
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^articles/2003/$', 'news.views.special_case_2003'),
(r'^articles/(?P<year>\d{4})/$', 'news.views.year_archive'),
(r'^articles/(?P<year>\d{4})/(?P<month>\d{2})/$', 'news.views.month_archive'),
(r'^articles/(?P<year>\d{4})/(?P<month>\d{2})/(?P<day>\d{2})/$', 'news.views.article_detail'),
)
This accomplishes exactly the same thing as the previous example, with one subtle difference: The captured values are passed to view functions as keyword arguments rather than positional arguments. For example:
/articles/2005/03/
would call the function
news.views.month_archive(request, year='2005', month='03')
, instead
of news.views.month_archive(request, '2005', '03')
./articles/2003/03/03/
would call the function
news.views.article_detail(request, year='2003', month='03', day='03')
.In practice, this means your URLconfs are slightly more explicit and less prone to argument-order bugs – and you can reorder the arguments in your views’ function definitions. Of course, these benefits come at the cost of brevity; some developers find the named-group syntax ugly and too verbose.
Here’s the algorithm the URLconf parser follows, with respect to named groups vs. non-named groups in a regular expression:
If there are any named arguments, it will use those, ignoring non-named arguments. Otherwise, it will pass all non-named arguments as positional arguments.
In both cases, it will pass any extra keyword arguments as keyword arguments. See “Passing extra options to view functions” below.
The URLconf searches against the requested URL, as a normal Python string. This does not include GET or POST parameters, or the domain name.
For example, in a request to http://www.example.com/myapp/
, the URLconf
will look for myapp/
.
In a request to http://www.example.com/myapp/?page=3
, the URLconf will look
for myapp/
.
The URLconf doesn’t look at the request method. In other words, all request
methods – POST
, GET
, HEAD
, etc. – will be routed to the same
function for the same URL.
urlpatterns
should be a Python list, in the format returned by the function
django.conf.urls.patterns()
. Always use patterns()
to create
the urlpatterns
variable.
django.conf.urls
utility functions¶Deprecated since version 1.4: Starting with Django 1.4 functions patterns
, url
, include
plus
the handler*
symbols described below live in the django.conf.urls
module.
Until Django 1.3 they were located in django.conf.urls.defaults
. You
still can import them from there but it will be removed in Django 1.6.
patterns
(prefix, pattern_description, ...)¶A function that takes a prefix, and an arbitrary number of URL patterns, and returns a list of URL patterns in the format Django needs.
The first argument to patterns()
is a string prefix
. See
The view prefix below.
The remaining arguments should be tuples in this format:
(regular expression, Python callback function [, optional dictionary [, optional name]])
...where optional dictionary
and optional name
are optional. (See
Passing extra options to view functions below.)
Note
Because patterns() is a function call, it accepts a maximum of 255 arguments (URL patterns, in this case). This is a limit for all Python function calls. This is rarely a problem in practice, because you’ll typically structure your URL patterns modularly by using include() sections. However, on the off-chance you do hit the 255-argument limit, realize that patterns() returns a Python list, so you can split up the construction of the list.
urlpatterns = patterns('',
...
)
urlpatterns += patterns('',
...
)
Python lists have unlimited size, so there’s no limit to how many URL patterns you can construct. The only limit is that you can only create 254 at a time (the 255th argument is the initial prefix argument).
url
(regex, view, kwargs=None, name=None, prefix='')¶You can use the url()
function, instead of a tuple, as an argument to
patterns()
. This is convenient if you want to specify a name without the
optional extra arguments dictionary. For example:
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url(r'^index/$', index_view, name="main-view"),
...
)
This function takes five arguments, most of which are optional:
url(regex, view, kwargs=None, name=None, prefix='')
See Naming URL patterns for why the name
parameter is useful.
The prefix
parameter has the same meaning as the first argument to
patterns()
and is only relevant when you’re passing a string as the
view
parameter.
include
(<module or pattern_list>)¶A function that takes a full Python import path to another URLconf module that should be “included” in this place.
include()
also accepts as an argument an iterable that returns URL
patterns.
See Including other URLconfs below.
When Django can’t find a regex matching the requested URL, or when an exception is raised, Django will invoke an error-handling view. The views to use for these cases are specified by three variables which can be set in your root URLconf. Setting these variables in any other URLconf will have no effect.
See the documentation on customizing error views for more details.
handler403
¶A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called if the user doesn’t have the permissions required to access a resource.
By default, this is 'django.views.defaults.permission_denied'
. That default
value should suffice.
See the documentation about the 403 (HTTP Forbidden) view for more information.
handler403
is new in Django 1.4.handler404
¶A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called if none of the URL patterns match.
By default, this is 'django.views.defaults.page_not_found'
. That default
value should suffice.
handler500
¶A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called in case of server errors. Server errors happen when you have runtime errors in view code.
By default, this is 'django.views.defaults.server_error'
. That default
value should suffice.
Each captured argument is sent to the view as a plain Python string, regardless of what sort of match the regular expression makes. For example, in this URLconf line:
(r'^articles/(?P<year>\d{4})/$', 'news.views.year_archive'),
...the year
argument to news.views.year_archive()
will be a string, not
an integer, even though the \d{4}
will only match integer strings.
A convenient trick is to specify default parameters for your views’ arguments. Here’s an example URLconf and view:
# URLconf
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^blog/$', 'blog.views.page'),
(r'^blog/page(?P<num>\d+)/$', 'blog.views.page'),
)
# View (in blog/views.py)
def page(request, num="1"):
# Output the appropriate page of blog entries, according to num.
In the above example, both URL patterns point to the same view –
blog.views.page
– but the first pattern doesn’t capture anything from the
URL. If the first pattern matches, the page()
function will use its
default argument for num
, "1"
. If the second pattern matches,
page()
will use whatever num
value was captured by the regex.
Each regular expression in a urlpatterns
is compiled the first time it’s
accessed. This makes the system blazingly fast.
You can specify a common prefix in your patterns()
call, to cut down on
code duplication.
Here’s the example URLconf from the Django overview:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/$', 'news.views.year_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/$', 'news.views.month_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/(\d+)/$', 'news.views.article_detail'),
)
In this example, each view has a common prefix – 'news.views'
.
Instead of typing that out for each entry in urlpatterns
, you can use the
first argument to the patterns()
function to specify a prefix to apply to
each view function.
With this in mind, the above example can be written more concisely as:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('news.views',
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/$', 'year_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/$', 'month_archive'),
(r'^articles/(\d{4})/(\d{2})/(\d+)/$', 'article_detail'),
)
Note that you don’t put a trailing dot ("."
) in the prefix. Django puts
that in automatically.
In practice, you’ll probably end up mixing and matching views to the point
where the views in your urlpatterns
won’t have a common prefix. However,
you can still take advantage of the view prefix shortcut to remove duplication.
Just add multiple patterns()
objects together, like this:
Old:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^$', 'django.views.generic.date_based.archive_index'),
(r'^(?P<year>\d{4})/(?P<month>[a-z]{3})/$', 'django.views.generic.date_based.archive_month'),
(r'^tag/(?P<tag>\w+)/$', 'weblog.views.tag'),
)
New:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('django.views.generic.date_based',
(r'^$', 'archive_index'),
(r'^(?P<year>\d{4})/(?P<month>[a-z]{3})/$','archive_month'),
)
urlpatterns += patterns('weblog.views',
(r'^tag/(?P<tag>\w+)/$', 'tag'),
)
At any point, your urlpatterns
can “include” other URLconf modules. This
essentially “roots” a set of URLs below other ones.
For example, here’s an excerpt of the URLconf for the Django Web site itself. It includes a number of other URLconfs:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
urlpatterns = patterns('',
# ... snip ...
(r'^comments/', include('django.contrib.comments.urls')),
(r'^community/', include('django_website.aggregator.urls')),
(r'^contact/', include('django_website.contact.urls')),
(r'^r/', include('django.conf.urls.shortcut')),
# ... snip ...
)
Note that the regular expressions in this example don’t have a $
(end-of-string match character) but do include a trailing slash. Whenever
Django encounters include()
, it chops off whatever part of the URL matched
up to that point and sends the remaining string to the included URLconf for
further processing.
Another possibility is to include additional URL patterns not by specifying the URLconf Python module defining them as the include argument but by using directly the pattern list as returned by patterns instead. For example:
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
extra_patterns = patterns('',
url(r'^reports/(?P<id>\d+)/$', 'credit.views.report', name='credit-reports'),
url(r'^charge/$', 'credit.views.charge', name='credit-charge'),
)
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url(r'^$', 'apps.main.views.homepage', name='site-homepage'),
(r'^help/', include('apps.help.urls')),
(r'^credit/', include(extra_patterns)),
)
This approach can be seen in use when you deploy an instance of the Django
Admin application. The Django Admin is deployed as instances of a
AdminSite
; each
AdminSite
instance has an attribute urls
that returns the url patterns available to that instance. It is this attribute
that you include()
into your projects urlpatterns
when you deploy the
admin instance.
An included URLconf receives any captured parameters from parent URLconfs, so the following example is valid:
# In settings/urls/main.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^(?P<username>\w+)/blog/', include('foo.urls.blog')),
)
# In foo/urls/blog.py
urlpatterns = patterns('foo.views',
(r'^$', 'blog.index'),
(r'^archive/$', 'blog.archive'),
)
In the above example, the captured "username"
variable is passed to the
included URLconf, as expected.
When you need to deploy multiple instances of a single application, it can be helpful to be able to differentiate between instances. This is especially important when using named URL patterns, since multiple instances of a single application will share named URLs. Namespaces provide a way to tell these named URLs apart.
A URL namespace comes in two parts, both of which are strings:
admin
.admin
.URL Namespaces can be specified in two ways.
Firstly, you can provide the application and instance namespace as arguments
to include()
when you construct your URL patterns. For example,:
(r'^help/', include('apps.help.urls', namespace='foo', app_name='bar')),
This will include the URLs defined in apps.help.urls
into the application
namespace bar
, with the instance namespace foo
.
Secondly, you can include an object that contains embedded namespace data. If
you include()
a patterns
object, that object will be added to the
global namespace. However, you can also include()
an object that contains
a 3-tuple containing:
(<patterns object>, <application namespace>, <instance namespace>)
This will include the nominated URL patterns into the given application and
instance namespace. For example, the urls
attribute of Django’s
AdminSite
object returns a 3-tuple that contains
all the patterns in an admin site, plus the name of the admin instance, and the
application namespace admin
.
Once you have defined namespaced URLs, you can reverse them. For details on reversing namespaced urls, see the documentation on reversing namespaced URLs.
URLconfs have a hook that lets you pass extra arguments to your view functions, as a Python dictionary.
Any URLconf tuple can have an optional third element, which should be a dictionary of extra keyword arguments to pass to the view function.
For example:
urlpatterns = patterns('blog.views',
(r'^blog/(?P<year>\d{4})/$', 'year_archive', {'foo': 'bar'}),
)
In this example, for a request to /blog/2005/
, Django will call the
blog.views.year_archive()
view, passing it these keyword arguments:
year='2005', foo='bar'
This technique is used in generic views and in the syndication framework to pass metadata and options to views.
Dealing with conflicts
It’s possible to have a URL pattern which captures named keyword arguments, and also passes arguments with the same names in its dictionary of extra arguments. When this happens, the arguments in the dictionary will be used instead of the arguments captured in the URL.
include()
¶Similarly, you can pass extra options to include()
. When you pass extra
options to include()
, each line in the included URLconf will be passed
the extra options.
For example, these two URLconf sets are functionally identical:
Set one:
# main.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^blog/', include('inner'), {'blogid': 3}),
)
# inner.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/$', 'mysite.views.archive'),
(r'^about/$', 'mysite.views.about'),
)
Set two:
# main.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^blog/', include('inner')),
)
# inner.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/$', 'mysite.views.archive', {'blogid': 3}),
(r'^about/$', 'mysite.views.about', {'blogid': 3}),
)
Note that extra options will always be passed to every line in the included URLconf, regardless of whether the line’s view actually accepts those options as valid. For this reason, this technique is only useful if you’re certain that every view in the included URLconf accepts the extra options you’re passing.
Some developers find it more natural to pass the actual Python function object rather than a string containing the path to its module. This alternative is supported – you can pass any callable object as the view.
For example, given this URLconf in “string” notation:
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/$', 'mysite.views.archive'),
(r'^about/$', 'mysite.views.about'),
(r'^contact/$', 'mysite.views.contact'),
)
You can accomplish the same thing by passing objects rather than strings. Just be sure to import the objects:
from mysite.views import archive, about, contact
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/$', archive),
(r'^about/$', about),
(r'^contact/$', contact),
)
The following example is functionally identical. It’s just a bit more compact because it imports the module that contains the views, rather than importing each view individually:
from mysite import views
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/$', views.archive),
(r'^about/$', views.about),
(r'^contact/$', views.contact),
)
The style you use is up to you.
Note that if you use this technique – passing objects rather than strings – the view prefix (as explained in “The view prefix” above) will have no effect.
It’s fairly common to use the same view function in multiple URL patterns in
your URLconf. For example, these two URL patterns both point to the archive
view:
urlpatterns = patterns('',
(r'^archive/(\d{4})/$', archive),
(r'^archive-summary/(\d{4})/$', archive, {'summary': True}),
)
This is completely valid, but it leads to problems when you try to do reverse
URL matching (through the permalink()
decorator or the url
template
tag). Continuing this example, if you wanted to retrieve the URL for the
archive
view, Django’s reverse URL matcher would get confused, because two
URL patterns point at that view.
To solve this problem, Django supports named URL patterns. That is, you can give a name to a URL pattern in order to distinguish it from other patterns using the same view and parameters. Then, you can use this name in reverse URL matching.
Here’s the above example, rewritten to use named URL patterns:
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url(r'^archive/(\d{4})/$', archive, name="full-archive"),
url(r'^archive-summary/(\d{4})/$', archive, {'summary': True}, "arch-summary"),
)
With these names in place (full-archive
and arch-summary
), you can
target each pattern individually by using its name:
{% url arch-summary 1945 %}
{% url full-archive 2007 %}
Even though both URL patterns refer to the archive
view here, using the
name
parameter to url()
allows you to tell them apart in templates.
The string used for the URL name can contain any characters you like. You are not restricted to valid Python names.
Note
When you name your URL patterns, make sure you use names that are unlikely
to clash with any other application’s choice of names. If you call your URL
pattern comment
, and another application does the same thing, there’s
no guarantee which URL will be inserted into your template when you use
this name.
Putting a prefix on your URL names, perhaps derived from the application
name, will decrease the chances of collision. We recommend something like
myapp-comment
instead of comment
.
Namespaced URLs are specified using the :
operator. For example, the main
index page of the admin application is referenced using admin:index
. This
indicates a namespace of admin
, and a named URL of index
.
Namespaces can also be nested. The named URL foo:bar:whiz
would look for
a pattern named whiz
in the namespace bar
that is itself defined within
the top-level namespace foo
.
When given a namespaced URL (e.g. myapp:index
) to resolve, Django splits
the fully qualified name into parts, and then tries the following lookup:
First, Django looks for a matching application namespace (in this
example, myapp
). This will yield a list of instances of that
application.
If there is a current application defined, Django finds and returns
the URL resolver for that instance. The current application can be
specified as an attribute on the template context - applications that
expect to have multiple deployments should set the current_app
attribute on any Context
or RequestContext
that is used to
render a template.
The current application can also be specified manually as an argument
to the reverse()
function.
If there is no current application. Django looks for a default
application instance. The default application instance is the instance
that has an instance namespace matching the application namespace (in
this example, an instance of the myapp
called myapp
).
If there is no default application instance, Django will pick the last deployed instance of the application, whatever its instance name may be.
If the provided namespace doesn’t match an application namespace in step 1, Django will attempt a direct lookup of the namespace as an instance namespace.
If there are nested namespaces, these steps are repeated for each part of the namespace until only the view name is unresolved. The view name will then be resolved into a URL in the namespace that has been found.
To show this resolution strategy in action, consider an example of two instances
of myapp
: one called foo
, and one called bar
. myapp
has a main
index page with a URL named index. Using this setup, the following lookups are
possible:
bar
- myapp:index
will resolve to the index page of
the instance bar
.myapp:index
will resolve to the last
registered instance of myapp
. Since there is no default instance,
the last instance of myapp
that is registered will be used. This could
be foo
or bar
, depending on the order they are introduced into the
urlpatterns of the project.foo:index
will always resolve to the index page of the instance foo
.If there was also a default instance - i.e., an instance named myapp - the following would happen:
bar
- myapp:index
will resolve to the index page of
the instance bar
.myapp:index
will resolve to the index page of the
default instance.foo:index
will again resolve to the index page of the instance foo
.django.core.urlresolvers
utility functions¶If you need to use something similar to the url
template tag in
your code, Django provides the following function (in the
django.core.urlresolvers
module):
reverse
(viewname[, urlconf=None, args=None, kwargs=None, current_app=None])¶viewname
is either the function name (either a function reference, or the
string version of the name, if you used that form in urlpatterns
) or the
URL pattern name. Normally, you won’t need to worry about the
urlconf
parameter and will only pass in the positional and keyword
arguments to use in the URL matching. For example:
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
def myview(request):
return HttpResponseRedirect(reverse('arch-summary', args=[1945]))
The reverse()
function can reverse a large variety of regular expression
patterns for URLs, but not every possible one. The main restriction at the
moment is that the pattern cannot contain alternative choices using the
vertical bar ("|"
) character. You can quite happily use such patterns for
matching against incoming URLs and sending them off to views, but you cannot
reverse such patterns.
The current_app
argument allows you to provide a hint to the resolver
indicating the application to which the currently executing view belongs.
This current_app
argument is used as a hint to resolve application
namespaces into URLs on specific application instances, according to the
namespaced URL resolution strategy.
You can use kwargs
instead of args
. For example:
>>> reverse('admin:app_list', kwargs={'app_label': 'auth'})
'/admin/auth/'
args
and kwargs
cannot be passed to reverse()
at the same time.
Make sure your views are all correct.
As part of working out which URL names map to which patterns, the
reverse()
function has to import all of your URLconf files and examine
the name of each view. This involves importing each view function. If
there are any errors whilst importing any of your view functions, it
will cause reverse()
to raise an error, even if that view function is
not the one you are trying to reverse.
Make sure that any views you reference in your URLconf files exist and can be imported correctly. Do not include lines that reference views you haven’t written yet, because those views will not be importable.
Note
The string returned by reverse()
is already
urlquoted. For example:
>>> reverse('cities', args=[u'Orléans'])
'.../Orl%C3%A9ans/'
Applying further encoding (such as urlquote()
or
urllib.quote
) to the output of reverse()
may produce undesirable results.
A lazily evaluated version of reverse().
reverse_lazy
(viewname[, urlconf=None, args=None, kwargs=None, current_app=None])¶It is useful for when you need to use a URL reversal before your project’s URLConf is loaded. Some common cases where this function is necessary are:
url
attribute of a generic class-based
view.login_url
argument
for the django.contrib.auth.decorators.permission_required()
decorator).The django.core.urlresolvers.resolve()
function can be used for
resolving URL paths to the corresponding view functions. It has the
following signature:
resolve
(path, urlconf=None)¶path
is the URL path you want to resolve. As with
reverse()
, you don’t need to
worry about the urlconf
parameter. The function returns a
ResolverMatch
object that allows you
to access various meta-data about the resolved URL.
If the URL does not resolve, the function raises an
Http404
exception.
ResolverMatch
¶func
¶The view function that would be used to serve the URL
args
¶The arguments that would be passed to the view function, as parsed from the URL.
kwargs
¶The keyword arguments that would be passed to the view function, as parsed from the URL.
url_name
¶The name of the URL pattern that matches the URL.
app_name
¶The application namespace for the URL pattern that matches the URL.
namespace
¶The instance namespace for the URL pattern that matches the URL.
namespaces
¶The list of individual namespace components in the full
instance namespace for the URL pattern that matches the URL.
i.e., if the namespace is foo:bar
, then namespaces will be
['foo', 'bar']
.
A ResolverMatch
object can then be interrogated to provide
information about the URL pattern that matches a URL:
# Resolve a URL
match = resolve('/some/path/')
# Print the URL pattern that matches the URL
print match.url_name
A ResolverMatch
object can also be assigned to a triple:
func, args, kwargs = resolve('/some/path/')
resolve()
returned a
triple containing (view function, arguments, keyword arguments);
the ResolverMatch
object (as well as the namespace and pattern
information it provides) is not available in earlier Django releases.One possible use of resolve()
would be to test
whether a view would raise a Http404
error before redirecting to it:
from urlparse import urlparse
from django.core.urlresolvers import resolve
from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect, Http404
def myview(request):
next = request.META.get('HTTP_REFERER', None) or '/'
response = HttpResponseRedirect(next)
# modify the request and response as required, e.g. change locale
# and set corresponding locale cookie
view, args, kwargs = resolve(urlparse(next)[2])
kwargs['request'] = request
try:
view(*args, **kwargs)
except Http404:
return HttpResponseRedirect('/')
return response
The django.db.models.permalink()
decorator is useful for writing short
methods that return a full URL path. For example, a model’s
get_absolute_url()
method. See django.db.models.permalink()
for more.
get_script_prefix
()¶Normally, you should always use reverse()
or
permalink()
to define URLs within your application.
However, if your application constructs part of the URL hierarchy itself, you
may occasionally need to generate URLs. In that case, you need to be able to
find the base URL of the Django project within its Web server
(normally, reverse()
takes care of this for
you). In that case, you can call get_script_prefix()
, which will return the
script prefix portion of the URL for your Django project. If your Django
project is at the root of its Web server, this is always "/"
, but it can be
changed, for instance by using django.root
(see How to use
Django with Apache and mod_python).
Oct 11, 2017