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I'm looking for a good tutorial for URL namespaces in Django. I find official documentation a little too sparse - it lacks good examples. I found similar question here on stack, but the answers didn't help me to fully understand the subject either.

2
  • Did you check url dispatcer doc in docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.3/topics/http/urls/… I reccomend you to read the whole section, because if you understand the basics about how it works, then it would be easier to understand
    – Mp0int
    May 28, 2011 at 10:33
  • 5
    @FallenAngel: my point still stays - in the official documentation there are no good examples of using namespaces.
    – minder
    Jun 12, 2011 at 10:48

2 Answers 2

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Agreed, the docs for this are rather confusing. Here's my reading of it (NB: all code is untested!):

In apps.help.urls:

urlpatterns = [
    url(r'^$', 'apps.help.views.index', name='index'),
    ]

In your main urls.py:

urlpatterns = [
    url(r'^help/', include('apps.help.urls', namespace='help', app_name='help')),
    url(r'^ineedhelp/', include('apps.help.urls', namespace='otherhelp', app_name='help')),
    ]

In your template:

{% url help:index %}

should produce the url /help/.

{% url otherhelp:index %}

should produce the url /ineedhelp/.

{% with current_app as 'otherhelp' %}
    {% url help:index %}
{% endwith %}

should likewise produce the url /ineedhelp/.

Similarly, reverse('help:index') should produce /help/.

reverse('otherhelp:index') should produce /ineedhelp/.

reverse('help:index', current_app='otherhelp') should likewise produce /ineedhelp/.

Like I said, this is based on my reading of the docs and my existing familiarity with how things tend to work in Django-land. I haven't taken the time to test this.

5
  • why do we need app_name and namespace both set? Was just wondering. Seems it also works when not setting the app_name Oct 3, 2012 at 6:26
  • Because the docs led me to believe they were necessary. Even if the docs are wrong or misleading, it's probably more future-proof to include app_name, as documented, in case the behavior changes in the future to match the docs. If you truly want to know why, you'd have to read the code.
    – David Eyk
    Oct 4, 2012 at 16:18
  • Good suggestion I normally try to read as much source as possible, but couldn't directly find the related part, will do some more digging. Read before a good article which said: The source never lies, but the manual may do. He basically told people to read the source if they encountered a problem or used the api wrong hehe. Oct 5, 2012 at 4:54
  • Be carefull. Runs for me but without quotes: {% url help:index %} Jan 4, 2013 at 17:44
  • Ack! I can never remember when I'm supposed to quote stuff or not in Django template tags. Good catch.
    – David Eyk
    Jan 4, 2013 at 19:26
0

This is from the docs

(r'^help/', include('apps.help.urls', namespace='foo', app_name='bar')),

Maybe you should be more specific about what you are trying to do.

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