4

I'm extending ListFilter to create a custom ListFilter for Django Admin in Django 1.4, but django is automagically converting my querystring arguments to e=1. Is there any way I can tell Django admin to allow certain parameters; instead of converting them to e=1.

Here's my Custom ListFilter:

class DateRangeListFilter(ListFilter):
    """ Custom Date Range Filter using Jquery UI for date-picker """
    title = _('date range')
    template = 'admin/filter_date.html'

    parameters = ['class_after', 'class_before']
    parameter_friendly_names = {parameters[0]: 'Class After', parameters[1]: 'Class Before'}
    parameter_values = {}
    parameter_name = parameters[0]
    used_parameters = {parameters[0]: '', parameters[1]: ''}

    def __init__(self, request, params, model, model_admin):
        super(ListFilter, self).__init__()

        for parameter in self.parameters:
            value = request.GET.get(parameter, None)
            if value:
                self.parameter_values[parameter] = value

        self.lookup_choices = list(self.lookups())

    def has_output(self):
        return len(self.lookup_choices) > 0

    def lookups(self, *args):
        lookup_list = []
        for key in self.parameters:
            lookup_list.append((key, self.parameter_friendly_names[key]))
        return lookup_list

    def expected_parameters(self):
        return self.parameters

    def queryset(self, request, queryset):
        return queryset

    def choices(self, cl):
        for lookup, title in self.lookup_choices:
            param_name = title
            replace_text = 'gte_icdate' if title == self.parameters[0] else 'lte_icdate'
            value = self.parameter_values[lookup] if self.parameter_values.has_key(lookup) else ''
            yield {
                'param_name': param_name,
                'selected': True if lookup is not None else False,
                'query_string': cl.get_query_string({param_name: replace_text, }, []),
                'value': value,
                'display': title,
                'replace_text': replace_text,
                }

2 Answers 2

1

Django is too magical sometimes. There is almost certainly a right way to do this, and what I'm doing is probably not it. But I modified my init function to delete my special parameters from the dictionary; and thus the django admin ignored it.

def __init__(self, request, params, model, model_admin):
    super(ListFilter, self).__init__()

    for param_key in self.parameters: 
        if param_key in params.keys():
            self.parameter_values[param_key] = params[param_key]
            del params[param_key]  # This is the anti-magic line
        else:
            self.parameter_values[param_key] = ''

    self.lookup_choices = list(self.lookups())
-1

I've seen that happen indeed: it seems you need to leave a "clean" set of parameters to the view. I've seen pop() is used as a more efficient alternative:

def __init__(self, request, params, model, model_admin):
    super(ListFilter, self).__init__()

    for param_key in self.parameters:
        self.parameter_values[param_key] = params.pop(param_key,'')

    self.lookup_choices = list(self.lookups())

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.