I'm attempting to override some of the behaviour of the Django UserAdmin model. Particularly, I'd like to hide the 'superuser' field from non-superusers.
So, my approach is this:
class ModelAdmin(BaseModelAdmin):
"Encapsulates all admin options and functionality for a given model."
# ...
def has_change_permission(self, request, obj=None):
"""
Returns True if the given request has permission to change the given
Django model instance.
If `obj` is None, this should return True if the given request has
permission to change *any* object of the given type.
"""
opts = self.opts
return request.user.has_perm(opts.app_label + '.' + opts.get_change_permission())
#...
Based on what I've found in ModelAdmin
class UserAdmin(UserAdmin):
"""
... my customised UserAdmin
"""
# adding a new method
def is_superuser(self, request):
"Returns True if the given user is a superuser."
return request.user.is_superuser
# then elsewhere 'hopefully' show a slightly different fieldset
# the following, of course, doesn't work.
fieldsets = (
(None, {
'fields': (
("first_name", "last_name"),
("email", "password"),
"is_staff",
"is_active",
"is_superuser" if self.is_superuser() else None
)
}),
('Groups', {
'fields': (
'groups',
)
}),
('Meta', {
'classes': ('collapse',),
'fields': (
'username',
"last_login",
"date_joined"
)
})
)
So, my questions are:
- How do I create a
def
within my new custom UserAdmin class, such as above, and how do I call it? (How do I know when I'm in the right context to do so) - Part 2 (bonus): how can I succinctly include/exclude the 'is_superuser' field in the form, as the psuedo code above is suggesting?
Kind thanks fellows!
~ Daryl
Thank you
form
member. Thing is, this level of customization is usually done from a view and not a model; everything I can think of won't haverequest
available. In other words, you could hide "Is Superuser" for everybody, which isn't what you want, right?