I had a function based view that looked like this:

def account_details(request, acc_id):
    account = get_object_or_404(Account, pk=acc_id, person__user=request.user)
    # ...

Which shows you details of your account on success, and 404 if you don't have permissions to access the account or it doesn't exist.

I was trying to implement the same using a class based view (extending DetailView), and came up with this:

class AccountDetailView(DetailView):
    def get_object(self, queryset=None):
        obj = super(AccountDetailView, self).get_object(queryset)
        if obj.person.user != self.request.user:
            raise Http404()
        return obj

The urlconf:

url(r'^account_details/(?P<pk>[0-9a-f]{24})$',
    login_required(AccountDetailView.as_view(model=Account)),
    name='account_details'),

This attitude works, but introduces 2 extra queries, and looks wrong.

Is there a standard or a more elegant way to achieve the same result?

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My first thought was to override get_queryset() but it doesn't accept arguments - no way to check the account pk... – Yuri Prezument Feb 22 at 21:23
1  
btw, you have access to the keyword args in a classed based view via self.kwargs – Timmy O'Mahony Feb 23 at 0:42
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

What arguments would you need to pass to get_queryset anyways? This should do it:

def get_queryset(self)
    qs = super(MyView, self).get_queryset()
    return qs.filter(person__user=self.request.user)
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For some reason I thought it wouldn't be filtered by PK correctly, Thanks. – Yuri Prezument Feb 22 at 22:10
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If you are worried about the queries, you can use select_related to prefetch the user profiles in the queryset:

 def get_queryset(self)
     return Account.objects.select_related("person", "person__user").all()

 def get_object(self, queryset=None):
     try:
         return queryset.get(pk=self.kwargs['acc_id'], person__user=self.request.user)
     except Account.DoesNotExist:
         raise Http404

I have to say, it's sometimes difficult to get things to fit with class-based views

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I've noticed that too. For the most part I love class-based views, but then there's simple things like passing handling to another view (so easy with function-based views) that are near demonically-difficult now. – Chris Pratt Feb 22 at 22:40
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