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I'm not sure you'd

Justin's response is right... I recommend you vote for that one, as he was first. His approach is particularly useful if you have multiple views that need this A/B adjustment.

Note, however, that you don't need a decorator, or alterations to urls.py, if you have just a handful of views. If you left your urls.py file as is...

(r'^foo/', my.view.here),

... you can use request.GET to determine the view variant requested:

def here(request):
    variant = request.GET.get('ui', some_default)

If you want to avoid hardcoding template names for the individual A/B/C/etc views, just make them a convention in your template naming scheme (as Justin's approach also recommends):

def here(request):
    variant = request.GET.get('ui', some_default)
    template_name = 'heretemplates/page%s.html' % variant
    try:
        return render_to_response(template_name)
    except TemplateDoesNotExist:
        return render_to_response('oops.html')
show/hide this revision's text 1

I'm not sure you'd need a decorator, or alterations to urls.py. If you left your urls.py file as is...

(r'^foo/', my.view.here),

... you can use request.GET to determine the view variant requested:

def here(request):
    variant = request.GET.get('ui', some_default)

If you want to avoid hardcoding template names for the individual A/B/C/etc views, just make them a convention in your template naming scheme:

def here(request):
    variant = request.GET.get('ui', some_default)
    template_name = 'heretemplates/page%s.html' % variant
    try:
        return render_to_response(template_name)
    except TemplateDoesNotExist:
        return render_to_response('oops.html')