The above-mentioned things give me almost the same results. I was wondering what is the main difference in them.
1 Answer
response = HttpResponse("Here's the text of the Web page.")
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will create a newHttpResponse
object with HTTP code 200 (OK), and the content passed to the constructor. In general, you should only use this for really small responses (like an AJAX form return value, if its really simple - just a number or so).HttpResponseRedirect("http://example.com/")
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will create a newHttpResponse
object with HTTP code 302 (Found/Moved temporarily). This should be used only to redirect to another page (e.g. after successful form POST)
From the docs:
class HttpResponseRedirect
The constructor takes a single argument -- the path to redirect to. This can be a fully qualified URL (e.g. 'http://www.yahoo.com/search/') or an absolute URL with no domain (e.g. '/search/'). Note that this returns an HTTP status code 302.
enough said...
render_to_response(template[, dictionary][, context_instance][,mimetype])
Renders a given template with a given context dictionary and returns an HttpResponse object with that rendered text.
is a call to render a template with given dictionary of variables to create the response for you. This is what you should be using most of the time, because you want to keep your presentation logic in templates and not in code.
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1render_to_response should not be used after processing POSTs. After POST processing a redirect is a better choice because it won't display the message saying the form will be resubmitted. Dec 17, 2009 at 13:57
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3
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6In Django 1.10 use render. The render_to_response will be deprecated Mar 27, 2017 at 23:23