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I'm following a few of the basic django blog tutorials. The part I am stuck on is how to set variables in my urls.

I want my urls to look like:

posts/1
posts/2
posts/3

Currently when i visit my index.html i see the list of blog posts (just the titles), and when I hover the cursor over each link it does show posts/1, posts/2, etc.

The problem is that when I click on these links, it basically just refreshes the page and does not show the detailed view.

my urls.py currently looks like this:

url(r'^posts/', index),
url(r'^posts/(?P<post_id>[0-9]+)/$', detailedview),

I'm not sure exactly what (?P[0-9]+)/$', does and I'm assuming this is the problem because detailedview is never being called.

This method is inside my views.py but again, it is never being called.

def detailedview(request, post_id):
    targetpost = Post.objects.get(id="post_id")
    context = {'targetpost': targetpost}
    return render(request, 'posts/detailedview.html', context)
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    You really need to go through the tutorial. Aug 28, 2015 at 23:11
  • I am. This exercise is taken directly from the tutorial.
    – stephan
    Aug 29, 2015 at 0:34

1 Answer 1

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Your question about the second URL:

(?P<post_id>[0-9]+) is a regex that means "set the post_id argument to the value of any number with one or more digits (more info at https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html.)

The way to fix your problem is to add a $ to the end of the first pattern, so it looks like this:

url(r'^posts/$', index),

This will make it only match the URL /posts/.

There is also a problem with your view: the line

    targetpost = Post.objects.get(id="post_id")

should be:

    targetpost = Post.objects.get(id=post_id)

This will make Django look for the Post with the id specified in the variable post_id, rather than the Post with the id that equals the string "post_id"

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  • Thank you, I never knew what the $ signified, very good to know.
    – stephan
    Aug 29, 2015 at 0:47
  • If you want to learn more about regular expressions, go to the the Regular Expression Syntax link on the python documentation page, which shows you everything you can add to a regular expression like those in the URLconf.
    – Jed Fox
    Aug 29, 2015 at 9:47

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