0

In Django Rest Framework want to pass a kwarg to my ClubFilter class from within my view.

class ClubView(ListCreateView):

    queryset = Club.objects.all()
    serializer_class = ClubSerializer

    filter_backends = (DjangoFilterBackend,)
    filter_class = ClubFilter

    def list(self, request, *args, **kwargs):

        queryset = self.filter_queryset(self.get_queryset())

        if page is not None:
            serializer = self.get_serializer(page, many=True)
            return self.get_paginated_response(serializer.data)

        serializer = self.get_serializer(queryset, many=True)
        return Response(serializer.data)

So I tried added self.filter_class = ClubFilter(**kwargs) to the list methoud but I get the error:

'ClubFilter' object is not callable

How can I pass in kwarg to my filter from the view?

2
  • You would have to get the data from a query param or post data. E.g. Override get_queryset() and inspect the request object for where you expect that data. Sep 17, 2015 at 13:38
  • @theWanderer4865 It's not about where I'm getting the data from, assume I have that, it's how I can pass in the kwargs to the filter
    – Prometheus
    Sep 17, 2015 at 13:45

2 Answers 2

2

filter_class must be an class, it can't be class instance. So you must pass that variable when filter object is created.

Creating of filter object is done in filter backend, so you should subclass your filter backend and provide in it some method that can take your kwargs.

Im assuming that you're using DjangoFilterBackend. You can then subclass it like this:

class MyFilterBackend(DjangoFilterBackend):

    def filter_queryset(self, request, queryset, view):
        filter_class = self.get_filter_class(view, queryset)o

        if filter_class:

            if hasattr(view, 'get_filter_kwargs'):
                filter_kwargs = view.get_filter_kwargs(queryset=queryset)
            else:
                filter_kwargs = {'queryset': queryset}

            return filter_class(request.query_params, **filter_kwargs).qs

        return None

That will allow you to create method get_filter_kwargs inside your view, that should return all kwargs that shuld be passed into your filter class. Remember to pass also queryset that is provided in kwarg for that method.

1
  • I see, so DjangoFilterBackend actually reads the methods in from the view so we can just tell it to read in the new method, nice!
    – Prometheus
    Sep 17, 2015 at 14:26
2

You can create custom filter backend

filters.py

class MyFilterBackend(DjangoFilterBackend):
    def filter_queryset(self, request, queryset, view):
        filter_class = self.get_filter_class(view, queryset)

        if filter_class:
            return filter_class(request.query_params, queryset=queryset, **kwargs).qs

    return queryset

and use it instead DjangoFilterBackend

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.