I am new to Django Rest Framework. Using serializer
and views
a simple CRUD is easy. When the logics increase, it is quite confusing where to write logics in serializer
or views
.
Some developers do prefer "Thick serializer and thin views" and some developers "Thick views and thin serializer".
Maybe this is not a big issue and I think it is up to the developer whether to write more on views
or serializer
, but as a newbie what will be your suggestion to follow? Should I write more on views
or serializer
?
There are many answers on Django View Template but can not find a satisfying answer for Django Rest Framework.
Thoughts of experienced developers will be highly appreciated. Thank you.
3 Answers
Personally I prefer to have the business logic separated from both view and serializer. I usually create a new class with the business logic which can be used in both serializer and view based on necessity. Basically I treat it as a service. Reason for that is:
- Makes the code cleaner(no thick and thin stuff).
- Writing tests for those business logic is easier.
- You can use that this business logic service in both view and serializer, depending on your need.
- while testing APIs, you can mock those buiness logic if needed.
- Reuse any logic in multiple places.
An example would be like this:
class BusinessLogicService(object):
def __init__(self, request):
self.request = request
def do_some_logical_ops(self, data_required_one, data_required_two):
# do processing
return processed_data
Example usage in serializer:
class SomeSerializer(serializer.Serialize):
...
def create(self, validated_data):
business_logic_data = BusinessLogicService(self.request).do_some_logical_ops(**validated_data)
return Model.objects.create(**business_logic_data)
-
From now on I will try to follow your suggestion, pretty clearly explained. What kind of logics will be best for
views
and what kind of logics forserializer
– dipeshAug 7, 2019 at 6:17 -
4it depends on your application design. In general, you can put validation related business logics and data manipulations in serializer. flow restrictions, permissions , external api call etc in views :)– ruddraAug 7, 2019 at 6:19
-
2
-
BusinessLogicService(self.request)
hereserializer object has no attribute'request'
What am I missing?– duduluOct 12, 2021 at 6:03 -
1You are not using generic views or you need to send the request object from view to serializer manually– ruddraOct 12, 2021 at 7:21
I've asked a similar question about this before. Actually, it depends on what logic you are going to adapt. After doing further research, I have come up with some approaches. Here are my suggestions:
- If you want to add some logic before doing serializer validation, it is better to include that in your view (eg. override your views
create
method). An example to this case would be; your POST body does not contain a value that is needed by the serializer hence is not valid yet, so add that in your view'screate
function. - If you are doing some custom authentication logic, such as parsing a custom token in your http header, do it in your view as well, because serializer has nothing to do with it. Moreover, you can create your own authentication decorator for that.
- If you want to add logic which is directly related to the representation of your data, such as an adaptation of a timestamp from UTC to some other, you can add in your serializer as it is directly related to your object representation. You can use
SerializerMethodField
etc. to do that.
-
okay, got it and what if the same logic is applicable in both
view
andserializer
, which one of them will you choose?– dipeshAug 7, 2019 at 6:06 -
1You can place them under wherever you want. Actually as in @ruddra's answer you can do that in a separate utils or helper class. This will also work. But I prefer adding view-related, or serializer-related logic inside views or serializers. I create separate classes when I have logic such as calling some other web endpoints etc.– cagriasAug 7, 2019 at 6:18
-
I try to segregate it on the basis of requirements of the context. Like:
- If I'm supposed to deal with the
request
object(like current user), I try to implement that inview
. - If I need to deal with querying models to create a view I would switch to
serializer
.
It may also depend upon how I'm planning to maintain the code (If I have huge number of views in a single file, I will try to avoid implementing logical stuffs as much as possible).