Hi,currently I am writing a Django applications built up from loosely coupled plug-ins. Each of these plug-ins shall offer a class based view to handle get and post requests. For get requests the context shall be populated with plug-in specific data. For post requests, the plug-in specific posted data shall be handled by the corresponding view class.
This of course is not difficult to achieve. The view class of the final app, which combines all these plugins, can overload the methods get_context_data() and post() and dispatch the requests to functions offered by these plug-ins. But I do not like this approach because it does not separate concerns and the author of the final app has to remember, how to dispatch these requests manually to the plug-ins.
My question is, if there is there a more elegant solution, say a pattern, which does not require to duplicate the dispatching code for the mixin classes?
Let me explain using some sample code:
class MainAppDetailView(SomeBaseDetailView, PluginAMixin, PluginBMixin):model = MyModeltemplate_name = "my_detail.html"
def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):context = super(FinalAppDetailView, self).get_context_data(**kwargs)PluginAMixin(self).update_context(context)PluginBMixin(self).update_context(context)
return context
def post(self, *args, **kwargs):post_request = self.request.POST
response = PluginAMixin(self).handle_post(post_request)
if issubclass(response, HTTPResponse):return responseresponse = PluginBMixin(self).handle_post(post_request)if issubclass(response, HTTPResponse):return response
# handle post request for the main app...return responseFor my point of view this example contains too much code duplication. Is there a pattern, so that I only have to modify the class declaration of my FinalAppDetailView or even better, only in my settings.py?
Cheers, Jacob
--Roland
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Well, that is evident isn't it - they are mixins. If they were derived
from DetailView, they would be subclasses.
Besides which, with python multiple inheritance, you don't get a
diamond, you get a chain, see below.
>
> And django.views.generic.detail.BaseDetailView.get calls get_context_data
> only once, so I don't see how the plugins shall "deliver" their contexts.
Welcome to the world of the MRO - Method Resolution Order. This SO
post gives a good example of how MRO works:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2010692/what-does-mro-do-in-python
This page*, particularly the diagram in the "Argument passing, argh!"
section should make it clearer how a diamond inheritance is handled
(viz. it's not a diamond):
http://fuhm.net/super-harmful/
Got that? OK, so when you have a class like this:
class MyView(Mixin1, Mixin2, SomeSuperView):
then the MRO for this class will look something like this:
(MyView, Mixin1, Mixin2, SomeSuperView, object)
When you call MyView.get_context_data and call super(MyView,
self).get_context_data, it will first try Mixin1.get_context_data,
which if exists should call super(Mixin1, self).get_context_data, and
so on up the MRO stack.
Cheers
Tom
* super is not harmful, no matter what that page says. It is just that
you must be consistent when using it.