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Pinax is an open-source platform built on the Django Web Framework. It is an ecosystem of reusable Django apps, themes, and starter project templates. This collection can be found at http://pinaxproject.com.
Where you can find what you need:
- Releases: published to PyPI or tagged in app repos in the Pinax GitHub organization
- Global documentation: Pinax documentation website
- App specific documentation: app repos in the Pinax GitHub organization
- Support information: SUPPORT.md file in the Pinax default community health file repo
- Contributing information: CONTRIBUTING.md file in the Pinax default community health file repo
- Current and historical release docs: Pinax Wiki
pinax-likes
is a liking app for Django, allowing users to "like" and "unlike"
any model instance in your project. Template tags provide the ability to see who
liked an object, what objects a user liked, and more.
pinax-likes
is not a karma system. It does not have down-voting.
Django / Python | 3.6 | 3.7 | 3.8 |
---|---|---|---|
2.2 | * | * | * |
3.0 | * | * | * |
To install pinax-likes:
$ pip install pinax-likes
Add pinax.likes
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# other apps
"pinax.likes",
]
Add the models that you want to be likable to PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS
in your settings file:
PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS = {
"app.Model": {} # override default config settings for each model in this dict
}
Add pinax.likes.auth_backends.CanLikeBackend
to your
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
(or use your own custom version checking
against the pinax.likes.can_like
permission):
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = [
# other backends
"pinax.likes.auth_backends.CanLikeBackend",
]
Add pinax.likes.urls
to your project urlpatterns:
urlpatterns = [
# other urls
url(r"^likes/", include("pinax.likes.urls", namespace="pinax_likes")),
]
Add each model that you want to be likable to the PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS
setting:
PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS = {
"profiles.Profile": {},
"videos.Video": {},
"biblion.Post": {},
}
Display "like" widgets in your Django templates. Suppose you have a detail page for a blog post. First load the template tags:
{% load pinax_likes_tags %}
In the body where you want the liking widget to go, add:
{% likes_widget request.user post %}
Finally, ensure you have eldarion-ajax
installed:
The likes_widget
templatetag above and the "toggle like" view both conform
to an AJAX
response that eldarion-ajax understands.
Furthermore, the templates that ship with this project will work
seemlessly with eldarion-ajax
. Include the eldarion-ajax.min.js
Javascript package in your base template:
{% load staticfiles %}
<script src="{% static "js/eldarion-ajax.min.js" %}"></script>
and include eldarion-ajax
in your site JavaScript:
require('eldarion-ajax');
Using Eldarion AJAX is optional. You can roll your own JavaScript handling as
the view also returns data in addition to rendered HTML. Furthermore, if
you don't want ajax
at all the view will handle a regular POST
and
perform a redirect.
Both of these signals are sent from the Like
model in the view that
processes the toggling of likes and unlikes.
This signal is sent immediately after the object is liked and provides
the single kwarg
of like
which is the created Like
instance.
This signal is sent immediately after the object is unliked and provides
the single kwarg
of object
which is the object that was just unliked.
Returns the number of likes for a given object:
{{ obj|likes_count }}
An assignment tag that fetches a list of likes for a given object:
{% who_likes car as car_likes %}
{% for like in car_likes %}
<div class="like">{{ like.sender.get_full_name }} likes {{ car }}</div>
{% endfor %}
The likes
tag will fetch into a context variable a list of objects
that the given user likes. This tag has two forms:
- Obtain
likes
of every model listed insettings.PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS
:
{% likes user as objs %}
- Obtain
likes
for specific models:
{% likes user "app.Model" as objs %}
{% likes request.user "app.Model" as objs %}
{% for obj in objs %}
<div>{{ obj }}</div>
{% endfor %}
This renders a like. It combines well with the likes
templatetag
for showing a list of likes:
{% likes user as like_list %}
<ul>
{% for like in like_list %}
<li>{% render_like like %}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
The render_like tag
looks in the following places for the template to
render. Any of them can be overwritten as needed, allowing you to
customize the rendering of the like on a per model and per application
basis:
pinax/likes/app_name/model.html
pinax/likes/app_name/like.html
pinax/likes/_like.html
This renders a fragment of HTML the user clicks on to unlike or like objects. It only has two required parameters, the user and the object:
{% likes_widget user object %}
It renders pinax/likes/_widget.html
.
A second form for this templatetag specifies the template to be rendered:
{% likes_widget request.user post "pinax/likes/_widget_brief.html" %}
This template tag decorates an iterable of objects with a
liked
boolean indicating whether or not the specified
user likes each object in the iterable:
{% liked objects by request.user as varname %}
{% for obj in varname %
<div>{% if obj.liked %}* {% endif %}{{ obj.title }}</div>
{% endfor %}
A dictionary keyed by "<appname.model>". Each model value is a dictionary containing context keys and values.
Context value keys are CSS element names used in template rendering for each model:
Here is an example from the test settings used on this project found in runtests.py.
PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS = {
"auth.User": {
"like_text_on": "unlike",
"css_class_on": "fa-heart",
"like_text_off": "like",
"css_class_off": "fa-heart-o",
"allowed": lambda user, obj: True
},
"tests.Demo": {
"like_text_on": "unlike",
"css_class_on": "fa-heart",
"like_text_off": "like",
"css_class_off": "fa-heart-o"
}
},
pinax-likes
uses minimal template snippets rendered with template tags.
Default templates are provided by the pinax-templates
app in the
likes
section of that project.
Reference pinax-templates installation instructions to include these templates in your project.
View live pinax-templates
examples and source at Pinax Templates!
Override the default pinax-templates
templates by copying them into your project
subdirectory pinax/likes/
on the template path and modifying as needed.
For example if your project doesn't use Bootstrap, copy the desired templates
then remove Bootstrap and Font Awesome class names from your copies.
Remove class references like class="btn btn-success"
and class="icon icon-pencil"
as well as
bootstrap
from the {% load i18n bootstrap %}
statement.
Since bootstrap
template tags and filters are no longer loaded, you'll also need to update
{{ form|bootstrap }}
to {{ form }}
since the "bootstrap" filter is no longer available.
- Drop Django 1.11, 2.0, and 2.1, and Python 2,7, 3.4, and 3.5 support
- Add Django 2.2 and 3.0, and Python 3.6, 3.7, and 3.8 support
- Update packaging configs
- Direct users to community resources
- Change receiver_object_id type to BigIntegerField
- Add makemigrations.py file
- Add django>=1.11 to requirements
- Improve documentation markup
- Remove doc build support
- Update CI config
- Replace pinax-theme-bootstrap with pinax-templates for testing
- Drop Django 1.8 and 1.10 support
- Improve documentation
- Correct LONG_DESCRIPTION app title
- Add Django 2.0 compatibility testing
- Drop Django 1.9 and Python 3.3 support
- Move documentation into README
- Convert CI and coverage to CircleCi and CodeCov
- Add PyPi-compatible long description
- adds context and request to the
likes_widget
template tag
- Improve documentation
- Converted documentation to Markdown format
- Converted to Django class-based generic views.
- Added URL namespace."pinax_likes"
- Added tests.
- Dropped support for Django 1.7
- Added
compat.py
in order to remove django-user-accounts dependency.
like_text_off
andcss_class_off
are passed into widget even ifcan_like
is False.PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS
entries now take an optional extra valueallowed
whose value should be a callable takinguser
andobj
and returningTrue
orFalse
depending on whether the user is allowed to like that particular object
- Fixed regression causing error when widget displayed while unauth'd
- Fixed
urls.py
deprecation warnings - Fixed unicode string
- Added support for custom User models
- Documentation updates
- Added an
admin.py
- Added a
likes\_widget\_brief
to display a brief widget template (likes/\_widget\_brief.html
)
- Added a
who\_likes
template tag that returns a list ofLike
objects for given object
- Made the link in the default widget template a bootstrap button
- Fixed
isinstance
check to checkmodels.Model
instead ofmodels.base.ModelBase
- Added permission checking
- Added rendering of HTML in the ajax response to liking
- Got rid of all the
js/css
cruft; up to site owner now but ships with bootstrap/bootstrap-ajax enabled templates - Updated use of
datetime.datetime.now
totimezone.now
- Added an
auth\_backend
to check permissions, you can just add thelikes.auth\_backends.PermCheckBackend
and do nothing else, or you can implement your own backend checking thelikes.can\_like
permission against the object and user according to your own business logic. - No more
likes_css
,likes_js
, orlikes_widget_js
tags. PINAX_LIKES_LIKABLE_MODELS
has changed from alist
to adict
likes_widget
optional parameters have been removed and instead put into per model settings
- Renamed
likes\_css
andlikes\_widget
tolikes\_css
andlikes\_widget
- Turned the JavaScript code in to a jQuery plugin, removed most of
the initialization code from the individual widget templates to a
external JavaScript file, and added a
{% likes\_js %}
tag to load this plugin. - Each like button gets a unique ID, so multiple like buttons can appear on a single page
- The like form works without JavaScript.
- Likable models need to be added to
PINAX\_LIKES\_LIKABLE\_MODELS
setting. This prevents users from liking anything and everything, which could potentially lead to security problems (eg. liking entries in permission tables, and thus seeing their content; liking administrative users and thus getting their username). - Added request objects to both
object\_liked
andobject\_unliked
signals.
- Pretty much all the template tags have been renamed and work slightly differently
- Made it easier to get rolling with a like widget using default markup and JavaScript
- Added returning the like counts for an object when it is liked or
unliked so that the widget (either your own or using the one that
ships with likes) can update via
AJAX
- Removed
likes\_ajax
andlikes\_form
template tags so if you were using them and had written custom overrides in\_ajax.js
and\_form.html
you'll need to plan your upgrade accordingly. - Changed the url pattern,
likes\_like\_toggle
, for likes to not require theuser pk
, instead, the view handling thePOST
to this url, usesrequest.user
. - Changed the ajax returned by the
like\_toggle
view so that it now just returns a single element:{"likes\_count": \<some-number\>}
- Initial release
Contributing information can be found in the Pinax community health file repo.
In order to foster a kind, inclusive, and harassment-free community, the Pinax Project has a Code of Conduct. We ask you to treat everyone as a smart human programmer that shares an interest in Python, Django, and Pinax with you.
For updates and news regarding the Pinax Project, please follow us on Twitter @pinaxproject and check out our Pinax Project blog.
Copyright (c) 2012-present James Tauber and contributors under the MIT license.