Skip to main content

Absolute URI functions and template tags for Django

Project description

django-absoluteuri

https://travis-ci.org/fusionbox/django-absoluteuri.png?branch=master

Absolute URI functions and template tags for Django.

Why

There are times when you need to output an absolute URL (for example, inside an email), but you don’t always have access to the request. These utilities use the Sites Framework if available in order to create absolute URIs.

Installation

Install django-absoluteuri:

pip install django-absoluteuri

Then add it to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    # ...
    'django.contrib.sites',
    'absoluteuri',
)

django-absoluteuri requires the Sites Framework to be in INSTALLED_APPS well and configured as well.

Settings

The protocol of the uris returned by this library defaults to http. You can specify the protocol with the ABSOLUTEURI_PROTOCOL setting.

# settings.py
ABSOLUTEURI_PROTOCOL = 'https'

# Elsewhere
>>> absoluteuri.build_absolute_uri('/some/path/')
'https://example.com/some/path/'

Template Tags

There are two template tags, absoluteuri and absolutize. absoluteuri works just like the url tag, but that it outputs absolute URLs.

{% load absoluteuri %}

<a href="{% absoluteuri 'my_view' kwarg1='foo' kwarg2='bar' %}">click here</a>

absolutize will take a relative URL and return an absolute URL.

{% load absoluteuri %}

<a href="{% absolutize url_from_context %}">click here</a>

Filter

Sometimes instead of template tags, it’s easier to use filters. You can do that as well.

{% load absoluteuri %}

<a href="{{ my_object.get_absolute_url|absolutize }}">click here</a>

But there are situations where tag can not be used but filter can.

{% load absoluteuri %}

{% include "some-other-template.html" with url=my_object.get_absolute_url|absolutize %}

Functions

There are also two functions that django-absoluteuri provides, build_absolute_uri and reverse, which are equivalents of request.build_absolute_url and urlresolvers.reverse.

>>> import absoluteuri

>>> my_relative_url = '/path/to/somewhere/'
>>> absoluteuri.build_absolute_uri(my_relative_url)
'http://example.com/path/to/somewhere/'
>>> absoluteuri.reverse('viewname', kwargs={'foo': 'bar'})
'http://example.com/path/to/bar/'

Changelog

1.2.0 (2016-02-29)

  • Add absolutize filter. This deprecates the absolutize tag. [#4]

1.1.0 (2015-03-23)

  • Added ABSOLUTEURI_PROTOCOL settings. [#1]

  • Documented sites framework requirement.

1.0.0 (2015-03-17)

  • First release on PyPI.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-absoluteuri-1.2.0.tar.gz (7.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file django-absoluteuri-1.2.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for django-absoluteuri-1.2.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 63686fbd838d03e78d6b85ede135e09f93723c52a0b2ed3462d56f7bd637da77
MD5 713b371e699dcb5fbbed18ab802c80ea
BLAKE2b-256 cab0e6bbb5a8a6f9b2f509b21f799a017793704e16d1b069c00925ed062b5c73

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page