A Django application which provides temporary notifications.
Project description
A Django application which provides temporary notifications.
Notification messages persist until a request retrieves them.
Installation
Add the middleware to your MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES setting (the default temporary storage relies on Django’s contrib.sessions application, so place this after SessionMiddleware):
'django_notify.middleware.NotificationsMiddleware',
To make it easy to access notifications in templates, add the context processor into your TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS setting:
'django_notify.context_processors.notifications',
Usage
Adding a temporary notification message
The middleware adds an instance of a temporary storage class called notifications to your request. To add a notification, call:
request.notifications.add('Hello world.')
You can optionally provide a string containing tags (which is usually represented as HTML classes for the message):
request.notifications.add('Your rating is over 9000!', 'error')
Displaying temporary notifications
In your template (rendered with RequestContext or with request.notifications passed as notifications in its context) using something like:
{% if notifications %} <ul class="notifications"> {% for message in notifications %} <li{% if message.tags %} class="{{ message.tags }}"{% endif %}>{{ message }}</li> {% endfor %} </ul> {% endif %}
The notifications are marked to be cleared when the storage instance is iterated (cleared when the response is processed). To avoid the notifications being cleared, you can set request.notifications.used = False after iterating.
Temporary Storage Backends
Django notify can use different backends to store temporary messages. To change which backend is being used, add a NOTIFICATIONS_STORAGE to your settings, referencing to the module and class of the storage class. For example:
NOTIFICATIONS_STORAGE = 'cookie.CookieStorage'
Django Notify first looks for the module inside of django_notify.storage, and if not found, tries to import the full given module directly.
Three temporary storage classes are included in Django Notify:
- 'session.SessionStorage'
This class stores all messages inside of the request’s session. It requires Django’s contrib.session application.
- 'cookie.CookieStorage'
This class stores the notification data in a cookie (signed with a secret hash to prevent manipulation) to persist notifications across requests. Old messages are dropped if the cookie data size would exceed 4096 bytes.
- 'fallback.FallbackStorage'
This is the default temporary storage class.
This class uses CookieStorage for all notification messages, falling back to using SessionStorage for the messages which could not fit in a single cookie.
Since it is uses SessionStorage, it also requires Django’s contrib.session application.
To write your own, subclass the BaseStorage class in django_notify.storage.base and write _get and _store methods.
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