========================= Django shortcut functions ========================= The package ``django.shortcuts`` collects helper functions and classes that "span" multiple levels of MVC. In other words, these functions/classes introduce controlled coupling for convenience's sake. ``render_to_response()`` ======================== ``django.shortcuts.render_to_response`` renders a given template with a given context dictionary and returns an ``HttpResponse`` object with that rendered text. Required arguments ------------------ ``template`` The full name of a template to use. Optional arguments ------------------ ``context`` A dictionary of values to add to the template context. By default, this is an empty dictionary. If a value in the dictionary is callable, the view will call it just before rendering the template. ``mimetype`` **New in Django development version:** The MIME type to use for the resulting document. Defaults to the value of the ``DEFAULT_CONTENT_TYPE`` setting. Example ------- The following example renders the template ``myapp/index.html`` with the MIME type ``application/xhtml+xml``:: from django.shortcuts import render_to_response def my_view(request): # View code here... return render_to_response('myapp/index.html', {"foo": "bar"}, mimetype="application/xhtml+xml") This example is equivalent to:: from django.http import HttpResponse from django.template import Context, loader def my_view(request): # View code here... t = loader.get_template('myapp/template.html') c = Context({'foo': 'bar'}) r = HttpResponse(t.render(c), mimetype="application/xhtml+xml") .. _an HttpResponse object: ../request_response/#httpresponse-objects ``get_object_or_404`` ===================== ``django.shortcuts.get_object_or_404`` calls `get()`_ on a given model manager, but it raises ``django.http.Http404`` instead of the model's ``DoesNotExist`` exception. Required arguments ------------------ ``klass`` A ``Model``, ``Manager`` or ``QuerySet`` instance from which to get the object. ``**kwargs`` Lookup parameters, which should be in the format accepted by ``get()`` and ``filter()``. Example ------- The following example gets the object with the primary key of 1 from ``MyModel``:: from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404 def my_view(request): my_object = get_object_or_404(MyModel, pk=1) This example is equivalent to:: from django.http import Http404 def my_view(request): try: my_object = MyModel.objects.get(pk=1) except MyModel.DoesNotExist: raise Http404 Note: As with ``get()``, an ``MultipleObjectsReturned`` exception will be raised if more than one object is found. .. _get(): ../db-api/#get-kwargs ``get_list_or_404`` =================== ``django.shortcuts.get_list_or_404`` returns the result of `filter()`_ on a given model manager, raising ``django.http.Http404`` if the resulting list is empty. Required arguments ------------------ ``klass`` A ``Model``, ``Manager`` or ``QuerySet`` instance from which to get the object. ``**kwargs`` Lookup parameters, which should be in the format accepted by ``get()`` and ``filter()``. Example ------- The following example gets all published objects from ``MyModel``:: from django.shortcuts import get_list_or_404 def my_view(request): my_objects = get_list_or_404(MyModel, published=True) This example is equivalent to:: from django.http import Http404 def my_view(request): my_objects = MyModel.objects.filter(published=True) if not my_objects: raise Http404 .. _filter(): ../db-api/#filter-kwargs