diff --git a/docs/design_philosophies.txt b/docs/design_philosophies.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..9bfe81ddc1 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/design_philosophies.txt @@ -0,0 +1,243 @@ +=================== +Design philosophies +=================== + +This document explains some of the fundamental philosophies Django's developers +have used in creating the framework. Its goal is to explain the past and guide +the future. + +Overall +======= + +Loose coupling +-------------- + +A fundamental goal of Django's stack is `loose coupling and tight cohesion`_. +The various layers of the framework shouldn't "know" about each other unless +absolutely necessary. + +For example, the template system knows nothing about Web requests, the database +layer knows nothing about data display and the view system doesn't care which +template system a programmer uses. + +.. _`loose coupling and tight cohesion`: http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?CouplingAndCohesion + +Less code +--------- + +Django apps should use as little code as possible; they should lack boilerplate. +Django should take full advantage of Python's dynamic capabilities, such as +introspection. + +Quick development +----------------- + +The point of a Web framework in the 21st century is to make the tedious aspects +of Web development fast. Django should allow for incredibly quick Web +development. + +Don't repeat yourself (DRY) +--------------------------- + +Every distinct concept and/or piece of data should live in one, and only one, +place. Redundancy is bad. Normalization is good. + +The framework, within reason, should deduce as much as possible from as little +as possible. + +Explicit is better than implicit +-------------------------------- + +This, a `core Python principle`_, means Django shouldn't do too much "magic." +Magic shouldn't happen unless there's a really good reason for it. + +.. _`core Python principle`: http://www.python.org/doc/Humor.html#zen + +Consistency +----------- + +The framework should be consistent at all levels. Consistency applies to +everything from low-level (the Python coding style used) to high-level (the +"experience" of using Django). + +Models +====== + +Explicit is better than implicit +-------------------------------- + +Fields shouldn't assume certain behaviors based solely on the name of the +field. This requires too much knowledge of the system and is prone to errors. +Instead, behaviors should be based on keyword arguments and, in some cases, on +the type of the field. + +Include all relevant domain logic +--------------------------------- + +Models should encapsulate every aspect of an "object," following Martin +Fowler's `Active Record`_ design pattern. + +This is why model-specific admin options are included in the model itself; data +related to a model should be stored *in* the model. + +.. _`Active Record`: http://www.martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/activeRecord.html + +Database API +============ + +The core goals of the database API are: + +SQL efficiency +-------------- + +It should execute SQL statements as few times as possible, and it should +optimize statements internally. + +This is why developers need to call ``save()`` explicitly, rather than the +framework saving things behind the scenes silently. + +This is also why the ``select_related`` argument exists. It's an optional +performance booster for the common case of selecting "every related object." + +Terse, powerful syntax +---------------------- + +The database API should allow rich, expressive statements in as little syntax +as possible. It should not rely on importing other modules or helper objects. + +Joins should be performed automatically, behind the scenes, when necessary. + +Every object should be able to access every related object, systemwide. This +access should work both ways. + +Option to drop into raw SQL easily, when needed +----------------------------------------------- + +The database API should realize it's a shortcut but not necessarily an +end-all-be-all. The framework should make it easy to write custom SQL -- entire +statements, or just custom ``WHERE`` clauses as custom parameters to API calls. + +URL design +========== + +Loose coupling +-------------- + +URLs in a Django app should not be coupled to the underlying Python code. Tying +URLs to Python function names is a Bad And Ugly Thing. + +Along these lines, the Django URL system should allow URLs for the same app to +be different in different contexts. For example, one site may put stories at +``/stories/``, while another may use ``/news/``. + +Infinite flexibility +-------------------- + +URLs should be as flexible as possible. Any conceivable URL design should be +allowed. + +Encourage best practices +------------------------ + +The framework should make it just as easy (or even easier) for a developer to +design pretty URLs than ugly ones. + +File extensions in Web-page URLs should be avoided. + +Definitive URLs +--------------- + +Technically, ``foo.com/bar`` and ``foo.com/bar/`` are two different URLs, and +search-engine robots (and some Web traffic-analyzing tools) would treat them as +separate pages. Django should make an effort to "normalize" URLs so that +search-engine robots don't get confused. + +This is the reasoning behind the ``APPEND_SLASH`` setting. + +Template system +=============== + +Separate logic from presentation +-------------------------------- + +We see a template system as a tool that controls presentation and +presentation-related logic -- and that's it. The template system shouldn't +support functionality that goes beyond this basic goal. + +If we wanted to put everything in templates, we'd be using PHP. Been there, +done that, wised up. + +Discourage redundancy +--------------------- + +The majority of dynamic Web sites use some sort of common sitewide design -- +a common header, footer, navigation bar, etc. The Django template system should +make it easy to store those elements in a single place, eliminating duplicate +code. + +This is the philosophy behind template inheritance. + +Be decoupled from HTML +---------------------- + +The template system shouldn't be designed so that it only outputs HTML. It +should be equally good at generating other text-based formats, or just plain +text. + +Assume designer competence +-------------------------- + +The template system shouldn't be designed so that templates are displayed +nicely in WYSIWYG editors such as Dreamweaver. That is too severe of a +limitation and wouldn't allow the syntax to be as nice as it is. Django expects +some level of competence in template authors. + +Treat whitespace obviously +-------------------------- + +The template system do magic things with whitespace. If a template includes +whitespace, the system should treat it as it treats text -- just display it. + +Don't invent a programming language +----------------------------------- + +The template system intentionally doesn't allow the following: + + * Assignment to variables + * Advanced logic + +The goal is not to invent a programming language. The goal is to offer just +enough programming-esque functionality, such as branching and looping, that are +essential for making presentation-related decisions. + +Extensibility +------------- + +The template system should recognize that advanced template authors may want +to extend its technology. + +This is the philosophy behind custom template tags and filters. + +Views +===== + +Simplicity +---------- + +Writing a view should be as simple as writing a Python function. Developers +shouldn't have to instantiate a class when a function will do. + +Use request objects +------------------- + +Views should have access to a request object -- an object that stores metadata +about the current request. The object should be passed directly to a view +function, rather than the view function having to access the request data from +a global variable. This makes it light, clean and easy to test views by passing +in "fake" request objects. + +Loose coupling +-------------- + +A view shouldn't care about which template system the developer uses -- or even +whether a template system is used at all.