Fixed #16021 - Minor documentation fixes for Generic Class Views; thanks Bradley Ayers.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@16256 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Timo Graham 2011-05-22 00:08:13 +00:00
parent 50ad59527c
commit 940d17409e
2 changed files with 16 additions and 16 deletions

View File

@ -81,20 +81,20 @@ TemplateResponseMixin
The response class to be returned by ``render_to_response`` method.
Default is
:class:`TemplateResponse <django.template.response.TemplateResponse>`.
The template and context of TemplateResponse instances can be
The template and context of ``TemplateResponse`` instances can be
altered later (e.g. in
:ref:`template response middleware <template-response-middleware>`).
Create TemplateResponse subclass and pass set it to
``template_response_class`` if you need custom template loading or
custom context object instantiation.
If you need custom template loading or custom context object
instantiation, create a ``TemplateResponse`` subclass and assign it to
``response_class``.
.. method:: render_to_response(context, **response_kwargs)
Returns a ``self.template_response_class`` instance.
Returns a ``self.response_class`` instance.
If any keyword arguments are provided, they will be
passed to the constructor of the response instance.
passed to the constructor of the response class.
Calls :meth:`~TemplateResponseMixin.get_template_names()` to obtain the
list of template names that will be searched looking for an existent

View File

@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ so we can just subclass it, and override the template name::
template_name = "about.html"
Then, we just need to add this new view into our URLconf. As the class-based
views themselves are classes, we point the URL to the as_view class method
views themselves are classes, we point the URL to the ``as_view`` class method
instead, which is the entry point for class-based views::
# urls.py
@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ instead, which is the entry point for class-based views::
)
Alternatively, if you're only changing a few simple attributes on a
class-based view, you can simply pass the new attributes into the as_view
class-based view, you can simply pass the new attributes into the ``as_view``
method call itself::
from django.conf.urls.defaults import *
@ -121,12 +121,12 @@ be using these models::
country = models.CharField(max_length=50)
website = models.URLField()
def __unicode__(self):
return self.name
class Meta:
ordering = ["-name"]
def __unicode__(self):
return self.name
class Book(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
authors = models.ManyToManyField('Author')
@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ all the publishers in a variable named ``object_list``. While this
works just fine, it isn't all that "friendly" to template authors:
they have to "just know" that they're dealing with publishers here.
Well, if you're dealing with a Django object, this is already done for
Well, if you're dealing with a model object, this is already done for
you. When you are dealing with an object or queryset, Django is able
to populate the context using the verbose name (or the plural verbose
name, in the case of a list of objects) of the object being displayed.
@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ key in the URL. Earlier we hard-coded the publisher's name in the URLconf, but
what if we wanted to write a view that displayed all the books by some arbitrary
publisher?
Handily, the ListView has a
Handily, the ``ListView`` has a
:meth:`~django.views.generic.detail.ListView.get_queryset` method we can
override. Previously, it has just been returning the value of the ``queryset``
attribute, but now we can add more logic.
@ -444,8 +444,8 @@ custom view:
**(r'^authors/(?P<pk>\\d+)/$', AuthorDetailView.as_view()),**
)
Then we'd write our new view - ``get_object`` is the method that retrieves the
object, so we simply override it and wrap the call::
Then we'd write our new view -- ``get_object`` is the method that retrieves the
object -- so we simply override it and wrap the call::
import datetime
from books.models import Author
@ -473,7 +473,7 @@ object, so we simply override it and wrap the call::
.. note::
The URLconf here uses the named group ``pk`` - this name is the default
name that DetailView uses to find the value of the primary key used to
name that ``DetailView`` uses to find the value of the primary key used to
filter the queryset.
If you want to change it, you'll need to do your own ``get()`` call