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- ===========
- Page models
- ===========
- Each page type (a.k.a. content type) in Wagtail is represented by a Django model. All page models must inherit from the :class:`wagtail.core.models.Page` class.
- As all page types are Django models, you can use any field type that Django provides. See `Model field reference <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/ref/models/fields/>`_ for a complete list of field types you can use. Wagtail also provides :class:`~wagtail.core.fields.RichTextField` which provides a WYSIWYG editor for editing rich-text content.
- .. topic:: Django models
- If you're not yet familiar with Django models, have a quick look at the following links to get you started:
- * `Creating models <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/intro/tutorial02/#creating-models>`_
- * `Model syntax <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/db/models/>`_
- An example Wagtail page model
- =============================
- This example represents a typical blog post:
- .. code-block:: python
- from django.db import models
- from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
- from wagtail.core.models import Page, Orderable
- from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
- from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel, MultiFieldPanel, InlinePanel
- from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel
- from wagtail.search import index
- class BlogPage(Page):
- # Database fields
- body = RichTextField()
- date = models.DateField("Post date")
- feed_image = models.ForeignKey(
- 'wagtailimages.Image',
- null=True,
- blank=True,
- on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
- related_name='+'
- )
- # Search index configuration
- search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
- index.SearchField('body'),
- index.FilterField('date'),
- ]
- # Editor panels configuration
- content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
- FieldPanel('date'),
- FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
- InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related links"),
- ]
- promote_panels = [
- MultiFieldPanel(Page.promote_panels, "Common page configuration"),
- ImageChooserPanel('feed_image'),
- ]
- # Parent page / subpage type rules
- parent_page_types = ['blog.BlogIndex']
- subpage_types = []
- class BlogPageRelatedLink(Orderable):
- page = ParentalKey(BlogPage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='related_links')
- name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
- url = models.URLField()
- panels = [
- FieldPanel('name'),
- FieldPanel('url'),
- ]
- .. important::
- Ensure that none of your field names are the same as your class names. This will cause errors due to the way Django handles relations (`read more <https://github.com/wagtail/wagtail/issues/503>`_). In our examples we have avoided this by appending "Page" to each model name.
- Writing page models
- ===================
- Here we'll describe each section of the above example to help you create your own page models.
- Database fields
- ---------------
- Each Wagtail page type is a Django model, represented in the database as a separate table.
- Each page type can have its own set of fields. For example, a news article may have body text and a published date, whereas an event page may need separate fields for venue and start/finish times.
- In Wagtail, you can use any Django field class. Most field classes provided by third party apps should work as well.
- Wagtail also provides a couple of field classes of its own:
- - ``RichTextField`` - For rich text content
- - ``StreamField`` - A block-based content field (see: :doc:`/topics/streamfield`)
- For tagging, Wagtail fully supports `django-taggit <https://django-taggit.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>`_ so we recommend using that.
- Search
- ------
- The ``search_fields`` attribute defines which fields are added to the search index and how they are indexed.
- This should be a list of ``SearchField`` and ``FilterField`` objects. ``SearchField`` adds a field for full-text search. ``FilterField`` adds a field for filtering the results. A field can be indexed with both ``SearchField`` and ``FilterField`` at the same time (but only one instance of each).
- In the above example, we've indexed ``body`` for full-text search and ``date`` for filtering.
- The arguments that these field types accept are documented in :ref:`wagtailsearch_indexing_fields`.
- Editor panels
- -------------
- There are a few attributes for defining how the page's fields will be arranged in the page editor interface:
- - ``content_panels`` - For content, such as main body text
- - ``promote_panels`` - For metadata, such as tags, thumbnail image and SEO title
- - ``settings_panels`` - For settings, such as publish date
- Each of these attributes is set to a list of ``EditHandler`` objects, which defines which fields appear on which tabs and how they are structured on each tab.
- Here's a summary of the ``EditHandler`` classes that Wagtail provides out of the box. See :doc:`/reference/pages/panels` for full descriptions.
- **Basic**
- These allow editing of model fields. The ``FieldPanel`` class will choose the correct widget based on the type of the field, though ``StreamField`` fields need to use a specialised panel class.
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.FieldPanel`
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.StreamFieldPanel`
- **Structural**
- These are used for structuring fields in the interface.
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.MultiFieldPanel` - For grouping similar fields together
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.InlinePanel` - For inlining child models
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.FieldRowPanel` - For organising multiple fields into a single row
- **Chooser**
- ``ForeignKey`` fields to certain models can use one of the below ``ChooserPanel`` classes. These add a nice modal chooser interface, and the image/document choosers also allow uploading new files without leaving the page editor.
- - :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.PageChooserPanel`
- - :class:`~wagtail.images.edit_handlers.ImageChooserPanel`
- - :class:`~wagtail.documents.edit_handlers.DocumentChooserPanel`
- - :class:`~wagtail.snippets.edit_handlers.SnippetChooserPanel`
- .. note::
- In order to use one of these choosers, the model being linked to must either be a page, image, document or snippet.
- To link to any other model type, you should use ``FieldPanel``, which will create a dropdown box.
- Customising the page editor interface
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The page editor can be customised further. See :doc:`/advanced_topics/customisation/page_editing_interface`.
- .. _page_type_business_rules:
- Parent page / subpage type rules
- --------------------------------
- These two attributes allow you to control where page types may be used in your site. It allows you to define rules like "blog entries may only be created under a blog index".
- Both take a list of model classes or model names. Model names are of the format ``app_label.ModelName``. If the ``app_label`` is omitted, the same app is assumed.
- - ``parent_page_types`` limits which page types this type can be created under
- - ``subpage_types`` limits which page types can be created under this type
- By default, any page type can be created under any page type and it is not necessary to set these attributes if that's the desired behaviour.
- Setting ``parent_page_types`` to an empty list is a good way of preventing a particular page type from being created in the editor interface.
- .. _page_urls:
- Page URLs
- ---------
- The most common method of retrieving page URLs is by using the ``{% pageurl %}`` template tag. Since it's called from a template, ``pageurl`` automatically includes the optimizations mentioned below. For more information, see :ref:`pageurl_tag`.
- Page models also include several low-level methods for overriding or accessing page URLs.
- Customising URL patterns for a page model
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The ``Page.get_url_parts(request)`` method will not typically be called directly, but may be overriden to define custom URL routing for a given page model. It should return a tuple of ``(site_id, root_url, page_path)``, which are used by ``get_url`` and ``get_full_url`` (see below) to construct the given type of page URL.
- When overriding ``get_url_parts()``, you should accept ``*args, **kwargs``:
- .. code-block:: python
- def get_url_parts(self, *args, **kwargs):
- and pass those through at the point where you are calling ``get_url_parts`` on ``super`` (if applicable), e.g.:
- .. code-block:: python
- super(MyPageModel, self).get_url_parts(*args, **kwargs)
- While you could pass only the ``request`` keyword argument, passing all arguments as-is ensures compatibility with any
- future changes to these method signatures.
- For more information, please see :meth:`wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url_parts`.
- Obtaining URLs for page instances
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The ``Page.get_url(request)`` method can be called whenever a page URL is needed. It defaults to returning local URLs (not including the protocol or domain) if it can detect that the page is on current site (via ``request.site``); otherwise, a full URL including the protocol and domain is returned. Whenever possible, the optional ``request`` argument should be included to enable per-request caching of site-level URL information and facilitate the generation of local URLs.
- A common use case for ``get_url(request)`` is in any custom template tag your project may include for generating navigation menus. When writing a such a
- custom template tag, ensure it includes ``takes_context=True`` and use ``context.get('request')`` to safely pass the
- request or ``None`` if no request exists in the context.
- For more information, please see :meth:`wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url`.
- In the event a full URL (including the protocol and domain) is needed, ``Page.get_full_url(request)`` can be used instead. Whenever possible, the optional ``request`` argument should be included to enable per-request caching of site-level URL information. For more information, please see :meth:`wagtail.core.models.Page.get_full_url`.
- Template rendering
- ==================
- Each page model can be given an HTML template which is rendered when a user browses to a page on the site frontend. This is the simplest and most common way to get Wagtail content to end users (but not the only way).
- Adding a template for a page model
- ----------------------------------
- Wagtail automatically chooses a name for the template based on the app label and model class name.
- Format: ``<app_label>/<model_name (snake cased)>.html``
- For example, the template for the above blog page will be: ``blog/blog_page.html``
- You just need to create a template in a location where it can be accessed with this name.
- Template context
- ----------------
- Wagtail renders templates with the ``page`` variable bound to the page instance being rendered. Use this to access the content of the page. For example, to get the title of the current page, use ``{{ page.title }}``. All variables provided by `context processors <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/ref/templates/api/#subclassing-context-requestcontext>`_ are also available.
- Customising template context
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- All pages have a ``get_context`` method that is called whenever the template is rendered and returns a dictionary of variables to bind into the template.
- To add more variables to the template context, you can override this method:
- .. code-block:: python
- class BlogIndexPage(Page):
- ...
- def get_context(self, request):
- context = super(BlogIndexPage, self).get_context(request)
- # Add extra variables and return the updated context
- context['blog_entries'] = BlogPage.objects.child_of(self).live()
- return context
- The variables can then be used in the template:
- .. code-block:: HTML+Django
- {{ page.title }}
- {% for entry in blog_entries %}
- {{ entry.title }}
- {% endfor %}
- Changing the template
- ---------------------
- Set the ``template`` attribute on the class to use a different template file:
- .. code-block:: python
- class BlogPage(Page):
- ...
- template = 'other_template.html'
- Dynamically choosing the template
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The template can be changed on a per-instance basis by defining a ``get_template`` method on the page class. This method is called every time the page is rendered:
- .. code-block:: python
- class BlogPage(Page):
- ...
- use_other_template = models.BooleanField()
- def get_template(self, request):
- if self.use_other_template:
- return 'blog/other_blog_page.html'
- return 'blog/blog_page.html'
- In this example, pages that have the ``use_other_template`` boolean field set will use the ``blog/other_blog_page.html`` template. All other pages will use the default ``blog/blog_page.html``.
- More control over page rendering
- --------------------------------
- All page classes have a ``serve()`` method that internally calls the ``get_context`` and ``get_template`` methods and renders the template. This method is similar to a Django view function, taking a Django ``Request`` object and returning a Django ``Response`` object.
- This method can also be overridden for complete control over page rendering.
- For example, here's a way to make a page respond with a JSON representation of itself:
- .. code-block:: python
- from django.http import JsonResponse
- class BlogPage(Page):
- ...
- def serve(self, request):
- return JsonResponse({
- 'title': self.title,
- 'body': self.body,
- 'date': self.date,
- # Resizes the image to 300px width and gets a URL to it
- 'feed_image': self.feed_image.get_rendition('width-300').url,
- })
- Inline models
- =============
- Wagtail can nest the content of other models within the page. This is useful for creating repeated fields, such as related links or items to display in a carousel. Inline model content is also versioned with the rest of the page content.
- Each inline model requires the following:
- - It must inherit from :class:`wagtail.core.models.Orderable`
- - It must have a ``ParentalKey`` to the parent model
- .. note:: django-modelcluster and ParentalKey
- The model inlining feature is provided by `django-modelcluster <https://github.com/torchbox/django-modelcluster>`_ and the ``ParentalKey`` field type must be imported from there:
- .. code-block:: python
- from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
- ``ParentalKey`` is a subclass of Django's ``ForeignKey``, and takes the same arguments.
- For example, the following inline model can be used to add related links (a list of name, url pairs) to the ``BlogPage`` model:
- .. code-block:: python
- from django.db import models
- from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
- from wagtail.core.models import Orderable
- class BlogPageRelatedLink(Orderable):
- page = ParentalKey(BlogPage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='related_links')
- name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
- url = models.URLField()
- panels = [
- FieldPanel('name'),
- FieldPanel('url'),
- ]
- To add this to the admin interface, use the :class:`~wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.InlinePanel` edit panel class:
- .. code-block:: python
- content_panels = [
- ...
- InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related links"),
- ]
- The first argument must match the value of the ``related_name`` attribute of the ``ParentalKey``.
- Working with pages
- ==================
- Wagtail uses Django's `multi-table inheritance <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/topics/db/models/#multi-table-inheritance>`_ feature to allow multiple page models to be used in the same tree.
- Each page is added to both Wagtail's builtin :class:`~wagtail.core.models.Page` model as well as its user-defined model (such as the ``BlogPage`` model created earlier).
- Pages can exist in Python code in two forms, an instance of ``Page`` or an instance of the page model.
- When working with multiple page types together, you will typically use instances of Wagtail's :class:`~wagtail.core.models.Page` model, which don't give you access to any fields specific to their type.
- .. code-block:: python
- # Get all pages in the database
- >>> from wagtail.core.models import Page
- >>> Page.objects.all()
- [<Page: Homepage>, <Page: About us>, <Page: Blog>, <Page: A Blog post>, <Page: Another Blog post>]
- When working with a single page type, you can work with instances of the user-defined model. These give access to all the fields available in ``Page``, along with any user-defined fields for that type.
- .. code-block:: python
- # Get all blog entries in the database
- >>> BlogPage.objects.all()
- [<BlogPage: A Blog post>, <BlogPage: Another Blog post>]
- You can convert a ``Page`` object to its more specific user-defined equivalent using the ``.specific`` property. This may cause an additional database lookup.
- .. code-block:: python
- >>> page = Page.objects.get(title="A Blog post")
- >>> page
- <Page: A Blog post>
- # Note: the blog post is an instance of Page so we cannot access body, date or feed_image
- >>> page.specific
- <BlogPage: A Blog post>
- Tips
- ====
- Friendly model names
- --------------------
- You can make your model names more friendly to users of Wagtail by using Django's internal ``Meta`` class with a ``verbose_name``, e.g.:
- .. code-block:: python
- class HomePage(Page):
- ...
- class Meta:
- verbose_name = "homepage"
- When users are given a choice of pages to create, the list of page types is generated by splitting your model names on each of their capital letters. Thus a ``HomePage`` model would be named "Home Page" which is a little clumsy. Defining ``verbose_name`` as in the example above would change this to read "Homepage", which is slightly more conventional.
- Page QuerySet ordering
- ----------------------
- ``Page``-derived models *cannot* be given a default ordering by using the standard Django approach of adding an ``ordering`` attribute to the internal ``Meta`` class.
- .. code-block:: python
- class NewsItemPage(Page):
- publication_date = models.DateField()
- ...
- class Meta:
- ordering = ('-publication_date', ) # will not work
- This is because ``Page`` enforces ordering QuerySets by path. Instead, you must apply the ordering explicitly when constructing a QuerySet:
- .. code-block:: python
- news_items = NewsItemPage.objects.live().order_by('-publication_date')
- .. _custom_page_managers:
- Custom Page managers
- --------------------
- You can add a custom ``Manager`` to your ``Page`` class. Any custom Managers should inherit from :class:`wagtail.core.models.PageManager`:
- .. code-block:: python
- from django.db import models
- from wagtail.core.models import Page, PageManager
- class EventPageManager(PageManager):
- """ Custom manager for Event pages """
- class EventPage(Page):
- start_date = models.DateField()
- objects = EventPageManager()
- Alternately, if you only need to add extra ``QuerySet`` methods, you can inherit from :class:`wagtail.core.models.PageQuerySet`, and call :func:`~django.db.models.managers.Manager.from_queryset` to build a custom ``Manager``:
- .. code-block:: python
- from django.db import models
- from django.utils import timezone
- from wagtail.core.models import Page, PageManager, PageQuerySet
- class EventPageQuerySet(PageQuerySet):
- def future(self):
- today = timezone.localtime(timezone.now()).date()
- return self.filter(start_date__gte=today)
- EventPageManager = PageManager.from_queryset(EventPageQuerySet)
- class EventPage(Page):
- start_date = models.DateField()
- objects = EventPageManager()
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