from collections import OrderedDict
from itertools import islice
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.urls import reverse
from django.utils.html import format_html
from django.utils.safestring import SafeData
from django.utils.text import capfirst
from ..utils import (
Accessor,
AttributeDict,
OrderBy,
OrderByTuple,
call_with_appropriate,
computed_values,
)
class Library:
"""A collection of columns."""
def __init__(self):
self.columns = []
def register(self, column):
if not hasattr(column, "from_field"):
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
"{} is not a subclass of Column".format(column.__class__.__name__)
)
self.columns.append(column)
return column
def column_for_field(self, field, **kwargs):
"""
Return a column object suitable for model field.
Returns:
`.Column` object or `None`
"""
if field is None:
return self.columns[0](**kwargs)
# Iterate in reverse order as columns are registered in order
# of least to most specialised (i.e. Column is registered
# first). This also allows user-registered columns to be
# favoured.
for candidate in reversed(self.columns):
if hasattr(field, "get_related_field"):
verbose_name = field.get_related_field().verbose_name
else:
verbose_name = getattr(field, "verbose_name", field.name)
kwargs["verbose_name"] = capfirst(verbose_name)
column = candidate.from_field(field, **kwargs)
if column is None:
continue
return column
# The library is a mechanism for announcing what columns are available. Its
# current use is to allow the table metaclass to ask columns if they're a
# suitable match for a model field, and if so to return an approach instance.
library = Library()
class LinkTransform:
"""Object used to generate attributes for the `<a>`-tag to wrap the cell content in."""
viewname = None
accessor = None
attrs = None
def __init__(self, url=None, accessor=None, attrs=None, reverse_args=None):
"""
arguments:
url (callable): If supplied, the result of this callable will be used as ``href`` attribute.
accessor (Accessor): if supplied, the accessor will be used to decide on which object
``get_absolute_url()`` is called.
attrs (dict): Customize attributes for the ``<a>`` tag.
reverse_args (dict, tuple): Arguments to ``django.urls.reverse()``. If dict, the arguments
are assumed to be keyword arguments to ``reverse()``, if tuple, a ``(viewname, args)``
or ``(viewname, kwargs)``
"""
self.url = url
self.attrs = attrs
self.accessor = accessor
if isinstance(reverse_args, (list, tuple)):
viewname, args = reverse_args
reverse_args = {"viewname": viewname}
reverse_args["kwargs" if isinstance(args, dict) else "args"] = args
self.reverse_args = reverse_args or {}
def compose_url(self, **kwargs):
if self.url and callable(self.url):
return call_with_appropriate(self.url, kwargs)
bound_column = kwargs.get("bound_column", None)
record = kwargs["record"]
if self.reverse_args.get("viewname", None) is not None:
return self.call_reverse(record=record)
if bound_column is None and self.accessor is None:
accessor = Accessor("")
else:
accessor = Accessor(self.accessor if self.accessor is not None else bound_column.name)
context = accessor.resolve(record)
if not hasattr(context, "get_absolute_url"):
if hasattr(record, "get_absolute_url"):
context = record
else:
raise TypeError(
"for linkify=True, '{}' must have a method get_absolute_url".format(
str(context)
)
)
return context.get_absolute_url()
def call_reverse(self, record):
"""
Prepares the arguments to reverse() for this record and calls reverse()
"""
def resolve_if_accessor(val):
return val.resolve(record) if isinstance(val, Accessor) else val
params = self.reverse_args.copy()
params["viewname"] = resolve_if_accessor(params["viewname"])
if params.get("urlconf", None):
params["urlconf"] = resolve_if_accessor(params["urlconf"])
if params.get("args", None):
params["args"] = [resolve_if_accessor(a) for a in params["args"]]
if params.get("kwargs", None):
params["kwargs"] = {
key: resolve_if_accessor(val) for key, val in params["kwargs"].items()
}
if params.get("current_app", None):
params["current_app"] = resolve_if_accessor(params["current_app"])
return reverse(**params)
def get_attrs(self, **kwargs):
attrs = AttributeDict(self.attrs or {})
attrs["href"] = self.compose_url(**kwargs)
return attrs
def __call__(self, content, **kwargs):
attrs = self.get_attrs(**kwargs)
if attrs["href"] is None:
return content
return format_html("<a {}>{}</a>", attrs.as_html(), content)
[docs]@library.register
class Column:
"""
Represents a single column of a table.
`.Column` objects control the way a column (including the cells that fall
within it) are rendered.
Arguments:
attrs (dict): HTML attributes for elements that make up the column.
This API is extended by subclasses to allow arbitrary HTML
attributes to be added to the output.
By default `.Column` supports:
- ``th`` -- ``table/thead/tr/th`` elements
- ``td`` -- ``table/tbody/tr/td`` elements
- ``cell`` -- fallback if ``th`` or ``td`` is not defined
- ``a`` -- To control the attributes for the ``a`` tag if the cell
is wrapped in a link.
accessor (str or `~.Accessor`): An accessor that describes how to
extract values for this column from the :term:`table data`.
default (str or callable): The default value for the column. This can be
a value or a callable object [1]_. If an object in the data provides
`None` for a column, the default will be used instead.
The default value may affect ordering, depending on the type of data
the table is using. The only case where ordering is not affected is
when a `.QuerySet` is used as the table data (since sorting is
performed by the database).
empty_values (iterable): list of values considered as a missing value,
for which the column will render the default value. Defaults to
`(None, '')`
exclude_from_export (bool): If `True`, this column will not be added to
the data iterator returned from as_values().
footer (str, callable): Defines the footer of this column. If a callable
is passed, it can take optional keyword arguments `column`,
`bound_column` and `table`.
order_by (str, tuple or `.Accessor`): Allows one or more accessors to be
used for ordering rather than *accessor*.
orderable (bool): If `False`, this column will not be allowed to
influence row ordering/sorting.
verbose_name (str): A human readable version of the column name.
visible (bool): If `True`, this column will be rendered.
Columns with `visible=False` will not be rendered, but will be included
in ``.Table.as_values()`` and thus also in :ref:`export`.
localize: If the cells in this column will be localized by the
`localize` filter:
- If `True`, force localization
- If `False`, values are not localized
- If `None` (default), localization depends on the ``USE_L10N`` setting.
linkify (bool, str, callable, dict, tuple): Controls if cell content will be wrapped in an
``a`` tag. The different ways to define the ``href`` attribute:
- If `True`, the ``record.get_absolute_url()`` or the related model's
`get_absolute_url()` is used.
- If a callable is passed, the returned value is used, if it's not ``None``.
The callable can optionally accept any argument valid for :ref:`table.render_foo`-methods,
for example `record` or `value`.
- If a `dict` is passed, it's passed on to ``~django.urls.reverse``.
- If a `tuple` is passed, it must be either a (viewname, args) or (viewname, kwargs)
tuple, which is also passed to ``~django.urls.reverse``.
Examples, assuming this model::
class Blog(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
body = model.TextField()
user = model.ForeignKey(get_user_model(), on_delete=models.CASCADE)
Using the ``linkify`` argument to control the linkification. These columns will all display
the value returned from `str(record.user)`::
# If the column is named 'user', the column will use record.user.get_absolute_url()
user = tables.Column(linkify=True)
# We can also do that explicitly:
user = tables.Column(linkify=lambda record: record.user.get_absolute_url())
# or, if no get_absolute_url is defined, or a custom link is required, we have a couple
# of ways to define what is passed to reverse()
user = tables.Column(linkify={"viewname": "user_detail", "args": [tables.A("user__pk")]})
user = tables.Column(linkify=("user_detail", [tables.A("user__pk")])) # (viewname, args)
user = tables.Column(linkify=("user_detail", {"pk": tables.A("user__pk")})) # (viewname, kwargs)
initial_sort_descending (bool): If `True`, a column will sort in descending order
on "first click" after table has been rendered. If `False`, column will follow
default behavior, and sort ascending on "first click". Defaults to `False`.
.. [1] The provided callable object must not expect to receive any arguments.
"""
# Tracks each time a Column instance is created. Used to retain order.
creation_counter = 0
empty_values = (None, "")
# by default, contents are not wrapped in an <a>-tag.
link = None
# Explicit is set to True if the column is defined as an attribute of a
# class, used to give explicit columns precedence.
_explicit = False
def __init__(
self,
verbose_name=None,
accessor=None,
default=None,
visible=True,
orderable=None,
attrs=None,
order_by=None,
empty_values=None,
localize=None,
footer=None,
exclude_from_export=False,
linkify=False,
initial_sort_descending=False,
):
if not (accessor is None or isinstance(accessor, str) or callable(accessor)):
raise TypeError(
"accessor must be a string or callable, not %s" % type(accessor).__name__
)
if callable(accessor) and default is not None:
raise TypeError("accessor must be string when default is used, not callable")
self.accessor = Accessor(accessor) if accessor else None
self._default = default
self.verbose_name = verbose_name
self.visible = visible
self.orderable = orderable
self.attrs = attrs or getattr(self, "attrs", {})
# massage order_by into an OrderByTuple or None
order_by = (order_by,) if isinstance(order_by, str) else order_by
self.order_by = OrderByTuple(order_by) if order_by is not None else None
if empty_values is not None:
self.empty_values = empty_values
self.localize = localize
self._footer = footer
self.exclude_from_export = exclude_from_export
link_kwargs = None
if callable(linkify) or hasattr(self, "get_url"):
link_kwargs = dict(url=linkify if callable(linkify) else self.get_url)
elif isinstance(linkify, (dict, tuple)):
link_kwargs = dict(reverse_args=linkify)
elif linkify is True:
link_kwargs = dict(accessor=self.accessor)
if link_kwargs is not None:
self.link = LinkTransform(attrs=self.attrs.get("a", {}), **link_kwargs)
self.initial_sort_descending = initial_sort_descending
self.creation_counter = Column.creation_counter
Column.creation_counter += 1
@property
def default(self):
return self._default() if callable(self._default) else self._default
@property
def header(self):
"""
The value used for the column heading (e.g. inside the ``<th>`` tag).
By default this returns `~.Column.verbose_name`.
:returns: `unicode` or `None`
.. note::
This property typically is not accessed directly when a table is
rendered. Instead, `.BoundColumn.header` is accessed which in turn
accesses this property. This allows the header to fallback to the
column name (it is only available on a `.BoundColumn` object hence
accessing that first) when this property doesn't return something
useful.
"""
return self.verbose_name
def footer(self, bound_column, table):
"""Return the content of the footer, if specified."""
footer_kwargs = {"column": self, "bound_column": bound_column, "table": table}
if self._footer is not None:
if callable(self._footer):
return call_with_appropriate(self._footer, footer_kwargs)
else:
return self._footer
if hasattr(self, "render_footer"):
return call_with_appropriate(self.render_footer, footer_kwargs)
return ""
[docs] def render(self, value):
"""
Return the content for a specific cell.
This method can be overridden by :ref:`table.render_FOO` methods on the
table or by subclassing `.Column`.
If the value for this cell is in `.empty_values`, this method is
skipped and an appropriate default value is rendered instead.
Subclasses should set `.empty_values` to ``()`` if they want to handle
all values in `.render`.
"""
return value
[docs] def value(self, **kwargs):
"""
Return the content for a specific cell for exports.
Similar to `.render` but without any html content.
This can be used to get the data in the formatted as it is presented but in a
form that could be added to a csv file.
The default implementation just calls the `render` function but any
subclasses where `render` returns html content should override this
method.
See `LinkColumn` for an example.
"""
value = call_with_appropriate(self.render, kwargs)
return value
[docs] def order(self, queryset, is_descending):
"""
Order the QuerySet of the table.
This method can be overridden by :ref:`table.order_FOO` methods on the
table or by subclassing `.Column`; but only overrides if second element
in return tuple is True.
returns:
Tuple (QuerySet, boolean)
"""
return (queryset, False)
@classmethod
def from_field(cls, field, **kwargs):
"""
Return a specialized column for the model field or `None`.
Arguments:
field (Model Field instance): the field that needs a suitable column
Returns:
`.Column` object or `None`
If the column is not specialized for the given model field, it should
return `None`. This gives other columns the opportunity to do better.
If the column is specialized, it should return an instance of itself
that is configured appropriately for the field.
"""
# Since this method is inherited by every subclass, only provide a
# column if this class was asked directly.
if cls is Column:
return cls(**kwargs)
[docs]class BoundColumn:
"""
A run-time version of `.Column`.
The difference between `.BoundColumn` and `.Column`,
is that `.BoundColumn` objects include the relationship between a `.Column` and a `.Table`.
In practice, this means that a `.BoundColumn` knows the *"variable name"* given to the `.Column`
when it was declared on the `.Table`.
arguments:
table (`~.Table`): The table in which this column exists
column (`~.Column`): The type of column
name (str): The variable name of the column used when defining the
`.Table`. In this example the name is ``age``::
class SimpleTable(tables.Table):
age = tables.Column()
"""
[docs] def __init__(self, table, column, name):
self._table = table
self.column = column
self.name = name
self.link = column.link
self.current_value = None
[docs] def __str__(self):
return str(self.header)
@property
def accessor(self):
"""Returns the string used to access data for this column out of the data source."""
return self.column.accessor or Accessor(self.name)
@property
def attrs(self):
"""
Proxy to `.Column.attrs` but injects some values of our own.
A ``th``, ``td`` and ``tf`` are guaranteed to be defined (irrespective
of what is actually defined in the column attrs. This makes writing
templates easier. ``tf`` is not actually a HTML tag, but this key name
will be used for attributes for column's footer, if the column has one.
"""
# prepare kwargs for computed_values()
kwargs = {"table": self._table, "bound_column": self}
# BoundRow.items() sets current_record and current_value when iterating over
# the records in a table.
if (
getattr(self, "current_record", None) is not None
and getattr(self, "current_value", None) is not None
):
kwargs.update({"record": self.current_record, "value": self.current_value})
# Start with table's attrs; Only 'th' and 'td' attributes will be used
attrs = dict(self._table.attrs)
# Update attrs to prefer column's attrs rather than table's
attrs.update(dict(self.column.attrs))
# we take the value for 'cell' as the basis for both the th and td attrs
cell_attrs = attrs.get("cell", {})
# override with attrs defined specifically for th and td respectively.
attrs["th"] = computed_values(attrs.get("th", cell_attrs), kwargs=kwargs)
attrs["td"] = computed_values(attrs.get("td", cell_attrs), kwargs=kwargs)
attrs["tf"] = computed_values(attrs.get("tf", cell_attrs), kwargs=kwargs)
# wrap in AttributeDict
attrs["th"] = AttributeDict(attrs["th"])
attrs["td"] = AttributeDict(attrs["td"])
attrs["tf"] = AttributeDict(attrs["tf"])
# Override/add classes
attrs["th"]["class"] = self.get_th_class(attrs["th"])
attrs["td"]["class"] = self.get_td_class(attrs["td"])
attrs["tf"]["class"] = self.get_td_class(attrs["tf"])
return attrs
[docs] def _get_cell_class(self, attrs):
"""
Return a set of the classes from the class key in ``attrs``.
"""
classes = attrs.get("class", None)
classes = set() if classes is None else set(classes.split(" "))
return self._table.get_column_class_names(classes, self)
[docs] def get_td_class(self, td_attrs):
"""
Returns the HTML class attribute for a data cell in this column
"""
classes = sorted(self._get_cell_class(td_attrs))
return None if len(classes) == 0 else " ".join(classes)
[docs] def get_th_class(self, th_attrs):
"""
Returns the HTML class attribute for a header cell in this column
"""
classes = self._get_cell_class(th_attrs)
# add classes for ordering
ordering_class = th_attrs.get("_ordering", {})
if self.orderable:
classes.add(ordering_class.get("orderable", "orderable"))
if self.is_ordered:
classes.add(
ordering_class.get("descending", "desc")
if self.order_by_alias.is_descending
else ordering_class.get("ascending", "asc")
)
return None if len(classes) == 0 else " ".join(sorted(classes))
@property
def default(self):
"""Returns the default value for this column."""
value = self.column.default
if value is None:
value = self._table.default
return value
@property
def header(self):
"""The contents of the header cell for this column."""
# favour Column.header
column_header = self.column.header
if column_header:
return column_header
# fall back to automatic best guess
return self.verbose_name
@property
def footer(self):
"""The contents of the footer cell for this column."""
return call_with_appropriate(
self.column.footer, {"bound_column": self, "table": self._table}
)
def has_footer(self):
return self.column._footer is not None or hasattr(self.column, "render_footer")
@property
def order_by(self):
"""
Return an `.OrderByTuple` of appropriately prefixed data source keys used to sort this column.
See `.order_by_alias` for details.
"""
if self.column.order_by is not None:
order_by = self.column.order_by
else:
# default to using column accessor as data source sort key
order_by = OrderByTuple((self.accessor,))
return order_by.opposite if self.order_by_alias.is_descending else order_by
@property
def order_by_alias(self):
"""
Return an `OrderBy` describing the current state of ordering for this column.
The following attempts to explain the difference between `order_by`
and `.order_by_alias`.
`.order_by_alias` returns and `.OrderBy` instance that's based on
the *name* of the column, rather than the keys used to order the table
data. Understanding the difference is essential.
Having an alias *and* a keys version is necessary because an N-tuple
(of data source keys) can be used by the column to order the data, and
it is ambiguous when mapping from N-tuple to column (since multiple
columns could use the same N-tuple).
The solution is to use order by *aliases* (which are really just
prefixed column names) that describe the ordering *state* of the
column, rather than the specific keys in the data source should be
ordered.
e.g.::
>>> class SimpleTable(tables.Table):
... name = tables.Column(order_by=("firstname", "last_name"))
...
>>> table = SimpleTable([], order_by=('-name', ))
>>> table.columns["name"].order_by_alias
"-name"
>>> table.columns["name"].order_by
("-first_name", "-last_name")
The `OrderBy` returned has been patched to include an extra attribute
``next``, which returns a version of the alias that would be
transitioned to if the user toggles sorting on this column, for example::
not sorted -> ascending
ascending -> descending
descending -> ascending
This is useful otherwise in templates you'd need something like::
{% if column.is_ordered %}
{% querystring table.prefixed_order_by_field=column.order_by_alias.opposite %}
{% else %}
{% querystring table.prefixed_order_by_field=column.order_by_alias %}
{% endif %}
"""
order_by = OrderBy((self._table.order_by or {}).get(self.name, self.name))
order_by.next = order_by.opposite if self.is_ordered else order_by
if self.column.initial_sort_descending and not self.is_ordered:
order_by.next = order_by.opposite
return order_by
@property
def is_ordered(self):
return self.name in (self._table.order_by or ())
@property
def orderable(self):
"""Return whether this column supports ordering."""
if self.column.orderable is not None:
return self.column.orderable
return self._table.orderable
@property
def verbose_name(self):
"""
Return the verbose name for this column.
In order of preference, this will return:
1) The column's explicitly defined `verbose_name`
2) The model's `verbose_name` with the first letter capitalized (if applicable)
3) Fall back to the column name, with first letter capitalized.
Any `verbose_name` that was not passed explicitly in the column
definition is returned with the first character capitalized in keeping
with the Django convention of `verbose_name` being defined in lowercase and
uppercased as needed by the application.
If the table is using `QuerySet` data, then use the corresponding model
field's `~.db.Field.verbose_name`. If it is traversing a relationship,
then get the last field in the accessor (i.e. stop when the
relationship turns from ORM relationships to object attributes [e.g.
person.upper should stop at person]).
"""
# Favor an explicit defined verbose_name
if self.column.verbose_name is not None:
return self.column.verbose_name
# This is our reasonable fall back, should the next section not result
# in anything useful.
name = self.name.replace("_", " ")
# Try to use a model field's verbose_name
model = self._table.data.model
if model:
field = Accessor(self.accessor).get_field(model)
if field:
if hasattr(field, "field"):
name = field.field.verbose_name
else:
name = getattr(field, "verbose_name", field.name)
# If verbose_name was mark_safe()'d, return intact to keep safety
if isinstance(name, SafeData):
return name
return capfirst(name)
@property
def visible(self):
"""Return whether this column is visible."""
return self.column.visible
@property
def localize(self):
"""Return `True`, `False` or `None` as described in ``Column.localize``"""
return self.column.localize
[docs]class BoundColumns:
"""
Container for spawning `.BoundColumn` objects.
This is bound to a table and provides its `.Table.columns` property.
It provides access to those columns in different ways (iterator,
item-based, filtered and unfiltered etc), stuff that would not be possible
with a simple iterator in the table class.
A `BoundColumns` object is a container for holding `BoundColumn` objects.
It provides methods that make accessing columns easier than if they were
stored in a `list` or `dict`. `Columns` has a similar API to a `dict` (it
actually uses a `~collections.OrderedDict` internally).
At the moment you'll only come across this class when you access a
`.Table.columns` property.
Arguments:
table (`.Table`): the table containing the columns
"""
[docs] def __init__(self, table, base_columns):
self._table = table
self.columns = OrderedDict()
for name, column in base_columns.items():
self.columns[name] = bound_column = BoundColumn(table, column, name)
bound_column.render = getattr(table, "render_" + name, column.render)
# How the value is defined: 1. value_<name> 2. render_<name> 3. column.value.
bound_column.value = getattr(
table, "value_" + name, getattr(table, "render_" + name, column.value)
)
bound_column.order = getattr(table, "order_" + name, column.order)
def iternames(self):
return (name for name, column in self.iteritems())
def names(self):
return list(self.iternames())
[docs] def iterall(self):
"""
Return an iterator that exposes all `.BoundColumn` objects,
regardless of visibility or sortability.
"""
return (column for name, column in self.iteritems())
def all(self):
return list(self.iterall())
[docs] def iteritems(self):
"""
Return an iterator of ``(name, column)`` pairs (where ``column`` is a `BoundColumn`).
This method is the mechanism for retrieving columns that takes into
consideration all of the ordering and filtering modifiers that a table
supports (e.g. `~Table.Meta.exclude` and `~Table.Meta.sequence`).
"""
for name in self._table.sequence:
if name not in self._table.exclude:
yield (name, self.columns[name])
def items(self):
return list(self.iteritems())
[docs] def iterorderable(self):
"""
Same as `BoundColumns.all` but only returns orderable columns.
This is useful in templates, where iterating over the full
set and checking ``{% if column.ordarable %}`` can be problematic in
conjunction with e.g. ``{{ forloop.last }}`` (the last column might not
be the actual last that is rendered).
"""
return (x for x in self.iterall() if x.orderable)
[docs] def itervisible(self):
"""
Same as `.iterorderable` but only returns visible `.BoundColumn` objects.
This is geared towards table rendering.
"""
return (x for x in self.iterall() if x.visible)
[docs] def hide(self, name):
"""
Hide a column.
Arguments:
name(str): name of the column
"""
self.columns[name].column.visible = False
[docs] def show(self, name):
"""
Show a column otherwise hidden.
Arguments:
name(str): name of the column
"""
self.columns[name].column.visible = True
[docs] def __iter__(self):
"""Convenience API, alias of `.itervisible`."""
return self.itervisible()
[docs] def __contains__(self, item):
"""
Check if a column is contained within a `BoundColumns` object.
*item* can either be a `~.BoundColumn` object, or the name of a column.
"""
if isinstance(item, str):
return item in self.iternames()
else:
# let's assume we were given a column
return item in self.iterall()
[docs] def __len__(self):
"""Return how many `~.BoundColumn` objects are contained (and visible)."""
return len(list(self.itervisible()))
[docs] def __getitem__(self, index):
"""
Retrieve a specific `~.BoundColumn` object.
*index* can either be 0-indexed or the name of a column
.. code-block:: python
columns['speed'] # returns a bound column with name 'speed'
columns[0] # returns the first column
"""
if isinstance(index, int):
try:
return next(islice(self.iterall(), index, index + 1))
except StopIteration:
raise IndexError
elif isinstance(index, str):
for column in self.iterall():
if column.name == index:
return column
raise KeyError(
"Column with name '{}' does not exist; choices are: {}".format(index, self.names())
)
else:
raise TypeError(
"Column indices must be integers or str, not {}".format(type(index).__name__)
)