django-admin-sort

Sortable changelist, tabular and stacked inlines, drag-and-drop and dropdowns


Keywords
django
License
MIT
Install
pip install django-admin-sort==0.4.0

Documentation

django-admin-sort

CI Version Licence PyPI Downloads

Sortable changelist, tabular and stacked inlines. Using existing order fields, flexible.

Originally based on jrief's django-admin-sortable2, django-admin-sort tries to further simplify, but also add some minor new features (like dropdown sortables, someday).

django-admin-sort's focus is on admin sorting, as the name suggests. Nevertheless, it provides a very simple SortableModelMixin class, that can be used to add sorting on your models, without the admin.

Installation

The latest stable release can be found on PyPI.

pip install django-admin-sort

Add 'admin_sort' to the list of INSTALLED_APPS in your project's settings.py file.

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    ..,
    'admin_sort',
)

Using Admin Sort

This Django module offers two mixin classes to be added to the existing classes of your model admin:

  • admin_sort.admin.SortableAdminMixin
  • admin_sort.admin.SortableInlineAdminMixin

They slightly modify the admin views of a sortable model. There is no need to derive your model class from a special base model class. But if you want (or if you dont need the admin), you can use the admin_sort.models.SortableModelMixin, a convinience mixin to make your model sortable.

Integrate your models

Each database model which shall be sortable, requires a position value in its model description.

class SortableBook(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(
        'Title',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        max_length=255,
    )
    my_order = models.PositiveIntegerField(
        default=0, 
        blank=False, 
        null=False,
    )

    class Meta(object):
        ordering = ('my_order', 'title', )

Here the ordering field is named my_order, but you may choose any other name. One constraint:

  • my_order's default value must be 0. The JavaScript which performs the sorting is 1-indexed, so this will not interfere with the order of your items, even if you're already using 0-indexed ordering fields.

The field used to store the ordering position may be any kind of numeric model field offered by Django. Use one of these models fields:

  • models.PositiveIntegerField
  • models.PositiveSmallIntegerField (recommended for small sets)

WARNING: Do not make this field unique!

Sortable list view

In admin.py, add a mixin class to augment the functionality for sorting (be sure to put the mixin class before model.ModelAdmin):

from django.contrib import admin
from admin_sort.admin import SortableAdminMixin
from models import MyModel

class MyModelAdmin(SortableAdminMixin, admin.ModelAdmin):
    position_field = 'my_order'  # required
    insert_position = 'first|last'  # optional, last is default
    
admin.site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)

The list view of the model admin interface now adds a column with a sensitive area. By clicking on that area, the user can move that row up or down.

Sortable stacked or tabular inline

from django.contrib import admin
from admin_sort.admin import SortableInlineAdminMixin
from models import MySubModel, MyModel

class MySubModelInline(SortableInlineAdminMixin, admin.TabularInline):  # or admin.StackedInline
    model = MySubModel

class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    inlines = (MySubModelInline,)
admin.site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)

The interface for a sortable stacked inline view is similar. If you click on an stacked inline's field title, this whole inline form can be moved up and down.

The interface for a sortable tabular inline view adds a sensitive area to each draggable row. These rows then can be moved up and down.

After moving a tabular or stacked inline, save the model form to persist its sorting order.

Initial data

django-admin-sort adds a "reorder" button in the admin change list (just next to "add new"), for superadmins only. Hit it, and the position_field will be repopulated, ensuring data integrity.

License

Copyright © 2018 Alaric Mägerle & Ben Stähli Licensed under the MIT license.

Run Example Code

To get a quick first impression of this plugin, clone this repositoty from GitHub and run an example webserver:

.. code:: bash

git clone https://github.com/rouxcode/django-admin-sort.git
cd django-admin-sort/example/
./manage.py syncdb
./manage.py createsuperuser
./manage.py loaddata testapp/fixtures/data.json
./manage.py runserver

Point a browser onto http://localhost:8000/admin/, log in and go to Sortable books. There you can test the behavior of this Django app.

geckodriver install

  • visit https://github.com/mozilla/geckodriver/releases
  • download the latest version of "geckodriver-vX.XX.X-linux64.tar.gz"
  • unarchive the tarball (tar -xvzf geckodriver-vX.XX.X-linux64.tar.gz)
  • give executable permissions to geckodriver (chmod +x geckodriver)
  • move the geckodriver binary to /usr/local/bin or any location on your system PATH.