synopsis: | Admin tool in order to get custom reports. |
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The objective of django-qbe is provide a assited and interactive way of making complex queries with no technical knowledge (or minimal) to get custom reports from the objects of Django models.
Based on QBE proposal from IBM®, django-qbe is intended to remove the limitations of Django QuerySets objects and to use the whole expresive power of the subjacent SQL.
Using the Python Package Index (PyPI) and easy_install script:
$ easy_install django_qbe
Or through pip:
$ pip install django_qbe
But you also can download the django_qbe
directory using git:
$ git clone git://github.com/versae/qbe.git $ cp -r qbe/django_qbe /path/to/your/project
Adding to the project settings:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( # [...] django builtins applications 'django_qbe', # [...] Any other application )
And adding the urlconf in your project urls.py:
# qbe url(r'^qbe/', include('django_qbe.urls')),
Add the context processor django.core.context_processors.static
:
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = ( # [...] django context processors 'django.core.context_processors.static', # [...] Any other context processors )
See the Django documentation on static files for details.
That's all. Then you can access to http://host:port/qbe However, you can add a link from your admin page changing the admin index template fo your AdminSite:
class AdminSite(admin.AdminSite): index_template = "qbe_index.html"
Or adding in your custom admin index template the next javascript:
<script type="text/javascript" src="{% url qbe_js %}"></script>
If you optionally want to store queries in your database, feel free to
install the also included app django_qbe.savedqueries
:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( # [...] django builtins applications 'django_qbe', 'django_qbe.savedqueries', # [...] Any other application )
Then run the syncdb
or optionally South's migrate
management command
to create the savedqueries_saved_query
table.
After that there will be a new option to save a query in a model instance and
an admin interface to browse the saved queries, or direclty from the command
line using the command qbe_export
:
$ python manage.py help qbe_export $ python manage.py qbe_export <query_hash> $ python manage.py qbe_export <query_hash> --output test.csv $ python manage.py qbe_export <query_hash> --output test.xls --format xls $ python manage.py qbe_export <query_hash> --output test.xls --format xls --db-alias default
The next lines show de available settings and its default values.
Enable autocompletion tool (work in progress, not enabled yet):
QBE_AUTOCOMPLETE = True
Admin module name to add admin urls in results:
QBE_ADMIN = "admin"
Set your own admin site if it's different to usual django.contrib.admin.site:
QBE_ADMIN_SITE ="admin.admin_site"
Function to control to users with access to QBE:
QBE_ACCESS_FOR = lambda user: user.is_staff
Path to QBE formats export file, in order to add custom export formats:
QBE_FORMATS_EXPORT = "qbe_formats"
Path to custom QBE operators for the criteria:
QBE_CUSTOM_OPERATORS = "qbe_operators"
Use Custom Operators only if you know what you are doing and at your own risks!
If you need to define custom operators, in a file qbe_operators.py
in your
project root, you need to create a new class that extends
django_qbe.operators.CustomOperator
:
import datetime from django.utils import timezone from django_qbe.operators import CustomOperator class SinceDaysAgo(CustomOperator): slug = 'since-days-ago' # REQUIRED and must be unique label = 'Since Days Ago' # REQUIRED def get_params(self): if len(self.params): return self.params now = timezone.now() today = now.replace(hour=0, minute=0, second=0, microsecond=0) tomorrow = today + datetime.timedelta(days=1) date_since = today - datetime.timedelta(days=int(self.value)) operator = "gt" lookup_since = self._get_lookup(operator, str(date_since)) lookup_until = self._get_lookup(operator, str(tomorrow)) self.params.append(lookup_since) self.params.append(lookup_until) return self.params def get_wheres(self): if len(self.wheres): return self.wheres lookup_cast = self._db_operations.lookup_cast for operator in ["gte", "lt"]: db_operator = self._db_operators[operator] self.wheres.append(u"%s %s" % ( lookup_cast(operator) % self.db_field, db_operator) ) return self.wheres
Your custom operator must have 2 attributes, slug
and label
in order
to be displayed in the Criteria dropdown.
The get_params
and get_wheres
methods must return an iterable instance
(eg. list), otherwise it gets converted to a list.
If you dont want to write it in your models.py
make sure that it is
imported in one of the files that are evaluated at runtime (eg. models.py
or urls.py
) in order to register your Custom Operator.