Mercurial > public > sg101
view core/paginator.py @ 917:0365fdbb4d78
Fix app conflict with messages.
Django's messages app label conflicts with our messages app.
We can't easily rename our label as that will make us rename database tables.
Since our app came first we'll just customize Django messages label.
For Django 1.7.7 upgrade.
author | Brian Neal <bgneal@gmail.com> |
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date | Mon, 06 Apr 2015 20:02:25 -0500 |
parents | ee87ea74d46b |
children |
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""" Digg.com style paginator. References: http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/773/ http://blog.elsdoerfer.name/2008/05/26/diggpaginator-update/ http://blog.elsdoerfer.name/2008/03/06/yet-another-paginator-digg-style/ """ import math from django.core.paginator import \ Paginator, QuerySetPaginator, Page, InvalidPage __all__ = ( 'InvalidPage', 'ExPaginator', 'DiggPaginator', 'QuerySetDiggPaginator', ) class ExPaginator(Paginator): """Adds a ``softlimit`` option to ``page()``. If True, querying a page number larger than max. will not fail, but instead return the last available page. This is useful when the data source can not provide an exact count at all times (like some search engines), meaning the user could possibly see links to invalid pages at some point which we wouldn't want to fail as 404s. >>> items = range(1, 1000) >>> paginator = ExPaginator(items, 10) >>> paginator.page(1000) Traceback (most recent call last): InvalidPage: That page contains no results >>> paginator.page(1000, softlimit=True) <Page 100 of 100> # [bug] graceful handling of non-int args >>> paginator.page("str") Traceback (most recent call last): InvalidPage: That page number is not an integer """ def _ensure_int(self, num, e): # see Django #7307 try: return int(num) except ValueError: raise e def page(self, number, softlimit=False): try: return super(ExPaginator, self).page(number) except InvalidPage, e: number = self._ensure_int(number, e) if number > self.num_pages and softlimit: return self.page(self.num_pages, softlimit=False) else: raise e class DiggPaginator(ExPaginator): """ Based on Django's default paginator, it adds "Digg-style" page ranges with a leading block of pages, an optional middle block, and another block at the end of the page range. They are available as attributes on the page: {# with: page = digg_paginator.page(1) #} {% for num in page.leading_range %} ... {% for num in page.main_range %} ... {% for num in page.trailing_range %} ... Additionally, ``page_range`` contains a nun-numeric ``False`` element for every transition between two ranges. {% for num in page.page_range %} {% if not num %} ... {# literally output dots #} {% else %}{{ num }} {% endif %} {% endfor %} Additional arguments passed to the constructor allow customization of how those bocks are constructed: body=5, tail=2 [1] 2 3 4 5 ... 91 92 |_________| |___| body tail |_____| margin body=5, tail=2, padding=2 1 2 ... 6 7 [8] 9 10 ... 91 92 |_| |__| ^padding^ |_| |__________| |___| tail body tail ``margin`` is the minimum number of pages required between two ranges; if there are less, they are combined into one. When ``align_left`` is set to ``True``, the paginator operates in a special mode that always skips the right tail, e.g. does not display the end block unless necessary. This is useful for situations in which the exact number of items/pages is not actually known. # odd body length >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5).page(1) 1 2 3 4 5 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5).page(100) 1 2 ... 96 97 98 99 100 # even body length >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=6).page(1) 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=6).page(100) 1 2 ... 95 96 97 98 99 100 # leading range and main range are combined when close; note how # we have varying body and padding values, and their effect. >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=2, margin=2).page(3) 1 2 3 4 5 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=6, padding=2, margin=2).page(4) 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=1, margin=2).page(6) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=2, margin=2).page(7) 1 2 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=1, margin=2).page(7) 1 2 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 99 100 # the trailing range works the same >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=2, margin=2, ).page(98) 1 2 ... 96 97 98 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=6, padding=2, margin=2, ).page(97) 1 2 ... 95 96 97 98 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=1, margin=2, ).page(95) 1 2 ... 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=2, margin=2, ).page(94) 1 2 ... 92 93 94 95 96 ... 99 100 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=1, margin=2, ).page(94) 1 2 ... 92 93 94 95 96 ... 99 100 # all three ranges may be combined as well >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,151), 10, body=6, padding=2).page(7) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ... 14 15 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,151), 10, body=6, padding=2).page(8) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,151), 10, body=6, padding=1).page(8) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ... 14 15 # no leading or trailing ranges might be required if there are only # a very small number of pages >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,80), 10, body=10).page(1) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,80), 10, body=10).page(8) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,12), 10, body=5).page(1) 1 2 # test left align mode >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, align_left=True).page(1) 1 2 3 4 5 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, align_left=True).page(50) 1 2 ... 48 49 50 51 52 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, align_left=True).page(97) 1 2 ... 95 96 97 98 99 >>> print DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, align_left=True).page(100) 1 2 ... 96 97 98 99 100 # padding: default value >>> DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=10).padding 4 # padding: automatic reduction >>> DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5).padding 2 >>> DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=6).padding 2 # padding: sanity check >>> DiggPaginator(range(1,1000), 10, body=5, padding=3) Traceback (most recent call last): ValueError: padding too large for body (max 2) """ def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): self.body = kwargs.pop('body', 10) self.tail = kwargs.pop('tail', 2) self.align_left = kwargs.pop('align_left', False) self.margin = kwargs.pop('margin', 4) # TODO: make the default relative to body? # validate padding value max_padding = int(math.ceil(self.body/2.0)-1) self.padding = kwargs.pop('padding', min(4, max_padding)) if self.padding > max_padding: raise ValueError('padding too large for body (max %d)'%max_padding) super(DiggPaginator, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def page(self, number, *args, **kwargs): """Return a standard ``Page`` instance with custom, digg-specific page ranges attached. """ page = super(DiggPaginator, self).page(number, *args, **kwargs) number = int(number) # we know this will work # easier access num_pages, body, tail, padding, margin = \ self.num_pages, self.body, self.tail, self.padding, self.margin # put active page in middle of main range main_range = map(int, [ math.floor(number-body/2.0)+1, # +1 = shift odd body to right math.floor(number+body/2.0)]) # adjust bounds if main_range[0] < 1: main_range = map(abs(main_range[0]-1).__add__, main_range) if main_range[1] > num_pages: main_range = map((num_pages-main_range[1]).__add__, main_range) # Determine leading and trailing ranges; if possible and appropriate, # combine them with the main range, in which case the resulting main # block might end up considerable larger than requested. While we # can't guarantee the exact size in those cases, we can at least try # to come as close as possible: we can reduce the other boundary to # max padding, instead of using half the body size, which would # otherwise be the case. If the padding is large enough, this will # of course have no effect. # Example: # total pages=100, page=4, body=5, (default padding=2) # 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 ... 99 100 # total pages=100, page=4, body=5, padding=1 # 1 2 3 [4] 5 ... 99 100 # If it were not for this adjustment, both cases would result in the # first output, regardless of the padding value. if main_range[0] <= tail+margin: leading = [] main_range = [1, max(body, min(number+padding, main_range[1]))] main_range[0] = 1 else: leading = range(1, tail+1) # basically same for trailing range, but not in ``left_align`` mode if self.align_left: trailing = [] else: if main_range[1] >= num_pages-(tail+margin)+1: trailing = [] if not leading: # ... but handle the special case of neither leading nor # trailing ranges; otherwise, we would now modify the # main range low bound, which we just set in the previous # section, again. main_range = [1, num_pages] else: main_range = [min(num_pages-body+1, max(number-padding, main_range[0])), num_pages] else: trailing = range(num_pages-tail+1, num_pages+1) # finally, normalize values that are out of bound; this basically # fixes all the things the above code screwed up in the simple case # of few enough pages where one range would suffice. main_range = [max(main_range[0], 1), min(main_range[1], num_pages)] # make the result of our calculations available as custom ranges # on the ``Page`` instance. page.main_range = range(main_range[0], main_range[1]+1) page.leading_range = leading page.trailing_range = trailing page.page_range = reduce(lambda x, y: x+((x and y) and [False])+y, [page.leading_range, page.main_range, page.trailing_range]) page.__class__ = DiggPage return page class DiggPage(Page): def __str__(self): return " ... ".join(filter(None, [ " ".join(map(str, self.leading_range)), " ".join(map(str, self.main_range)), " ".join(map(str, self.trailing_range))])) class QuerySetDiggPaginator(DiggPaginator, QuerySetPaginator): pass if __name__ == "__main__": import doctest doctest.testmod()