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DetailView – Class Based Views Django

Detail View refers to a view (logic) to display one instances of a table in the database. We have already discussed basics of Detail View in Detail View – Function based Views Django. Class-based views provide an alternative way to implement views as Python objects instead of functions. They do not replace function-based views, but have certain differences and advantages when compared to function-based views:

Class based views are simpler and efficient to manage than function-based views. A function based view with tons of lines of code can be converted into a class based views with few lines only. This is where Object Oriented Programming comes into impact.



Django DetailView – Class Based Views

Illustration of How to create and use Detail view using an Example. Consider a project named geeksforgeeks having an app named geeks.

Refer to the following articles to check how to create a project and an app in Django.



After you have a project and an app, let’s create a model of which we will be creating instances through our view. In geeks/models.py, 




# import the standard Django Model
# from built-in library
from django.db import models
  
# declare a new model with a name "GeeksModel"
class GeeksModel(models.Model):
 
    # fields of the model
    title = models.CharField(max_length = 200)
    description = models.TextField()
 
    # renames the instances of the model
    # with their title name
    def __str__(self):
        return self.title

After creating this model, we need to run two commands in order to create Database for the same.

Python manage.py makemigrations
Python manage.py migrate

Now let’s create some instances of this model using shell, run form bash,

Python manage.py shell

Enter following commands

>>> from geeks.models import GeeksModel
>>> GeeksModel.objects.create(
                       title="title1",
                       description="description1").save()
>>> GeeksModel.objects.create(
                       title="title2",
                       description="description2").save()
>>> GeeksModel.objects.create(
                       title="title2",
                       description="description2").save()

Now we have everything ready for back end. Verify that instances have been created from http://localhost:8000/admin/geeks/geeksmodel/ Class Based Views automatically setup everything from A to Z. One just needs to specify which model to create DetailView for, then Class based DetailView will automatically try to find a template in app_name/modelname_detail.html. In our case it is geeks/templates/geeks/geeksmodel_detail.html. Let’s create our class based view. In geeks/views.py, 




from django.views.generic.detail import DetailView
 
from .models import GeeksModel
 
class GeeksDetailView(DetailView):
    # specify the model to use
    model = GeeksModel

Now create a url path to map the view. In geeks/urls.py, 




from django.urls import path
 
# importing views from views..py
from .views import GeeksDetailView
urlpatterns = [
    # <pk> is identification for id field,
    # slug can also be used
    path('<pk>/', GeeksDetailView.as_view()),
]

Create a template in templates/geeks/geeksmodel_detail.html, 




<h1>{{ object.title }}</h1>
<p>{{ object.description }}</p>

Let’s check what is there on http://localhost:8000/1/

Manipulate Context Data in DetailView

By default DetailView will only display fields of a table. If one wants to modify this context data before sending it to template or add some extra field, context data can be overridden. In geeks/views.py, 




from django.views.generic.detail import DetailView
 
from .models import GeeksModel
 
class GeeksDetailView(DetailView):
    # specify the model to use
    model = GeeksModel
 
    # override context data
    def get_context_data(self, *args, **kwargs):
        context = super(GeeksDetailView,
             self).get_context_data(*args, **kwargs)
        # add extra field
        context["category"] = "MISC"       
        return context

In geeks/templates/geeksmodel_detail.html, 




<h1>{{ object.title }}</h1>
<p>{{ object.description }}</p>
<p>{{ category }}</p>

Now check, if the category is added.


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