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Allows Django models to be ordered and provides a simple admin interface for reordering them.

Project description

django-ordered-model
====================

[![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/bfirsh/django-ordered-model.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/bfirsh/django-ordered-model)

django-ordered-model allows models to be ordered and provides a simple admin
interface for reordering them.

Based on https://djangosnippets.org/snippets/998/ and
https://djangosnippets.org/snippets/259/

Requires:

* Django >=1.8
* Python 2.7 or >=3.3

Installation
------------

$ python setup.py install

You can use Pip:

$ pip install django-ordered-model

Usage
-----

Add `ordered_model` to your `SETTINGS.INSTALLED_APPS`.

Inherit your model from `OrderedModel` to make it ordered:

```python
from django.db import models
from ordered_model.models import OrderedModel

class Item(OrderedModel):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)

class Meta(OrderedModel.Meta):
pass
```

Model instances now have a set of methods to move them relative to each other.
To demonstrate those methods we create two instances of `Item`:

```python
foo = Item.objects.create(name="Foo")
bar = Item.objects.create(name="Bar")
```

### Swap positions

```
foo.swap(bar)
```

This swaps the position of two objects.

### Move position up on position

```python
foo.up()
foo.down()
```

Moving an object up or down just makes it swap its position with the neighouring
object directly above of below depending on the direction.

### Move to arbitrary position

```python
foo.to(12)
bar.to(13)
```

Move the object to an arbitrary position in the stack. This essentially sets the
order value to the specified integer. Objects between the original and the new
position get their order value increased or decreased according to the direction
of the move.

### Move object above or below reference

```python
foo.above(bar)
foo.below(bar)
```

Move the object directly above or below the reference object, increasing or
decreasing the order value for all objects between the two, depending on the
direction of the move.

### Move to top of stack

```python
foo.top()
```

This sets the order value to the lowest value found in the stack and increases
the order value of all objects that were above the moved object by one.

### Move to bottom of stack

```python
foo.bottom()
```

This sets the order value to the highest value found in the stack and decreases
the order value of all objects that were below the moved object by one.

### Updating fields that would be updated during save()

For performance reasons, the delete(), to(), below(), above(), top(), and bottom()
methods use Django's update() method to change the order of other objects that
are shifted as a result of one of these calls. If the model has fields that
are typically updated in a customized save() method, or through other app level
functionality such as DateTimeField(auto_now=True), you can add additional fields
to be passed through to update(). This will only impact objects where their order
is being shifted as a result of an operation on the target object, not the target
object itself.

```python
foo.to(12, extra_update={'modified': now()}
```

## Subset Ordering

In some cases, ordering objects is required only on a subset of objects. For example,
an application that manages contact lists for users, in a many-to-one/many relationship,
would like to allow each user to order their contacts regardless of how other users
choose their order. This option is supported via the `order_with_respect_to` parameter.

A simple example might look like so:

```python
class Contact(OrderedModel):
user = models.ForeignKey(User)
phone = models.CharField()
order_with_respect_to = 'user'
```

If objects are ordered with respect to more than one field, `order_with_respect_to` supports
tuples to define multiple fields:

```python
class Model(OrderedModel)
# ...
order_with_respect_to = ('field_a', 'field_b')
```

In a many-to-many relationship you need to use a seperate through model which is derived from the OrderedModel.
For example, an application which manages pizzas with toppings.

A simple example might look like so:

```python
class Topping(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)

class Pizza(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
toppings = models.ManyToManyField(Topping, through='PizzaToppingsThroughModel')

class PizzaToppingsThroughModel(OrderedModel):
pizza = models.ForeignKey(Pizza)
topping = models.ForeignKey(Topping)
order_with_respect_to = 'pizza'

class Meta:
ordering = ('pizza', 'order')
```

When you want ordering on the baseclass instead of subclasses in an ordered list of objects of various classes, specify the full module path of the base class:

class BaseQuestion(OrderedModel):
order_class_path = __module__ '.BaseQuestion'
question = models.TextField(max_length=100)
class Meta:
ordering = ('order',)

class MultipleChoiceQuestion(BaseQuestion):
good_answer = models.TextField(max_length=100)
wrong_answer1 = models.TextField(max_length=100)
wrong_answer2 = models.TextField(max_length=100)
wrong_answer3 = models.TextField(max_length=100)

class OpenQuestion(BaseQuestion):
answer = models.TextField(max_length=100)





Admin integration
-----------------

To add arrows in the admin change list page to do reordering, you can use the
`OrderedModelAdmin` and the `move_up_down_links` field:

```python
from django.contrib import admin
from ordered_model.admin import OrderedModelAdmin
from models import Item

class ItemAdmin(OrderedModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', 'move_up_down_links')

admin.site.register(Item, ItemAdmin)
```


For a many-to-many relationship you need the following in the admin.py file:

```python
from django.contrib import admin
from ordered_model.admin import OrderedTabularInline
from models import Pizza, PizzaToppingsThroughModel

class PizzaToppingsThroughModelInline(OrderedTabularInline):
model = PizzaToppingsThroughModel
fields = ('topping', 'order', 'move_up_down_links',)
readonly_fields = ('order', 'move_up_down_links',)
extra = 1
ordering = ('order',)

class PizzaAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', )
inlines = (PizzaToppingsThroughModelInline, )

def get_urls(self):
urls = super(PizzaAdmin, self).get_urls()
for inline in self.inlines:
if hasattr(inline, 'get_urls'):
urls = inline.get_urls(self) + urls
return urls

admin.site.register(Pizza, PizzaAdmin)
```

Test suite
----------

Requires Docker.

$ script/test

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