Fast development of complex CRUD views for Django.
Fastview slashes development time for modern hybrid apps - build comprehensive and completely customisable CRUD views in a couple of lines, with flexible access control, default templates, and built-in HTMX support:
from fastview.viewgroups import ModelViewGroup
from fastview.permissions import Owner, Staff
class ContactViewGroup(ModelViewGroup):
model = Contact
fields = ["name", "category", "email", "phone", "last_updated"]
search_fields = ["name"]
filters = ["category", "last_updated"]
permission = Owner('owner') | Staff()
# urls.py
urlpatterns = [
...
url(r'^contacts/', WikiViewGroup().include(namespace="contacts")),
]
Inspired by Django's admin, you now have a group of 5 views using your own templates, ready to customise and extend. See the examples for more details.
Fastview lets you:
- Manage model CRUD - list, read, create, update and delete views
- All views are class-based, so they're quick and easy to add, customise or replace
- Views can be embedded in other views with HTMX
- Default templates are flexible to fit your design
- Advanced permission system for fine-grained row-level access control
- Built-in support for HTMX, inline model formsets and more
Note: this is an alpha release; see the roadmap for planned breaking changes, and the upgrade notes for instructions when upgrading.
- Project site: https://radiac.net/projects/django-fastview/
- Documentation: https://django-fastview.readthedocs.io/
- Source code: https://github.com/radiac/django-fastview
- Requires Python 3.7 or later and Django 2.2 or later
Lets write a wiki where anyone can view, add, edit and delete pages:
# urls.py (for example purposes - normally define the viewgroup in app/views.py)
from fastview.viewgroups import ModelViewGroup
from fastview.permissions import Public
from mywiki.models import Wiki
class WikiViewGroup(ModelViewGroup):
model = Wiki
permission = Public()
urlpatterns = [
url(r'^wiki/', WikiViewGroup().include(namespace="wiki")),
]
This will create a functioning set of list, detail, create, update and delete views
under the /wiki/
path on your site.
There are all sorts of things you can do from here:
- The views are all based on Django's generic class-based views, so they're easy to customise
- Easy and flexible permissions to control who can do what
See the Tutorial in the documentation for more details.
Install using pip:
pip install django-fastview
Add to
INSTALLED_APPS
:INSTALLED_APPS = [ ... "fastview", ]
Optional: add the default JavaScript and CSS to your templates or frontend build process.
See Getting Started in the documentation for more details.
Build a more complex view group with custom view classes and complex access controls:
# urls.py (for example purposes)
from fastview.viewgroups import ModelViewGroup
from fastview.permissions import Public, Login, Staff, Owner, Django
from myblog.models import Blog
from myblog.views import BlogUpdateView, BlogPublishView
class BlogViewGroup(ModelViewGroup):
model = Blog
# Default permission for views - any views without explicit permissions will
# require that user is logged in
permission = Login()
# Make the list view public by reconfiguring it with a call to View.config()
list_view = fastview.views.generics.ListView.config(
permission=Public(),
)
# Make the detail view public by reconfiguring it with the dict shorthand format
detail_view = dict(
permission=Public(),
)
# Override change with a custom view, and limit access to staff or post owners
change_view = BlogUpdateView.config(
permission=Staff() | Owner("owner"),
)
# Use the Django permission framework to manage who can delete Blog objects
delete_view = dict(
permission=Django("delete"),
)
# Add a publish view where only staff can access, but only if it's not their own
publish_view = BlogPublishView.config(
permission=Staff() & ~Owner("owner"),
)
urlpatterns = [
url(r'^blog/', BlogViewGroup().include(namespace="blog")),
]
You may then want to create a custom templates at templates/myblog/blog/list.html
and templates/myblog/blog/detail.html
to change the way blog posts are rendered.
For more details see the main documentation.
See Examples in the documentation for more details on these two examples, as well as how you can use fastview to:
- configure and customise the views
- use permissions to control access to individual database objects
- add inline models to your forms
- and more