This tutorial will walk you through the building blocks that make up REST framework. It'll take a little while to get through, but it'll give you a comprehensive understanding of how everything fits together.
Before we do anything else we'll create a new virtual environment, using [virtualenv]. This will make sure our package configuration is keep nicely isolated from any other projects we're working on.
To get started, let's create a new project to work with.
django-admin.py startproject tutorial
cd tutorial
Once that's done we can create an app that we'll use to create a simple Web API.
python manage.py startapp blog
The simplest way to get up and running will probably be to use an `sqlite3` database for the tutorial. Edit the `tutorial/settings.py` file, and set the default database `"ENGINE"` to `"sqlite3"`, and `"NAME"` to `"tmp.db"`.
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3',
'NAME': 'tmp.db',
'USER': '',
'PASSWORD': '',
'HOST': '',
'PORT': '',
}
}
We'll also need to add our new `blog` app and the `djangorestframework` app to `INSTALLED_APPS`.
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'djangorestframework',
'blog'
)
We also need to wire up the root urlconf, in the `tutorial/urls.py` file, to include our blog views.
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url(r'^', include('blog.urls')),
)
Okay, we're ready to roll.
## Creating a model to work with
For the purposes of this tutorial we're going to start by creating a simple `Comment` model that is used to store comments against a blog post. Go ahead and edit the `blog` app's `models.py` file.
from django.db import models
class Comment(models.Model):
email = models.EmailField()
content = models.CharField(max_length=200)
created = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
Don't forget to sync the database for the first time.
python manage.py syncdb
## Creating a Serializer class
We're going to create a simple Web API that we can use to edit these comment objects with. The first thing we need is a way of serializing and deserializing the objects into representations such as `json`. We do this by declaring serializers, that work very similarly to Django's forms. Create a file in the project named `serializers.py` and add the following.
from blog import models
from djangorestframework import serializers
class CommentSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
email = serializers.EmailField()
content = serializers.CharField(max_length=200)
created = serializers.DateTimeField()
def restore_object(self, attrs, instance=None):
"""
Create or update a new comment instance.
"""
if instance:
instance.email = attrs['email']
instance.content = attrs['content']
instance.created = attrs['created']
return instance
return models.Comment(**attrs)
The first part of serializer class defines the fields that get serialized/deserialized. The `restore_object` method defines how fully fledged instances get created when deserializing data.
We can actually also save ourselves some time by using the `ModelSerializer` class, as we'll see later, but for now we'll keep our serializer definition explicit.
## Working with Serializers
Before we go any further we'll familiarise ourselves with using our new Serializer class. Let's drop into the Django shell.
python manage.py shell
Okay, once we've got a few imports out of the way, we'd better create a few comments to work with.
from blog.models import Comment
from blog.serializers import CommentSerializer
from djangorestframework.renderers import JSONRenderer
from djangorestframework.parsers import JSONParser
c1 = Comment(email='leila@example.com', content='nothing to say')
Notice how similar the API is to working with forms. The similarity should become even more apparent when we start writing views that use our serializer.
## Writing regular Django views using our Serializers
Let's see how we can write some API views using our new Serializer class.
We'll start off by creating a subclass of HttpResponse that we can use to render any data we return into `json`.
Edit the `blog/views.py` file, and add the following.
from blog.models import Comment
from blog.serializers import CommentSerializer
from djangorestframework.renderers import JSONRenderer
from djangorestframework.parsers import JSONParser
from django.http import HttpResponse
class JSONResponse(HttpResponse):
"""
An HttpResponse that renders it's content into JSON.
Finally we need to wire these views up, in the `tutorial/urls.py` file.
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url
urlpatterns = patterns('blog.views',
url(r'^$', 'comment_root'),
url(r'^(?P<pk>[0-9]+)$', 'comment_instance')
)
It's worth noting that there's a couple of edge cases we're not dealing with properly at the moment. If we send malformed `json`, or if a request is made with a method that the view doesn't handle, then we'll end up with a 500 "server error" response. Still, this'll do for now.
## Testing our first attempt at a Web API
**TODO: Describe using runserver and making example requests from console**
**TODO: Describe opening in a web browser and viewing json output**
## Where are we now
We're doing okay so far, we've got a serialization API that feels pretty similar to Django's Forms API, and some regular Django views.
Our API views don't do anything particularly special at the moment, beyond serve `json` responses, and there's some error handling edge cases we'd still like to clean up, but it's a functioning Web API.