> Django provides a few classes that help you manage paginated data – that is, data that’s split across several pages, with “Previous/Next” links.
>
> — [Django documentation][cite]
REST framework includes a `PaginationSerializer` class that makes it easy to return paginated data in a way that can then be rendered to arbitrary media types.
Let's start by taking a look at an example from the Django documentation.
from django.core.paginator import Paginator
objects = ['john', 'paul', 'george', 'ringo']
paginator = Paginator(objects, 2)
page = paginator.page(1)
page.object_list
# ['john', 'paul']
At this point we've got a page object. If we wanted to return this page object as a JSON response, we'd need to provide the client with context such as next and previous links, so that it would be able to page through the remaining results.
from rest_framework.pagination import PaginationSerializer
The `context` argument of the `PaginationSerializer` class may optionally include the request. If the request is included in the context then the next and previous links returned by the serializer will use absolute URLs instead of relative URLs.
Our first example worked because we were using primative objects. If we wanted to paginate a queryset or other complex data, we'd need to specify a serializer to use to serialize the result set itself with.
We can do this using the `object_serializer_class` attribute on the inner `Meta` class of the pagination serializer. For example.
class UserSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""
Serializes user querysets.
"""
class Meta:
model = User
fields = ('username', 'email')
class PaginatedUserSerializer(pagination.PaginationSerializer):
The generic class based views `ListAPIView` and `ListCreateAPIView` provide pagination of the returned querysets by default. You can customise this behaviour by altering the pagination style, by modifying the default number of results, or by turning pagination off completely.
The default pagination style may be set globally, using the `PAGINATION_SERIALIZER` and `PAGINATE_BY` settings. For example.
For more complex requirements such as serialization that differs depending on the requested media type you can override the `.get_paginate_by()` and `.get_pagination_serializer_class()` methods.
To create a custom pagination serializer class you should override `pagination.BasePaginationSerializer` and set the fields that you want the serializer to return.
For example, to nest a pair of links labelled 'prev' and 'next', and set the name for the results field to 'objects', you might use something like this.