Since DRF Docs is not compatible with the latest version of DRF (or Django?; related issue: https://github.com/manosim/django-rest-framework-docs/issues/180) and the latest release is almost 3 years ago I suggest to remove the recommendation for this package.
On Python 3, the ugettext functions are a simple aliases of their non-u
counterparts (the 'u' represents Python 2 unicode type). Starting with
Django 3.0, the u versions will be deprecated.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/releases/3.0/#id2
> django.utils.translation.ugettext(), ugettext_lazy(), ugettext_noop(),
> ungettext(), and ungettext_lazy() are deprecated in favor of the
> functions that they’re aliases for:
> django.utils.translation.gettext(), gettext_lazy(), gettext_noop(),
> ngettext(), and ngettext_lazy().
Thanks to Jon Dufresne (@jdufresne) for review.
Co-authored-by: Asif Saif Uddin <auvipy@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rizwan Mansuri <Rizwan@webbyfox.com>
* Introspect ManyRelatedField data type recursively
For all `ManyRelatedField` objects, we were assuming that the inner type was always a `String`. While this may be true for the default output, a `ManyRelatedField` is a wrapper for a lot of other classes which includes more than just strings. This should allow us to document lists of things other than strings.
* Added test for schemas for many-to-many fields
This adds a test that makes sure we generate the schema for a many-to-many field such that it actually has the right type. For some reason we did not previously have any tests for schema generation that included them, so hopefully this will prevent any future issues from popping up.
This should serve as a regression test for the `items` field on to-many relationships, which was previously forced to a `String` even though in most cases it is a different inner type within the array.
As all source files import unicode_literals, type('') is always
equivalent to six.text_type (str on Python 3 and unicode on Python 2).
Removes the need to call type(), is more explicit, and will be easier to
catch places to change for when it is time to eventually drop Python 2.