* this commit fixes the usage of a CursorPagination combined with a view
implementing an ordering filter, without a default ordering value.
* former behavior was to fetch the ordering value from the filter, and
raises an error if the value was None, preventing the fallback on the
ordering set on the CursorPagination class itself.
* we reversed the logic by getting first the value set on the class,
and override it by the ordering filter if the parameter is present
* Ensure CursorPagination respects nulls in the ordering field
* Lint
* Fix pagination tests
* Add test_ascending with nulls
* Push tests for nulls
* Test pass
* Add comment
* Fix test for django30
Refs #6846
This provides a way for pagination classes to add pagination properties (`count`, `next`, `results` etc.) to OpenAPI response schemas.
A new method `get_paginated_response_schema()` has been added to `BasePagination`. This method is intended to mirror `get_paginated_response()` (which takes a `list` and wraps it in a `dict`).
Hence, `get_paginated_response_schema()` takes an unpaginated response schema (of type `array`) and wraps that with a schema object of type `object` containing the relevant properties that the pagination class adds to responses.
The default implementation of `BasePagination.get_paginated_response_schema()` simply passes the schema through unmodified, for backwards compatibility.
* Added regression tests (#6504)
Co-Authored-By: Tom Quinonero <tq@3yourmind.com>
* Fix CursorPagination when objects get deleted between calls (#6504)
Co-Authored-By: Tom Quinonero <tq@3yourmind.com>
Thanks to Jon Dufresne (@jdufresne) for review.
Co-authored-by: Asif Saif Uddin <auvipy@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rizwan Mansuri <Rizwan@webbyfox.com>
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.
To do `GROUP_BY` queries in django requires one to use `.values()`
eg this groups posts by user getting a count of posts per user.
```
Posts.objects.order_by('user').values('user').annotate(post_count=Count('post'))
```
This would produce a value queryset which serializes its result
objects as dictionaries while `CursorPagination` requires a queryset
with result objects that are model instances.
This commit enables cursor pagination for value querysets.
- had to mangle the tests a bit to test it out. They might need
some refactoring.
- tried the same for `.values_list()` but it turned out to be
trickier than I expected since you have to use tuple indexes.