Responses
Unlike basic HttpResponse objects, TemplateResponse objects retain the details of the context that was provided by the view to compute the response. The final output of the response is not computed until it is needed, later in the response process.
REST framework supports HTTP content negotiation by providing a Response
class which allows you to return content that can be rendered into multiple content types, depending on the client request.
The Response
class subclasses Django's SimpleTemplateResponse
. Response
objects are initialised with data, which should consist of native Python primitives. REST framework then uses standard HTTP content negotiation to determine how it should render the final response content.
There's no requirement for you to use the Response
class, you can also return regular HttpResponse
or StreamingHttpResponse
objects from your views if required. Using the Response
class simply provides a nicer interface for returning content-negotiated Web API responses, that can be rendered to multiple formats.
Unless you want to heavily customize REST framework for some reason, you should always use an APIView
class or @api_view
function for views that return Response
objects. Doing so ensures that the view can perform content negotiation and select the appropriate renderer for the response, before it is returned from the view.
Creating responses
Response()
Signature: Response(data, status=None, template_name=None, headers=None, content_type=None)
Unlike regular HttpResponse
objects, you do not instantiate Response
objects with rendered content. Instead you pass in unrendered data, which may consist of any Python primitives.
The renderers used by the Response
class cannot natively handle complex datatypes such as Django model instances, so you need to serialize the data into primitive datatypes before creating the Response
object.
You can use REST framework's Serializer
classes to perform this data serialization, or use your own custom serialization.
Arguments:
data
: The serialized data for the response.status
: A status code for the response. Defaults to 200. See also status codes.template_name
: A template name to use ifHTMLRenderer
is selected.headers
: A dictionary of HTTP headers to use in the response.content_type
: The content type of the response. Typically, this will be set automatically by the renderer as determined by content negotiation, but there may be some cases where you need to specify the content type explicitly.
Attributes
.data
The unrendered content of a Request
object.
.status_code
The numeric status code of the HTTP response.
.content
The rendered content of the response. The .render()
method must have been called before .content
can be accessed.
.template_name
The template_name
, if supplied. Only required if HTMLRenderer
or some other custom template renderer is the accepted renderer for the response.
.accepted_renderer
The renderer instance that will be used to render the response.
Set automatically by the APIView
or @api_view
immediately before the response is returned from the view.
.accepted_media_type
The media type that was selected by the content negotiation stage.
Set automatically by the APIView
or @api_view
immediately before the response is returned from the view.
.renderer_context
A dictionary of additional context information that will be passed to the renderer's .render()
method.
Set automatically by the APIView
or @api_view
immediately before the response is returned from the view.
Standard HttpResponse attributes
The Response
class extends SimpleTemplateResponse
, and all the usual attributes and methods are also available on the response. For example you can set headers on the response in the standard way:
response = Response()
response['Cache-Control'] = 'no-cache'
.render()
Signature: .render()
As with any other TemplateResponse
, this method is called to render the serialized data of the response into the final response content. When .render()
is called, the response content will be set to the result of calling the .render(data, accepted_media_type, renderer_context)
method on the accepted_renderer
instance.
You won't typically need to call .render()
yourself, as it's handled by Django's standard response cycle.