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In REST framework Resources classes are just View classes that don't have any handler methods bound to them. This allows us to seperate out the behaviour of the classes from how that behaviour should be bound to a set of URLs.
For instance, given our serializers
serializers.py
class BlogPostSerializer(URLModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = BlogPost
class CommentSerializer(URLModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = Comment
We can re-write our 4 sets of views into something more compact...
resources.py
class BlogPostResource(ModelResource):
serializer_class = BlogPostSerializer
model = BlogPost
permissions_classes = (permissions.IsAuthenticatedOrReadOnly,)
throttle_classes = (throttles.UserRateThrottle,)
class CommentResource(ModelResource):
serializer_class = CommentSerializer
model = Comment
permissions_classes = (permissions.IsAuthenticatedOrReadOnly,)
throttle_classes = (throttles.UserRateThrottle,)
The handler methods only get bound to the actions when we define the URLConf. Here's our urls.py:
comment_root = CommentResource.as_view(actions={
'get': 'list',
'post': 'create'
})
comment_instance = CommentInstance.as_view(actions={
'get': 'retrieve',
'put': 'update',
'delete': 'destroy'
})
... # And for blog post
urlpatterns = patterns('blogpost.views',
url(r'^$', comment_root),
url(r'^(?P<pk>[0-9]+)$', comment_instance)
... # And for blog post
)
Using Routers
Right now that hasn't really saved us a lot of code. However, now that we're using Resources rather than Views, we actually don't need to design the urlconf ourselves. The conventions for wiring up resources into views and urls can be handled automatically, using Router
classes. All we need to do is register the appropriate resources with a router, and let it do the rest. Here's our re-wired urls.py
file.
from blog import resources
from djangorestframework.routers import DefaultRouter
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register(resources.BlogPostResource)
router.register(resources.CommentResource)
urlpatterns = router.urlpatterns
Trade-offs between views vs resources.
Writing resource-orientated code can be a good thing. It helps ensure that URL conventions will be consistent across your APIs, and minimises the amount of code you need to write.
The trade-off is that the behaviour is less explict. It can be more difficult to determine what code path is being followed, or where to override some behaviour.
Onwards and upwards.
We've reached the end of our tutorial. If you want to get more involved in the REST framework project, here's a few places you can start:
- Contribute on GitHub by reviewing issues, and submitting issues or pull requests.
- Join the REST framework group, and help build the community.
- Follow me on Twitter and say hi.
Now go build something great.