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Django Design Patterns and Best Practices. - Second Edition

You're reading from  Django Design Patterns and Best Practices. - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in May 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788831345
Pages 282 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Arun Ravindran Arun Ravindran
Profile icon Arun Ravindran
Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
PacktPub.com
Contributors
Preface
1. Django and Patterns 2. Application Design 3. Models 4. Views and URLs 5. Templates 6. Admin Interface 7. Forms 8. Working Asynchronously 9. Creating APIs 10. Dealing with Legacy Code 11. Testing and Debugging 12. Security 13. Production-Ready 1. Python 2 Versus Python 3 2. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

M is bigger than V and C


In Django, models are classes that provide an object-oriented way of dealing with databases. Typically, each class refers to a database table and each attribute refers to a database column. You can make queries to these tables using an automatically generated API.

Models can be the base for many other components. Once you have a model, you can rapidly derive model admins, model forms, and all kinds of generic views. In each case, you would need to write a line of code or two, just so that it does not seem too magical.

Also, models are used in more places than you would expect. This is because Django can be run in several ways. Some of the entry points of Django are as follows:

  • The familiar web request-response flow
  • Django interactive shell
  • Management commands
  • Test scripts
  • Asynchronous task queues such as Celery

In almost all of these cases, the model modules would get imported (as a part of django.setup()). Hence, it is best to keep your models free from any unnecessary...

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