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Web Development with Django

You're reading from   Web Development with Django Learn to build modern web applications with a Python-based framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839212505
Length 826 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (5):
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Saurabh Badhwar Saurabh Badhwar
Author Profile Icon Saurabh Badhwar
Saurabh Badhwar
Bharath Chandra K S Bharath Chandra K S
Author Profile Icon Bharath Chandra K S
Bharath Chandra K S
Andrew Bird Andrew Bird
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Andrew Bird
Ben Shaw Ben Shaw
Author Profile Icon Ben Shaw
Ben Shaw
Chris Guest Chris Guest
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Chris Guest
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Introduction to Django 2. Models and Migrations FREE CHAPTER 3. URL Mapping, Views, and Templates 4. Introduction to Django Admin 5. Serving Static Files 6. Forms 7. Advanced Form Validation and Model Forms 8. Media Serving and File Uploads 9. Sessions and Authentication 10. Advanced Django Admin and Customizations 11. Advanced Templating and Class-Based Views 12. Building a REST API 13. Generating CSV, PDF, and Other Binary Files 14. Testing 15. Django Third-Party Libraries 16. Using a Frontend JavaScript Library with Django

Serializers

By now, we are well versed in the way Django works with data in our application. Broadly, the columns of a database table are defined in a class in models.py, and when we access a row of the table, we are working with an instance of that class. Ideally, we often just want to pass this object to our frontend application. For example, if we wanted to build a website that displayed a list of books in our Bookr app, we would want to call the title property of each book instance to know what string to display to the user. However, our frontend application knows nothing about Python and needs to retrieve this data through an HTTP request, which just returns a string in a specific format.

This means that any information translated between Django and the frontend (via our API) must be done by representing the information in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format. JSON objects look similar to a Python dictionary, except there are some extra rules that constrict the exact syntax...

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