Alternative to CommaSeparatedIntegerField built-in field that supports MultipleChoiceField, custom separator and returns values as list.
Install package from PyPi:
pip install django-separatedvaluesfield
Or download the archive from GitHub and proceed to a manual installation:
curl -L https://github.com/ulule/django-separatedvaluesfield/tarball/master | tar zx cd thoas-django-separatedvaluesfield python setup.py install
Add SeparatedValuesField
to your Django model:
# models.py
from django.db import models
from separatedvaluesfield.models import SeparatedValuesField
class Project(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=150)
languages = SeparatedValuesField(
max_length=150,
token=',',
choices=(
('en', 'English'),
('fr', 'French')))
If your choices values are not strings, add the cast
option with the type
you want to apply on values (defaults to django.utils.six.text_type
):
# models.py
from django.db import models
from separatedvaluesfield.models import SeparatedValuesField
class Project(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=150)
languages = SeparatedValuesField(
max_length=150,
cast=int,
token=',',
choices=(
(1, 'English'),
(2, 'French')))
If you are running Django <= 1.6, synchronize your database using syncdb
:
python manage.py syncdb
If you are running Django >= 1.7, synchronize your database using migrate
:
python manage.py migrate
The SeparatedValuesField
behaves like a CharField
which separates values with
a token (default is ,
).
This field is transformed as a MultipleChoiceField when you are
creating a forms.ModelForm
with your model.
>>> from myapp.models import Project
>>> project = Project(name='Project with strings', languages=['fr', 'en'])
>>> project.save() # save 'fr,en' in database for the column "languages"
>>> project.pk
1
>>> project = Project.objects.get(pk=1)
>>> project.languages
['fr', 'en']
# If you added "cast" option to the field to cast to 'int'
>>> project = Project(name='Project with integers', languages=[u'1', u'2'])
>>> project.save() # save '1,2' in database for the column "languages"
>>> project = Project.objects.get(pk=1)
>>> project.languages
[1, 2]
- Fork the repository
- Clone your fork
- Create a dedicated branch (never ever work in
master
) - Create your development environment with
make dev
- Activate your environment with
source .venv/bin/activate
- Make modifications
- Write tests and execute them with
make test
- Be sure all test pass with
tox
- If all tests pass, submit a pull request