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djangular

A reusable app that provides better app integration with Angular. Djangular allows you to create Angular content per app, instead of creating a single massive Angular application inside of Django. This allows you to selectively use apps per site, as well as create a consistent structure across all of your Django apps.

This is intended to be a Django version of the Angular-Seed project (https://github.com/angular/angular-seed). The current mindset is to limit the amount of changes introduced by Djangular.

Requirements

  • Currently requires Python 2.7.
  • Requires Django 1.4 or 1.5.
  • Local installs of Node.js and Karma for testing.

Installation

  • You may install directly from pypi:

      pip install djangular
    
  • Or download the source and install it in a terminal/console:

      python setup.py install
    
  • Or download the source and move the djangular directory inside your django project as an app.

Configuration Changes Needed for Djangular

  • Djangular needs to be placed as an app inside a Django project and added to the INSTALLED_APPS setting. Also, the staticfiles contrib library will need to be included if it isn't.

      INSTALLED_APPS = (
          ...
          'django.contrib.staticfiles',
          'djangular',
          ...
      )
    
  • After you install Djangular inside a project, you will need to run the makeangularsite command to properly setup Karma into your default site directory. Note: You may need to edit these configuration templates to add any additional javascript libraries.

      python manage.py makeangularsite
    
  • The STATICFILES_FINDERS needs to be updated to include djangular.finders.NamespacedAngularAppDirectoriesFinder.

      STATICFILES_FINDERS = (
          'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.FileSystemFinder',
          'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.AppDirectoriesFinder',
          'djangular.finders.NamespacedAngularAppDirectoriesFinder'
      )
    
  • Because of this new finder, the findstatic and collectstatic commands will place the angular files underneath an <app_name>/ folder. You will not need to namespace each of your static directories (unless you really want to).

  • To create an app already setup with the djangular (angular-seed) structure, run python manage.py startangularapp <app_name> from the command line. This will create the files and directory structures needed for you to get started.

  • To use the Angular module that Djangular provides you, you'll need to add the djangular app to your projects URLs.

      urlpatterns = patterns('',
          ...
          url(r'^djangular/', include('djangular.urls')),
          ...
      )
    
  • Djangular also includes a JSON Vulnerability middleware that AngularJS knows how to process. To include this protection, add djangular.middleware.AngularJsonVulnerabilityMiddleware to the MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES setting. This only affects JSON requests (based on Content-Type), so this can be located fairly low in the middleware stack.

      MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
          ...
          'djangular.middleware.AngularJsonVulnerabilityMiddleware'
      )
    

Comparison between Djangular and Angular-Seed

  • Each app has its own Angular "app" folder, with directories for CSS, JS, images and partials supplied. As a result, the URLs for these get grouped into the STATIC_URL structure of Django. So, each resource inside an Angular app will have a {{ STATIC URL }}/{{ app_name }}/ prefix.

    • Note: Because of these URLs, referring to Angular content in a separate app should use a ../<separate_app>/ URL. This will help significantly during testing to make sure paths are correct.
    • Note: It is recommended to namespace the Angular code the same name as the Django app. The created JS files do this already.
  • Tests have moved from test/ to tests/. There are unit/ and e2e/ subdirectories where the Angular tests go.

  • The lib/ directory (containing the AngularJS code) has been moved to the static folder of the Djangular app. This will use the normal Django static urls: {{ STATIC URL }}/lib/angular/angular.js

  • The config/ directory is now placed inside of your default Django site. Each individual Django app doesn't need its own AngularJS or Karma config.

  • The scripts/ directory has removed, because the Angular-Seed scripts have been made into Django commands. These commands exist in the standard management/ directory.

    • makeangularsite places the Karma configuration templates inside the given Django Site directory. This should be run after installing Djangular.
    • runtestserver runs a local Django Web Server configured to support running all e2e tests.
    • startangularapp creates a Django app with the Angular structure.
    • testjs runs the Karma Server for either the unit or e2e tests. Note that the e2e tests requires the runtestserver to be running beforehand.

How to obtain the Django Template variables into Angular

There is an Angular module called djangular that is rendered via the Django templating engine to obtain common template variables like the STATIC_URL, MEDIA_URL, the User object, etc. This app includes a service called DjangoProperties, which will enable you to get access to those variables, and a django filter, which follows the standard Angular filtering rules. The URL for this JavaScript is /djangular/app.js (Note that is not static).

Current Roadmap

  • Auto-detection of node and karma installs.
  • Providing additional synchronization between Django models and Angular's $resource. This includes removing the patch for Angular's $resource, yet not having to require Django's FORCE_SLASHES setting to be False.
  • Using Django's ModelForms and Templates to provide an easy way to generate Angular partials.

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A reusable Django app that provides better integration and tools for Angular.js

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