python-django-appconf
Port variant py310
Summary Django configure defaults helper class (3.10)
Package version 1.0.5
Homepage https://django-appconf.readthedocs.io/
Keywords python
Maintainer Python Automaton
License Not yet specified
Other variants v11
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Last modified 23 JAN 2023, 06:04:31 UTC
Port created 02 FEB 2018, 15:29:04 UTC
Subpackage Descriptions
single django-appconf ============== A helper class for handling configuration defaults of packaged Django apps gracefully. .. note:: This app precedes Django's own AppConfig_ classes that act as "objects [to] store metadata for an application" inside Django's app loading mechanism. In other words, they solve a related but different use case than django-appconf and can't easily be used as a replacement. The similarity in name is purely coincidental. .. _AppConfig: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/applications/#django.apps.AppConfig Overview -------- Say you have an app called myapp with a few defaults, which you want to refer to in the app's code without repeating yourself all the time. appconf provides a simple class to implement those defaults. Simply add something like the following code somewhere in your app files: .. code-block:: python from appconf import AppConf class MyAppConf(AppConf): SETTING_1 = "one" SETTING_2 = ( "two", ) .. note:: AppConf classes depend on being imported during startup of the Django process. Even though there are multiple modules loaded automatically, only the models modules (usually the ``models.py`` file of your app) are guaranteed to be loaded at startup. Therefore it's recommended to put your AppConf subclass(es) there, too. The settings are initialized with the capitalized app label of where the setting is located at. E.g. if your ``models.py with the AppConf class is in the myapp`` package, the prefix of the settings will be MYAPP. You can override the default prefix by specifying a prefix attribute of an inner Meta class: .. code-block:: python from appconf import AppConf class AcmeAppConf(AppConf): SETTING_1 = "one" SETTING_2 = ( "two", ) class Meta: prefix = 'acme' The MyAppConf class will automatically look at Django's global settings to determine if you've overridden it. For example, adding this to your site's ``settings.py would override SETTING_1 of the above MyAppConf``: .. code-block:: python ACME_SETTING_1 = "uno" Since django-appconf completes Django's global settings with its default values (like "one" above), the standard ``python manage.py diffsettings`` will show these defaults automatically. In case you want to use a different settings object instead of the default ``'django.conf.settings'``, set the holder attribute of the inner Meta class to a dotted import path: .. code-block:: python from appconf import AppConf class MyAppConf(AppConf): SETTING_1 = "one" SETTING_2 = ( "two", ) class Meta: prefix = 'acme' holder = 'acme.conf.settings' If you ship an AppConf class with your reusable Django app, it's recommended to put it in a ``conf.py file of your app package and import django.conf.settings`` in it, too:
Configuration Switches (platform-specific settings discarded)
PY310 ON Build using Python 3.10 PY311 OFF Build using Python 3.11
Package Dependencies by Type
Build (only) python-pip:single:py310
autoselect-python:single:standard
Build and Runtime python310:single:standard
Runtime (only) python-Django:single:py310
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ae9f864ee1958c815a965ed63b3fba4874eec13de10236ba063a788f9a17389d 6433 django_appconf-1.0.5-py3-none-any.whl
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