I don't know whether it will help, but it seems that it isn't the top-level urls.py that the error is complaining about but the one in your persons app. Presumably the top-level urlconf includes that?
As to why applying a decorator should trigger the problem, I am a bit stumped. regards Steve On 8/5/2010 11:14 AM, Dan Gentry wrote: > Steve, thanks for the guidance. I'm heading in the right direction > with a better understanding of the concept, but still stymied by the > urls error. Not seeing the connection between adding a decorator and > having trouble with urls.py. I'll get there. Dan > > On Aug 4, 11:31 am, Steve Holden <holden...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On 8/4/2010 10:52 AM, Dan Gentry wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >>> When I attempt to use the decorator logic, the view becomes this: >> >>> views.py >>> @institution_required >>> def list_type(request): >> >>> inst_id=request.session.get('inst_id',None) >> >>> queryset = RecordType.objects.filter(institution=inst_id) >>> return object_list(request, queryset, paginate_by = 12) >> >>> I don't make any changes to urls.py, but the error is >>> "TemplateSyntaxError at /index >>> Caught ImproperlyConfigured while rendering: The included urlconf >>> person.urls doesn't have any patterns in it" >>> However, when I take out the decorator, all of the urls work as >>> expected. >> >>> urls.py does import * from views.py >> >> Your decorator takes two arguments - its signature is >> >> institution_required(fn, redirect_field_name=REDIRECT_FIELD_NAME) >> >> But the decorator mechanism only allows you to specify one argument (the >> decorated function). There is no way to specify anything OTHER than the >> default value for the redirect_field_name argument ... >> >> Therefore if you want to use decorators for this application you will >> have to write something more complex still: a function that takes a >> single redirect_field_name argument and /returns a decorator/ that can >> be applied to views. Then you would call it as >> >> @institution_required("Some_field_name") >> def list_type(request): >> ... >> >> Your call to institution_required should return a decorator. That takes >> the decorated function as its single argument and returns the decorated >> function. This is getting a little complex for a beginner. >> >> regards >> Steve >> -- >> I'm no expert. >> "ex" == "has-been"; "spurt" == "drip under pressure" >> "expert" == "has-been drip under pressure". > -- I'm no expert. "ex" == "has-been"; "spurt" == "drip under pressure" "expert" == "has-been drip under pressure". -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django users" group. To post to this group, send email to django-us...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to django-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en.