Thanks for the reply Gonzalo, I really appreciate the feedback.
So, conceptually I understand how the remaining pieces of this app fit
together - but could I ask for just a little more of your help as I'm
struggling with coding the details of what's needed.
Let's start basic - I've got some 'cards' in my database and on one of the
web pages the title of the card is presented in a list (with some CSS
styling to present the list item as a rectangle):
<ul>
{% for card in cards.all %}
<li class="card">{{ card.title }} </li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
I'd like to click on one of the items in the list and open up a new page
showing all the database details for that particular list item (title,
description, time of creation, etc). Roughly, would I change the list items
into links:
<ul>
{% for card in cards.all %}
<li class="card"><a href='card.html/get(this_object_id)>{{
card.title }}</a></li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
Then there would be a new view defined, something like
def card(request):
object = get(this_object_id)
context = {'cards': object}
return render(request, 'scrumbuddy/card.html', context)
I know this code is incorrect, but is it roughly how I should proceed?
Connecting the list item URL to the card view which I don't really
understand how to do.
Many thanks
Lylio
On Tuesday, 13 February 2018 14:18:25 UTC, Gonzalo Delgado wrote:
>
> Hi Lylio,
>
> On 12/2/18 16:20, Lylio wrote:
> > 1. To click on a card so it opens up and displays the details, am I
> right
> > to say I should create a card.html file in the templates folder for
> this?
>
> It isn't necessary, but it is a good idea
> What you need is to create a view that renders such template.
> I suggest you write your own view function that does that, but what
> you'd usually do is just use a generic view and either pass it the
> template you want to use, or name the template in a way the generic view
> will find it on its own.
> See:
>
> https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.0/topics/class-based-views/generic-display/
>
>
> > 2. I'm confused about how Django keeps track of the cards in my app - I
> > presume each card object has an ID in the database and I'd need this
> ID in
> > order to retrieve the card's details when it's clicked - but I'm
> unsure of
> > how to link the two. In the two pictures above, say someone clicked on
> the
> > 'class progression' card on the left... I'd like a new page to open up
> that
> > display the details for that card and allows the user to edit the info
> or
> > completely delete the card.
>
> Yes, in general, every Django model instance has an id (unless you
> specifically tell it not to), and you can use it to create urls for the
> detail view I mentioned earlier. This is a good start, but you'll later
> want to add a SlugField to your Card model, and use that instead of the
> id so urls look nicer.
>
> > I'm maybe asking a bit much here - but I'm unsure of how complex these
> > requirements are. It feels like it should be *fairly *straightforward.
> Any
> > thoughts or advice would be greatly appreciated.
>
> I can assure you using Django for a project like yours is *very*
> straightforward.
> When in doubt, revisit the Django tutorial. This part is a good one for
> where you're at: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.0/intro/tutorial03/
>
>
> --
> Gonzalo Delgado
>
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