Can I call a view from within another view?
Solution 1:
Sure, as long as when it's all said and done your view returns an HttpResponse object. The following is completely valid:
def view1(request):
# do some stuff here
return HttpResponse("some html here")
def view2(request):
return view1(request)
If you don't want to return the HttpResponse from the first view then just store it into some variable to ignore:
def view1(request):
# do some stuff here
return HttpResponse("some html here")
def view2(request):
response = view1(request)
# do some stuff here
return HttpResponse("some different html here")
Solution 2:
View functions should return a rendered HTML back to the browser (in an HttpResponse
). Calling a view within a view means that you're (potentially) doing the rendering twice. Instead, just factor out the "add" into another function that's not a view, and have both views call it.
def add_stuff(bar):
item = Item.objects.create(foo=bar)
return item
def specific_add_item_view(request):
item = add_stuff(bar)
...
def big_view(request):
item = add_stuff(bar)
...
Solution 3:
A better way is to use the template system. Combining ideas from @Seth and @brady:
def specific_add_item_view(request, extra_context_stuff=None):
Item.objects.create()
context_variables = {} # obviously want to populate this
if extra_context_stuff:
context_variables.update(extra_context_stuff)
return render(request, 'app_name/view1_template.html', context_variables)
def bigger_view(request):
extra_context_stuff = {'big_view': True}
return specific_add_item_view(request, extra_context_stuff)
And your app_name/view1_template.html might contain a conditional template tag
{% if big_view %}
<p>Extra html for the bigger view</p>
{% endif %}
Solution 4:
Without class based views:
def my_view(request):
return call_another_view(request)
def call_another_view(request):
return HttpResponse( ... )
With class based views:
def my_view(request):
return CallAnotherView.as_view()(request)
class CallAnotherView(View):
...