Getting Django admin url for an object
Before Django 1.0 there was an easy way to get the admin url of an object, and I had written a small filter that I'd use like this: <a href="{{ object|admin_url }}" .... > ... </a>
Basically I was using the url reverse function with the view name being 'django.contrib.admin.views.main.change_stage'
reverse( 'django.contrib.admin.views.main.change_stage', args=[app_label, model_name, object_id] )
to get the url.
As you might have guessed, I'm trying to update to the latest version of Django, and this is one of the obstacles I came across, that method for getting the admin url doesn't work anymore.
How can I do this in django 1.0? (or 1.1 for that matter, as I'm trying to update to the latest version in the svn).
You can use the URL resolver directly in a template, there's no need to write your own filter. E.g.
{% url 'admin:index' %}
{% url 'admin:polls_choice_add' %}
{% url 'admin:polls_choice_change' choice.id %}
{% url 'admin:polls_choice_changelist' %}
Ref: Documentation
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
def url_to_edit_object(obj):
url = reverse('admin:%s_%s_change' % (obj._meta.app_label, obj._meta.model_name), args=[obj.id] )
return u'<a href="%s">Edit %s</a>' % (url, obj.__unicode__())
This is similar to hansen_j's solution except that it uses url namespaces, admin: being the admin's default application namespace.
I had a similar issue where I would try to call reverse('admin_index')
and was constantly getting django.core.urlresolvers.NoReverseMatch
errors.
Turns out I had the old format admin urls in my urls.py file.
I had this in my urlpatterns:
(r'^admin/(.*)', admin.site.root),
which gets the admin screens working but is the deprecated way of doing it. I needed to change it to this:
(r'^admin/', include(admin.site.urls) ),
Once I did that, all the goodness that was promised in the Reversing Admin URLs docs started working.
There's another way for the later versions, for example in 1.10:
{% load admin_urls %}
<a href="{% url opts|admin_urlname:'add' %}">Add user</a>
<a href="{% url opts|admin_urlname:'delete' user.pk %}">Delete this user</a>
Where opts
is something like mymodelinstance._meta
or MyModelClass._meta
One gotcha is you can't access underscore attributes directly in Django templates (like {{ myinstance._meta }}
) so you have to pass the opts
object in from the view as template context.
Essentially the same as Mike Ramirez's answer, but simpler and closer in stylistics to django standard get_absolute_url
method:
from django.urls import reverse
def get_admin_url(self):
return reverse('admin:%s_%s_change' % (self._meta.app_label, self._meta.model_name),
args=[self.id])