thirdparty/google_appengine/lib/django/tests/modeltests/pagination/models.py
author Pawel Solyga <Pawel.Solyga@gmail.com>
Tue, 14 Oct 2008 16:10:07 +0000
changeset 324 05e21c089be6
parent 109 620f9b141567
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
Add missing import in soc/views/site/sponsor/list.py which caused exception when app was deployed and first site you visited was "List Site Sponsors". Update files according to recent django update and django backwards incompatibility (for example newforms is changed to forms). Patch by: Pawel Solyga Review by: to-be-reviewed

"""
30. Object pagination

Django provides a framework for paginating a list of objects in a few lines
of code. This is often useful for dividing search results or long lists of
objects into easily readable pages.
"""

from django.db import models

class Article(models.Model):
    headline = models.CharField(maxlength=100, default='Default headline')
    pub_date = models.DateTimeField()

    def __str__(self):
        return self.headline

__test__ = {'API_TESTS':"""
# prepare a list of objects for pagination
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> for x in range(1, 10):
...     a = Article(headline='Article %s' % x, pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
...     a.save()

# create a basic paginator, 5 articles per page
>>> from django.core.paginator import ObjectPaginator, InvalidPage
>>> paginator = ObjectPaginator(Article.objects.all(), 5)

# the paginator knows how many hits and pages it contains
>>> paginator.hits
9

>>> paginator.pages
2

# get the first page (zero-based)
>>> paginator.get_page(0)
[<Article: Article 1>, <Article: Article 2>, <Article: Article 3>, <Article: Article 4>, <Article: Article 5>]

# get the second page
>>> paginator.get_page(1)
[<Article: Article 6>, <Article: Article 7>, <Article: Article 8>, <Article: Article 9>]

# does the first page have a next or previous page?
>>> paginator.has_next_page(0)
True

>>> paginator.has_previous_page(0)
False

# check the second page
>>> paginator.has_next_page(1)
False

>>> paginator.has_previous_page(1)
True

>>> paginator.first_on_page(0)
1
>>> paginator.first_on_page(1)
6
>>> paginator.last_on_page(0)
5
>>> paginator.last_on_page(1)
9

# Add a few more records to test out the orphans feature.
>>> for x in range(10, 13):
...     Article(headline="Article %s" % x, pub_date=datetime(2006, 10, 6)).save()

# With orphans set to 3 and 10 items per page, we should get all 12 items on a single page:
>>> paginator = ObjectPaginator(Article.objects.all(), 10, orphans=3)
>>> paginator.pages
1

# With orphans only set to 1, we should get two pages:
>>> paginator = ObjectPaginator(Article.objects.all(), 10, orphans=1)
>>> paginator.pages
2
"""}