Added bulk acceptance and progress bar in review org applications view.
In the list of organization applications for reviewing, if you click the button "click here" the whole first text line will fade out and the progress bar will fade in while starting to contact the server for the list of orgs to accept and then make synchronous calls for acceptance, while updating the progress bar, the name of the organization currently accepting and the number of orgs already accepted against the total.
Inside the script, what's inside the parenthesis is converted due to regexp (in this case (link_id)) and then read the json_object.applications[index].link_id. By doing this with an eval(), you can use other names as well and the script will be reading for example json_object.applications[index].attribute_name if you insert "(attribute_name)" inside the link returned by {{ bulk_accept_link }}.
Notes by Lennard:
-Put Done outside the for-loop so that it also shows when there are 0 pre-accepted organizations.
-Made some minor style fixes
Patch by: Mario Ferraro
Reviewed by: Lennard de Rijk
"""
Settings and configuration for Django.
Values will be read from the module specified by the DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment
variable, and then from django.conf.global_settings; see the global settings file for
a list of all possible variables.
"""
import os
import time # Needed for Windows
from django.conf import global_settings
ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE = "DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"
class LazySettings(object):
"""
A lazy proxy for either global Django settings or a custom settings object.
The user can manually configure settings prior to using them. Otherwise,
Django uses the settings module pointed to by DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE.
"""
def __init__(self):
# _target must be either None or something that supports attribute
# access (getattr, hasattr, etc).
self._target = None
def __getattr__(self, name):
if self._target is None:
self._import_settings()
if name == '__members__':
# Used to implement dir(obj), for example.
return self._target.get_all_members()
return getattr(self._target, name)
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
if name == '_target':
# Assign directly to self.__dict__, because otherwise we'd call
# __setattr__(), which would be an infinite loop.
self.__dict__['_target'] = value
else:
if self._target is None:
self._import_settings()
setattr(self._target, name, value)
def _import_settings(self):
"""
Load the settings module pointed to by the environment variable. This
is used the first time we need any settings at all, if the user has not
previously configured the settings manually.
"""
try:
settings_module = os.environ[ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE]
if not settings_module: # If it's set but is an empty string.
raise KeyError
except KeyError:
# NOTE: This is arguably an EnvironmentError, but that causes
# problems with Python's interactive help.
raise ImportError("Settings cannot be imported, because environment variable %s is undefined." % ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE)
self._target = Settings(settings_module)
def configure(self, default_settings=global_settings, **options):
"""
Called to manually configure the settings. The 'default_settings'
parameter sets where to retrieve any unspecified values from (its
argument must support attribute access (__getattr__)).
"""
if self._target != None:
raise RuntimeError, 'Settings already configured.'
holder = UserSettingsHolder(default_settings)
for name, value in options.items():
setattr(holder, name, value)
self._target = holder
def configured(self):
"""
Returns True if the settings have already been configured.
"""
return bool(self._target)
configured = property(configured)
class Settings(object):
def __init__(self, settings_module):
# update this dict from global settings (but only for ALL_CAPS settings)
for setting in dir(global_settings):
if setting == setting.upper():
setattr(self, setting, getattr(global_settings, setting))
# store the settings module in case someone later cares
self.SETTINGS_MODULE = settings_module
try:
mod = __import__(self.SETTINGS_MODULE, {}, {}, [''])
except ImportError, e:
raise ImportError, "Could not import settings '%s' (Is it on sys.path? Does it have syntax errors?): %s" % (self.SETTINGS_MODULE, e)
# Settings that should be converted into tuples if they're mistakenly entered
# as strings.
tuple_settings = ("INSTALLED_APPS", "TEMPLATE_DIRS")
for setting in dir(mod):
if setting == setting.upper():
setting_value = getattr(mod, setting)
if setting in tuple_settings and type(setting_value) == str:
setting_value = (setting_value,) # In case the user forgot the comma.
setattr(self, setting, setting_value)
# Expand entries in INSTALLED_APPS like "django.contrib.*" to a list
# of all those apps.
new_installed_apps = []
for app in self.INSTALLED_APPS:
if app.endswith('.*'):
appdir = os.path.dirname(__import__(app[:-2], {}, {}, ['']).__file__)
app_subdirs = os.listdir(appdir)
app_subdirs.sort()
for d in app_subdirs:
if d.isalpha() and os.path.isdir(os.path.join(appdir, d)):
new_installed_apps.append('%s.%s' % (app[:-2], d))
else:
new_installed_apps.append(app)
self.INSTALLED_APPS = new_installed_apps
if hasattr(time, 'tzset'):
# Move the time zone info into os.environ. See ticket #2315 for why
# we don't do this unconditionally (breaks Windows).
os.environ['TZ'] = self.TIME_ZONE
time.tzset()
def get_all_members(self):
return dir(self)
class UserSettingsHolder(object):
"""
Holder for user configured settings.
"""
# SETTINGS_MODULE doesn't make much sense in the manually configured
# (standalone) case.
SETTINGS_MODULE = None
def __init__(self, default_settings):
"""
Requests for configuration variables not in this class are satisfied
from the module specified in default_settings (if possible).
"""
self.default_settings = default_settings
def __getattr__(self, name):
return getattr(self.default_settings, name)
def get_all_members(self):
return dir(self) + dir(self.default_settings)
settings = LazySettings()