app/django/utils/http.py
author Lennard de Rijk <ljvderijk@gmail.com>
Sat, 14 Feb 2009 21:18:12 +0000
changeset 1328 cd175dddc15c
parent 323 ff1a9aa48cfd
permissions -rw-r--r--
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

import urllib
from email.Utils import formatdate

from django.utils.encoding import smart_str, force_unicode
from django.utils.functional import allow_lazy

def urlquote(url, safe='/'):
    """
    A version of Python's urllib.quote() function that can operate on unicode
    strings. The url is first UTF-8 encoded before quoting. The returned string
    can safely be used as part of an argument to a subsequent iri_to_uri() call
    without double-quoting occurring.
    """
    return force_unicode(urllib.quote(smart_str(url), safe))

urlquote = allow_lazy(urlquote, unicode)

def urlquote_plus(url, safe=''):
    """
    A version of Python's urllib.quote_plus() function that can operate on
    unicode strings. The url is first UTF-8 encoded before quoting. The
    returned string can safely be used as part of an argument to a subsequent
    iri_to_uri() call without double-quoting occurring.
    """
    return force_unicode(urllib.quote_plus(smart_str(url), safe))
urlquote_plus = allow_lazy(urlquote_plus, unicode)

def urlencode(query, doseq=0):
    """
    A version of Python's urllib.urlencode() function that can operate on
    unicode strings. The parameters are first case to UTF-8 encoded strings and
    then encoded as per normal.
    """
    if hasattr(query, 'items'):
        query = query.items()
    return urllib.urlencode(
        [(smart_str(k),
         isinstance(v, (list,tuple)) and [smart_str(i) for i in v] or smart_str(v))
            for k, v in query],
        doseq)

def cookie_date(epoch_seconds=None):
    """
    Formats the time to ensure compatibility with Netscape's cookie standard.

    Accepts a floating point number expressed in seconds since the epoch, in
    UTC - such as that outputted by time.time(). If set to None, defaults to
    the current time.

    Outputs a string in the format 'Wdy, DD-Mon-YYYY HH:MM:SS GMT'.
    """
    rfcdate = formatdate(epoch_seconds)
    return '%s-%s-%s GMT' % (rfcdate[:7], rfcdate[8:11], rfcdate[12:25])

def http_date(epoch_seconds=None):
    """
    Formats the time to match the RFC1123 date format as specified by HTTP
    RFC2616 section 3.3.1.

    Accepts a floating point number expressed in seconds since the epoch, in
    UTC - such as that outputted by time.time(). If set to None, defaults to
    the current time.

    Outputs a string in the format 'Wdy, DD Mon YYYY HH:MM:SS GMT'.
    """
    rfcdate = formatdate(epoch_seconds)
    return '%s GMT' % rfcdate[:25]

# Base 36 functions: useful for generating compact URLs

def base36_to_int(s):
    """
    Convertd a base 36 string to an integer
    """
    return int(s, 36)

def int_to_base36(i):
    """
    Converts an integer to a base36 string
    """
    digits = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
    factor = 0
    # Find starting factor
    while True:
        factor += 1
        if i < 36 ** factor:
            factor -= 1
            break
    base36 = []
    # Construct base36 representation
    while factor >= 0:
        j = 36 ** factor
        base36.append(digits[i / j])
        i = i % j
        factor -= 1
    return ''.join(base36)