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django-minify

1. Requirements

At the moment django-minify requires Python >2.5 and Django >1.0 to run.

2. Installation

Simply run:

python setup.py install

You can also obtain django-minify via:

pip install django-minify

or

easy_install django-minify

3. Setup

If you want to use templatetags and run the tests you need to add django-minify to your INSTALLED_APPS setting:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    ...
    'minify',
    ...
)

To use template tags you also need to copy minify directory in minify/templates/ to one of your template directories or add minify/templates/ to your TEMPLATE_DIRS setting.

This doesn't let you use django-minify yet. Additionally you need to add the setting MINIFY_PATHS to your project settings. This must be a tuple or list providing directories django-minify should look for files to minify and combine them. If you for example stored your JavaScript- and CSS-files in your MEDIA_ROOT you could do something like this:

MINIFY_PATHS = (
    os.path.join(MEDIA_ROOT, 'js'),
    os.path.join(MEDIA_ROOT, 'css')
)

You not necessarily need to use directories in your MEDIA_ROOT:

MINIFY_PATHS = (
    os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'javascript'),    # 'javascript' directory in project folder
    os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'css'),    # 'css' directory in project folder
)

Now the last thing to do is pointing to django-minify in your main url conf. In project_dir/urls.py you can add:

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ...
    (r'^minify/', include('minify.urls')),
    ...
)

4. Usage

If you want specific files to be minified you can create <script> or <link> tags pointing to the django-minify views. Example assuming above url configuration is used:

<link type="text/css" href="/minify/css/?files=reset.css,main.css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/minify/js/?files=jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js,base.js"></script>

Though more comfortable to use are the django-minify template tags. In your template do something like this:

{% load minify_tags %}

{% css "reset.css, main.css" %}
{% js "jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js, base.js" %}

This will automatically render the <script> and <link> tags. Also if you set DEBUG to True it will not combine and minify the content of these files.

5. Complex usage

Sometimes you a have lot more than just a couple Javascript- or CSS-files you want to use with django-minify. Instead of specify them in your template you can create a setting for it. The name of the setting doesn't matter. For example:

MY_JAVASCRIPT_FILES = [
    'jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js',
    'jquery/jquery.tools.js',
    'base.js',
    'swfobject.js',
    ...
]

Then in your template you can simply use the name of the setting instead of a comma-seperated string with all these file paths in it:

{% js "MY_JAVASCRIPT_FILES" %}

If you don't want to combine and minify all files together, but for example group them you can use nested lists (or tuples for that matter) in your setting:

MY_JAVASCRIPT_FILES = [
    [
        'jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js',
        'jquery/jquery.tools.js'
    ],
    [
        'base.js',
        'swfobject.js'
    ]
]

This will combine and minify the files specified in the first list/tuple and create a <script> tag for it, then the files in the second group and so on. See the sample project for a more complex example using headJS.

One of your views is rendering JavaScript and you want to minify this one as well? No problem. You can pass a url as an optional parameter to your js template tag and therefore to the view:

{% load minify_tags %}

{% js "jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js, base.js" "/url-path/to-my/js-view/" %}

The rendered script tag might then look something like this:

<script src="/minify/js/?files=jquery/jquery-1.4.3.js,base.js&url=/url-path/to-my/js-view/"></script>

This will combine the Javascript prodided by your view with the Javascript within these files. Keep in mind that in the current version of django-minify the view content will be appended first and after that the files will be combined with it.

6. Additional settings

For django-minify you can provide a couple optional settings to tweak it for your project. Within django-minify app there are reasonable defaults set for it:

For example you could set debug mode just for django-minify

# default: settings.DEBUG
MINIFY_DEBUG = True #or False

Specify when browser cached CSS or Javascript will expire:

# default: 5 (days)
MINIFY_CSS_JS_EXPIRES = 3   # in days

Specify if HTTP-Response should set the Cache-Control header to private or public

# default: False (cached in users browser and proxy cache)
MINIFY_HEADER_CACHE_PRIVATE = True

Specify how long will minified content stay in Django's cache (if you use Django's cache framework):

# default: 60*60*24*5 aka 5 days
MINIFY_CACHE_DURATION = 300   # in seconds

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