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Simple object instance ordering for the Django administration change list. (Currently unmaintained and out of order.)

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tkaemming/django-orderable

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django-orderable

Adds simple object instance ordering to the Django administration change list.

Installation

Installing django-orderable is simple, just complete the following steps:

  1. Clone the django-orderable repository from GitHub.
  2. Run python setup.py install to install the module package.
  3. Add orderable to the INSTALLED_APPS tuple for your Django project.
  4. Make sure the orderable.js file is served by your favorite web server.
  5. For any models that you would like to be ordered through the change list, have these models extend orderable.models.OrderableModel, and have their admin classes implement or extend orderable.admin.OrderableAdmin.
  6. Make sure that in your ModelAdmin, the list_per_page attribute is set to a value that is greater than the possible number of objects (this attribute defaults to 100). If you're looking to order an inordinate number of model instances, you might want to look elsewhere for your ordering solution.

Adding Orderable Administration Inlines

You can also create orderable inlines in your administration site by creating inlines that extend orderable.admin.OrderableStackedInline or orderable.admin.OrderableTabularInline.

Usage

Please note that this isn't a fool-proof solution to ordering objects in every scenario. However, this app is useful for small applications where the change list will not be paginated beyond the first page of model instances. There are a lot of cases where this application isn't the appropriate solution (at least currently), such as objects that are ordered with respect to a related object, situations where the list_filter will be implemented, etc.

Test Server

The test application can be run with the manage-tests.sh script in the root directory of the repository. (Please note that the script does need to be executed with the root as the repository as $PWD, or else the $PYTHONPATH environment variable will not be set correctly.) It takes any valid arguments to the environment's django-admin.py command. When creating the database, it creates a default superuser, with the username admin and password password, as well as some test data to play with in the administration panel.

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Simple object instance ordering for the Django administration change list. (Currently unmaintained and out of order.)

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