Have you ever wanted multiple views to match to the same URL? Now you can.
You may once have tried something like this:
urlpatterns = [ url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.people), url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.place), ]
However, if you try this, /app/san-francisco/
will only map to
app.views.people
. Raising an Http404
from app.views.people
doesn't
help: you only get a 404 in the browser because Django stops resolving
URLs at the first match.
Well, django-multiurl
solves this problem. Just
pip install django-multiurl
, then do this:
from multiurl import multiurl urlpatterns = [ multiurl( url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.people), url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.place), ) ]
Now in your views, raise multiurl.ContinueResolving
anywhere you'd like
to break out of the view and keep resolving. For example, here's what
app.views.people
might look like:
from multiurl import ContinueResolving def people(request, name): try: person = Person.objects.get(name=name) except Person.DoesNotExist: raise ContinueResolving return render(...)
That's it! ContinueResolving
will cause multiurl
to continue onto the
next view (app.views.place
, in this example).
A few notes to round things out:
If you don't want to use
ContinueResolving
-- perhaps you'd rather continue usingget_object_or_404
, or you're using third-party views that you can't modify to raiseContinueResolving
, you can pass acatch
argument intomultiurl
to control which exceptions are considered "continue" statements. For example, to allowHttp404
exceptions to continue resolving, do this:urlpatterns = [ multiurl( url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.people), url('/app/(\w+)/$', app.views.place), catch = (Http404, ContinueResolving) ) ]
As you can see,
catch
should be a tuple of exceptions. It's probably a good idea to always includeContinueResolving
in the tuple.If the last view in a
multiurl
raisesContinueResolving
(or another "continuing" exception), a 404 will be raised instead. That is, if resolving "falls off the end" of some multi-urls, you'll get the 404 you expect.Reverse URL resolution just works as expected. Name your sub-URLs and then reverse your heart out.
Development takes place on GitHub; pull requests are welcome. Run tests with tox.