Widget Reference¶
This is a reference document with a list of the provided widgets and their arguments.
LinkWidget¶
This widget renders each option as a link, instead of an actual <input>. It has
one method that you can override for additional customizability.
option_string() should return a string with 3 Python keyword argument
placeholders:
attrs: This is a string with all the attributes that will be on the final<a>tag.query_string: This is the query string for use in thehrefoption on the<a>element.label: This is the text to be displayed to the user.
BooleanWidget¶
This widget converts its input into Python’s True/False values. It will convert
all case variations of True and False into the internal Python values.
To use it, pass this into the widgets argument of the BooleanFilter:
active = BooleanFilter(widget=BooleanWidget())
CSVWidget¶
This widget expects a comma separated value and converts it into a list of string values. It is expected that the field class handle a list of values as well as type conversion.
RangeWidget¶
This widget is used with RangeFilter and its subclasses. It generates two
form input elements which generally act as start/end values in a range.
Under the hood, it is Django’s forms.TextInput widget and excepts
the same arguments and values. To use it, pass it to widget argument of
a RangeField:
date_range = DateFromToRangeFilter(widget=RangeWidget(attrs={'placeholder': 'YYYY/MM/DD'}))
SuffixedMultiWidget¶
Extends Django’s builtin MultiWidget to append custom suffixes instead of
indices. For example, take a range widget that accepts minimum and maximum
bounds. By default, the resulting query params would look like the following:
GET /products?price_0=10&price_1=25 HTTP/1.1
By using SuffixedMultiWidget instead, you can provide human-friendly suffixes.
class RangeWidget(SuffixedMultiWidget):
suffixes = ['min', 'max']
The query names are now a little more ergonomic.
GET /products?price_min=10&price_max=25 HTTP/1.1