My goal is to use a URL parameter as a variable in a function and output it in the serializer. But the following solution doesnt work. Anybody know why?
The URL looks like this: http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/water-bodies/?from=2013-02-17&to=2013-02-18
models.py
class Application(models.Model):
"""Database models for application information"""
name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
machine_name = models.SlugField(max_length=255, allow_unicode=True)
description = models.TextField(blank=True, null=True)
indice_to_use = models.ForeignKey('Indice', on_delete=models.PROTECT, blank=True, null=True)
def __str__(self):
return self.name
views.py
class DetailView(APIView):
def get_serializer_context(self):
context = super().get_serializer_context()
context["date_from"] = self.request.query_params.get("from", None)
return context
def get(self, request, machine_name):
application = Application.objects.get(machine_name=machine_name)
serializer = OsdSerializer(application)
return Response({"Everything you need to analyzing "+application.name: serializer.data})
serializer.py
class OsdSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
bands = BandSerializer(source='indice_to_use.needed_bands', many=True)
satellite = SatelliteSerializer(source='indice_to_use.satellite_to_use')
indice = IndiceSerializer(source='indice_to_use')
def get_alternate_name(self, obj):
return self.context.get('date_from')
class Meta:
model = Application
fields = ['machine_name', 'name', 'description', 'indice', 'satellite', 'bands', 'date_from', ]
We would be required to update the code at two places.
In this, we are updating context to include data_from
. (please note, we can also access this directly in the serialzier)
class DetailView(APIView):
...
def get(self, request, machine_name):
application = Application.objects.get(machine_name=machine_name)
serializer = OsdSerializer(application, context={
"date_from": request.query_params.get("from")
})
return Response({"Everything you need to analyzing "+application.name: serializer.data})
...
class OsdSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
bands = BandSerializer(source='indice_to_use.needed_bands', many=True)
satellite = SatelliteSerializer(source='indice_to_use.satellite_to_use')
indice = IndiceSerializer(source='indice_to_use')
alternate_name = serializers.SerializerMethodField()
def get_alternate_name(self, obj):
return self.context.get('date_from')
class Meta:
model = Application
fields = ['machine_name', 'name', 'description', 'indice', 'satellite', 'bands', 'date_from', 'alternate_name']
Another approach would be to access the request object directly from the context of the serializer. By default, the serializer context contains the request object in it. To do so, just update the serializer as mentioned below
OsdSerializer in the serializers.py
class OsdSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
bands = BandSerializer(source='indice_to_use.needed_bands', many=True)
satellite = SatelliteSerializer(source='indice_to_use.satellite_to_use')
indice = IndiceSerializer(source='indice_to_use')
alternate_name = serializers.SerializerMethodField()
def get_alternate_name(self, obj):
return self.context.get('request').query_params.get('from', None)
class Meta:
model = Application
fields = ['machine_name', 'name', 'description', 'indice', 'satellite', 'bands', 'date_from', 'alternate_name']