views:

521

answers:

3

I'm writing a simple real-estate listing app in Django. Each property needs to have a variable number of images. Images need to have an editable order. And I need to make the admin user-proof.

So that said, what are my options?

  1. Is there a ImageList field that I don't know about?

  2. Is there an app like django.contrib.comments that does the job for me?

  3. If I have to write it myself, how would I go about making the admin-side decent? I'm imagining something a lot slicker than what ImageField provides, with some drag'n'drop for re-ordering. But I'm a complete clutz at writing admin pages =(

+2  A: 

Write an Image model that has a ForeignKey to your Property model. Quite probably, you'll have some other fields that belong to the image and not to the Property.

Javier
+5  A: 
  1. Variable lists, also known as a many-to-one relationship, are usually handled by making a separate model for the many and, in that model, using a ForeignKey to the "one".

  2. There isn't an app like this in django.contrib, but there are several external projects you can use, e.g. django-photologue which even has some support for viewing the images in the admin.

  3. The admin site can't be made "user proof", it should only be used by trusted users. Given this, the way to make your admin site decent would be to define a ModelAdmin for your property and then inline the photos (inline documentation.

So, to give you some quick drafts, everything would look something like this:

# models.py
class Property(models.Model):
    address = models.TextField()
    ...

class PropertyImage(models.Model):
    property = models.ForeignKey(Property, related_name='images')
    image = models.ImageField()

and:

# admin.py
class PropertyImageInline(admin.TabularInline):
    model = PropertyImage
    extra = 3

class PropertyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    inlines = [ PropertyImageInline, ]

The reason for using the related_name argument on the ForeignKey is so your queries will be more readable, e.g. in this case you can do something like this in your view:

property = Property.objects.get(pk=1)
image_list = property.images.all()

EDIT: forgot to mention, you can then implement drag-and-drop ordering in the admin using Simon Willison's snippet Orderable inlines using drag and drop with jQuery UI

Van Gale
The PropertyImage model should include a field for ordering.
akaihola
+1  A: 

I'm currently make about the same thing, and I faced the same issue.

After I researched for a while, I decided to use http://code.google.com/p/django-imaging/. It has a nice Ajax feature, images can be uploaded on the same page as the model Insert page, and can be editable. The only thing it is lacking is the support for non-JPEG extension. I hope I will have the workaround for it in days. :)

Adrian Liem