Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: neapolitan
Version: 25.1
Summary: Neapolitan: quick CRUD views for Django.
Author-email: Carlton Gibson <carlton.gibson@noumenal.es>
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Requires-Dist: Django
Requires-Dist: django-filter
Requires-Dist: Sphinx ; extra == "docs"
Requires-Dist: coverage[toml] ; extra == "tests"
Requires-Dist: django_coverage_plugin ; extra == "tests"
Project-URL: Docs, https://noumenal.es/neapolitan/
Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/carltongibson/neapolitan
Provides-Extra: docs
Provides-Extra: tests

==========
Neapolitan
==========

.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/neapolitan.svg
  :target: https://pypi.org/project/neapolitan/
  :alt: PyPI version

I have a Django model:

.. code:: python

    from django.db import models

    class Bookmark(models.Model):
        url = models.URLField(unique=True)
        title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
        note = models.TextField(blank=True)
        favourite = models.BooleanField(default=False)

I want easy CRUD views for it, without it taking all day:

.. code:: python

    # urls.py
    from neapolitan.views import CRUDView
    from .models import Bookmark

    class BookmarkView(CRUDView):
        model = Bookmark
        fields = ["url", "title", "note"]
        filterset_fields = [
            "favourite",
        ]

    urlpatterns = [
        *BookmarkView.get_urls(),
    ]

Neapolitan's ``CRUDView`` provides the standard list, detail,
create, edit, and delete views for a model, as well as the hooks you need to
be able to customise any part of that.

Neapolitan provides base templates and re-usable template tags to make getting
your model on the page as easy as possible.

Where you take your app after that is up to you. But Neapolitan will get you
started.

Let's go! 🚀

Next stop `the docs <https://noumenal.es/neapolitan/>`_ 🚂

Versioning and Status
---------------------

Neapolitan uses a two-part CalVer versioning scheme, such as ``23.7``. The first
number is the year. The second is the release number within that year.

On an on-going basis, Neapolitan aims to support all current Django
versions and the matching current Python versions.

Please see:

* `Status of supported Python versions <https://devguide.python.org/versions/#supported-versions>`_
* `List of supported Django versions <https://www.djangoproject.com/download/#supported-versions>`_

Support for Python and Django versions will be dropped when they reach
end-of-life. Support for Python versions will be dropped when they reach
end-of-life, even when still supported by a current version of Django.

This is alpha software. I'm still working out the details of the API, and I've
only begun the docs.

**But**: You could just read ``neapolitan.views.CRUDView`` and see what it does.
Up to you. 😜

Installation
------------

Install with pip:

.. code:: bash

    pip install neapolitan

Add ``neapolitan`` to your ``INSTALLED_APPS``:

.. code:: python

    INSTALLED_APPS = [
        ...
        "neapolitan",
    ]

Templates expect a ``base.html`` template to exist and for that template to define a
``content`` block. (Refs <https://github.com/carltongibson/neapolitan/issues/6>.)

