You will learn how to add your own content types and how you can render them in a template.
In FeinCMS, a content type is something to attach as content to a base model, for example a CMS Page (the base model) may have several rich text components associated to it (those would be RichTextContent content types).
Every content type knows, amongst other things, how to render itself. Think of content types as “snippets” of information to appear on a page.
Simple:
<div id="content">
{% block content %}
{% for content in feincms_page.content.main %}
{{ content.render }}
{% endfor %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
<div id="sidebar">
{% block sidebar %}
{% for content in feincms_page.content.sidebar %}
{{ content.render }}
{% endfor %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
The minimal content type is an abstract Django model with a render() method, nothing else:
class TextileContent(models.Model):
content = models.TextField(_('content'))
class Meta:
abstract = True
def render(self, **kwargs):
return textile(self.content)
All content types’ render() methods must accept **kwargs. This allows easily extending the interface with additional parameters. But more on this later.
FeinCMS offers a method on feincms.models.Base called create_content_type() which will create concrete content types from your abstract content types. Since content types can be used for different CMS base models such as pages and blog entries (implementing a rich text or an image content once and using it for both models makes lots of sense) your implementation needs to be abstract. create_content_type() adds a few utility methods and a few model fields to build the concrete type, a foreign key to the base model (f.e. the Page) and several properties indicating where the content block will be positioned in the rendered result.
Note
The examples on this page assume that you use the Page CMS base model. The principles outlined apply for all other CMS base types.
The complete code required to implement and include a custom textile content type is shown here:
from feincms.module.page.models import Page
from django.contrib.markup.templatetags.markup import textile
from django.db import models
class TextilePageContent(models.Model):
content = models.TextField()
class Meta:
abstract = True
def render(self, **kwargs):
return textile(self.content)
Page.create_content_type(TextilePageContent)
There are three field names you should not use because they are added by create_content_type: These are parent, region and ordering. These fields are used to specify the place where the content will be placed in the output.
The default render method uses the region key to find a render method in your concrete content type and calls it. This allows you to customize the output depending on the region; you might want to show the same content differently in a sidebar and in the main region for example. If no matching method has been found a NotImplementedError is raised.
This render method tries to be a sane default, nothing more. You can simply override it and put your own code there if you do not any differentiation, or if you want to do it differently.
All render methods should accept **kwargs. Some render methods might need the request, for example to determine the correct Google Maps API key depending on the current domain. The two template tags feincms_render_region and feincms_render_content pass the current rendering context as a keyword argument too.
The example above could be rewritten like this:
{% load feincms_tags %}
<div id="content">
{% block content %}
{% for content in feincms_page.content.main %}
{% feincms_render_content content request %}
{% endfor %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
<div id="sidebar">
{% block sidebar %}
{% for content in feincms_page.content.sidebar %}
{% feincms_render_content content request %}
{% endfor %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
Or even like this:
{% load feincms_tags %}
<div id="content">
{% block content %}
{% feincms_render_region feincms_page "main" request %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
<div id="sidebar">
{% block sidebar %}
{% feincms_render_region feincms_page "sidebar" request %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
This does exactly the same, but you do not have to loop over the page content blocks yourself. You need to add the request context processor to your list of context processors for this example to work.
Some content types require extra CSS or javascript to work correctly. The content types have a way of individually specifying which CSS and JS files they need. The mechanism in use is almost the same as the one used in form and form widget media.
Include the following code in the <head> section of your template to include all JS and CSS media file definitions:
{{ feincms_page.content.media }}
The individual content types should use a media property do define the media files they need:
from django import forms
from django.db import models
from django.template.loader import render_to_string
class MediaUsingContentType(models.Model):
album = models.ForeignKey('gallery.Album')
class Meta:
abstract = True
@property
def media(self):
return forms.Media(
css={'all': ('gallery/gallery.css',),},
js=('gallery/gallery.js'),
)
def render(self, **kwargs):
return render_to_string('content/gallery/album.html', {
'content': self,
})
Please note that you can’t define a Media inner class (yet). You have to provide the media property yourself. As with form and widget media definitions, either STATIC_URL or MEDIA_URL (in this order) will be prepended to the media file path if it is not an absolute path already.
Since FeinCMS 1.3, content types are not only able to render themselves, they can offer two more entry points which are called before and after the response is rendered. These two entry points are called process() and finalize().
process() is called before rendering the template starts. The method always gets the current request as first argument, but should accept **kwargs for later extensions of the interface. This method can short-circuit the request-response-cycle simply by returning any response object. If the return value is a HttpResponse, the standard FeinCMS view function does not do any further processing and returns the response right away.
As a special case, if a process() method returns True (for successful processing), Http404 exceptions raised by any other content type on the current page are ignored. This is especially helpful if you have several ApplicationContent content types on a single page.
finalize() is called after the response has been rendered. It receives the current request and response objects. This function is normally used to set response headers inside a content type or do some other post-processing. If this function has any return value, the FeinCMS view will return this value instead of the rendered response.
Here’s an example form-handling content which uses all of these facilities:
class FormContent(models.Model):
class Meta:
abstract = True
def process(self, request, **kwargs):
if request.method == 'POST':
form = FormClass(request.POST)
if form.is_valid():
# Do something with form.cleaned_data ...
return HttpResponseRedirect('?thanks=1')
else:
form = FormClass()
self.rendered_output = render_to_string('content/form.html', {
'form': form,
'thanks': request.GET.get('thanks'),
})
def render(self, **kwargs):
return getattr(self, 'rendered_output', u'')
def finalize(self, request, response):
# Always disable caches if this content type is used somewhere
response['Cache-Control'] = 'no-cache, must-revalidate'
Note
Please note that the render method should not raise an exception if process has not been called beforehand.
Warning
The FeinCMS page module views guarantee that process is called beforehand, other modules may not do so. feincms.module.blog for instance does not.
Used to let the administrator freely integrate 3rd party applications into the CMS. Described in Integrating 3rd party apps.
Comment list and form using django.contrib.comments.
Simple contact form. Also serves as an example how forms might be used inside content types.
These are simple content types holding just a file or an image with a position. You should probably use the MediaFileContent though.
Mini-framework for arbitrary file types with customizable rendering methods per-filetype. Add ‘feincms.module.medialibrary’ to INSTALLED_APPS.
Additional arguments for create_content_type():
TYPE_CHOICES: (mandatory)
A list of tuples for the type choice radio input fields.
This field allows the website administrator to select a suitable presentation for a particular media file. For example, images could be shown as thumbnail with a lightbox or offered as downloads. The types should be specified as follows for this use case:
..., TYPE_CHOICES=(('lightbox', _('lightbox')), ('download', _('as download'))),
The MediaFileContent tries loading the following templates in order for a particular image media file with type download:
The media file type is stored directly on MediaFile.
The file type can also be used to select templates which can be used to further customize the presentation of mediafiles, f.e. content/mediafile/swf.html to automatically generate the necessary <object> and <embed> tags for flash movies.
Raw HTML code, f.e. for flash movies or javascript code.
Rich text editor widget, stripped down to the essentials; no media support, only a few styles activated. The necessary javascript files are not included, you need to put them in the right place on your own.
By default, RichTextContent expects a TinyMCE activation script at <MEDIA_URL>js/tiny_mce/tiny_mce.js. This can be customized by overriding FEINCMS_RICHTEXT_INIT_TEMPLATE and FEINCMS_RICHTEXT_INIT_CONTEXT in your settings.py file.
If you only want to provide a different path to the TinyMCE javascript file, you can do this as follows:
FEINCMS_RICHTEXT_INIT_CONTEXT = {
'TINYMCE_JS_URL': '/your_custom_path/tiny_mce.js',
}
If you pass cleanse=True to the create_content_type invocation for your RichTextContent types, the HTML code will be cleansed right before saving to the database everytime the content is modified.
Additional arguments for create_content_type():
cleanse:
Whether the HTML code should be cleansed of all tags and attributes which are not explicitly whitelisted. The default is False.
A feed reader widget. This also serves as an example how to build a content type that needs additional processing, in this case from a cron job. If an RSS feed has been added to the CMS, manage.py update_rsscontent should be run periodically (either through a cron job or through other means) to keep the shown content up to date. The feedparser module is required.
Combined rich text editor, title and media file.
The default configuration of the rich text editor does not include table controls. Because of this, you can use this content type to provide HTML table editing support. The data is stored in JSON format, additional formatters can be easily written which produce the definitive HTML representation of the table.
This content scans all template directories for templates below content/template/ and allows the user to select one of these templates which are rendered using the Django template language.
Template usage isn’t restricted in any way.
Note
You cannot use Django’s cached template loader with TemplateContent currently. The cached template loader has no way of enumerating available templates in the filesystem.
Imagine that you have developed a content type which really only makes sense in the sidebar, not in the main content area. It is very simple to restrict a content type to a subset of regions, the only thing you have to do is pass a tuple of region keys to the create_content_type method:
Page.create_content_type(SomeSidebarContent, regions=('sidebar',))
Note that the restriction only influences the content types shown in the “Add new item”-dropdown in the item editor. The user may still choose to add the SomeSidebarContent to the sidebar, for example, and then proceed to move the content item into the main region.
Because the admin interface is already filled with information, it is sometimes easier to keep the details for certain models outside the CMS content types. Complicated models do not need to be edited directly in the CMS item editor, you can instead use the standard Django administration interface for them, and integrate them into FeinCMS by utilizing foreign keys. Already the bundled FileContent and ImageContent models can be viewed as bad style in this respect, because if you want to use a image or file more than once you need to upload it for every single use instead of being able to reuse the uploaded file. The media library module and MediaFileContent resolve at least this issue nicely by allowing the website administrator to attach metadata to a file and include it in a page by simply selecting the previously uploaded media file.
So you’d like to check whether Django is properly configured for your content type, or maybe add model/form fields depending on arguments passed at content type creation time? This is very easy to achieve. The only thing you need to do is adding a classmethod named initialize_type() to your content type, and pass additional keyword arguments to create_content_type().
If you want to see an example of these two uses, have a look at the MediaFileContent.
It is generally recommended to use this hook to configure content types compared to putting the configuration into the site-wide settings file. This is because you might want to configure the content type differently depending on the CMS base model that it is used with.
The concrete content type models are stored in the same module as the CMS base class, but they do not have a name using which you could import them. Accessing internal attributes is hacky, so what is the best way to get a hold onto the concrete content type?
There are two recommended ways. The example use a RawContent content type and the Page CMS base class.
You could take advantage of the fact that create_content_type returns the created model:
from feincms.module.page.models import Page
from feincms.content.raw.models import RawContent
PageRawContent = Page.create_content_type(RawContent)
Or you could use content_type_for():
from feincms.content.raw.models import RawContent
PageRawContent = Page.content_type_for(RawContent)