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Django API Decorator

A collection of tools to build function based Django APIs.

Warning This project is still in early development. Expect breaking changes.

Installation

Django API Decorator can be installed from PyPI:

pip install django-api-decorator

Usage

The main interface of this library is the @api decorator. This handles input and output from your view, according to type annotations on the view. Pydantic is used to handle most of the encoding and decoding, but you are not limited to use pydantic models for your types. You can use any type supported by pydantic, from simple types to dataclasses and typed dicts.

Here's a simple example:

@api(method="GET")
def list_some_numbers(request: HttpRequest) -> list[int]:
    return [1, 2, 3, 4]

Under the hood the @api decorator will encode the list of numbers ot JSON and wrap it up in a response object for Django to handle like any other response.

You can also specify query parameters, that will be decoded according to the specified type annotations:

@api(method="GET", query_params=["count"])
def list_some_numbers(request: HttpRequest, count: int) -> list[int]:
    return [random.randint(0, 10) for _ in range(count)]

Here the decorator will extract the count query paramter from the request and make sure it's a valid integer.

The decorator can also decode the request body for you:

@api(method="POST")
def sum_of_numbers(request: HttpRequest, body: list[int]) -> int:
    return sum(body)

The views produced by the decorator are plain Django views and should be added in your urls module just like any other view:

urlpatterns = [
    path("/api/numbers/", list_some_numbers, name="list-some-numbers"),
]

If you want to handle multiple methods on the same url a method_router helper function is provided, which can be used like this:

urlpatterns = [
    path(
        "/api/numbers/",
        method_router(
            GET=list_some_numbers,
            POST=...
        ),
        name="list-some-numbers",
    ),
]

OpenAPI specification

This library can also generate an OpenAPI specification from your views. This is done by inspecting the urlpatterns of the Django project, finding all views using the @api decorator. The schema for the specification is generated using pydantic, so for details about how different types are treated see Pydantic's documentation.

The specification is generated using the generate_api_schemas management command.

Control Operations Included in the Schema

Controlling which operations are included in the generated schema can be useful. Your application might depend on libraries that also use the django-api-decorator package to build APIs, and you may prefer not to include those in your schema.

This is achieved by defining a set of tags on each view method.

@api(method="GET", tags=["django-api-decorator"])
def view(request: HttpRequest) -> None:
    ...

Views without the tags property set will always be included in the schema.

You can either exclude tags you don't want in your schema or select tags you want to include. However, you cannot both include and exclude tags simultaneously.

Including Tags in the Schema

Specify the tags to include in your schema in the Django settings file:

API_DECORATOR_SCHEMA_INCLUDE_TAGS = ["app", ...]

Excluding Tags from the Schema

Specify the tags to exclude from your schema in the Django settings file:

API_DECORATOR_SCHEMA_EXCLUDE_TAGS = ["library", ...]

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