* Home
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-home
:CUSTOM_ID: /
:TITLE:
:DESCRIPTION: Framework for creating Realtime SPAs using HTML over the Wire technology.
:END:
** What is Django LiveView?
Django LiveView is a framework for creating Realtime SPAs using HTML over the Wire technology. It is inspired by Phoenix LiveView and it is built on top of Django Channels.
It allows you to create interactive web applications using only HTML, CSS and Python. JavaScript ONLY is used to capture events, send and receive strings over a WebSockets channel.
** What are your superpowers?
- Create SPAs without using APIs.
- Uses Django's template system to render the frontend (Without JavaScript).
- The logic is not split between the backend and the frontend, it all stays in Python.
- You can still use all of Django's native tools, such as its ORM, forms, plugins, etc.
- Everything is asynchronous by default.
- Don't learn anything new. If you know Python, you know how to use Django LiveView.
- All in real time.
Now you can create SPAs without using APIs, without JavaScript, and without learning anything new. If you know Python, you know how to use Django LiveView.
Are you ready to create your first Realtime SPA? Let's go to the [[#/docs/quickstart/][Quickstart]].
* Quickstart
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-doc
:CUSTOM_ID: /docs/quickstart/
:TITLE: Quickstart
:DESCRIPTION: Get started with Django LiveView the easy way.
:END:
Welcome to the Quickstart guide. Here you will learn how to create your first Realtime SPA using Django LiveView. I assume you have a basic understanding of Django and Python.
All the steps are applied in a [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/minimal-template][minimalist template]].
** 1. Install Django
Install Django, create a project and an app.
** 2. Install LiveView
Install django-liveview with ~pip~.
#+BEGIN_SRC sh
pip install django-liveview
#+END_SRC
** 3. Modify the configuration
Add ~liveview~ to your installed ~INSTALLED_APPS~.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
INSTALLED_APPS = [
"daphne",
"channels",
"liveview",
]
#+END_SRC
Then indicate in which previously created App you want to implement LiveView.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
LIVEVIEW_APPS = ["website"]
#+END_SRC
** 4. Migration
Execute the migrations so that the LiveView tables are generated.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
python manage.py migrate
#+END_SRC
** 5. ASGI
Modify the ASGI file, ~asgi.py~ to add the LiveView routing. In this example it is assumed that settings.py is inside core, in your case it may be different.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
import os
import django
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "core.settings")
django.setup()
from channels.auth import AuthMiddlewareStack
from django.core.asgi import get_asgi_application
from channels.security.websocket import AllowedHostsOriginValidator
from channels.routing import ProtocolTypeRouter, URLRouter
from django.urls import re_path
from liveview.consumers import LiveViewConsumer
application = ProtocolTypeRouter(
{
# Django's ASGI application to handle traditional HTTP requests
"http": get_asgi_application(),
# WebSocket handler
"websocket": AuthMiddlewareStack(
AllowedHostsOriginValidator(
URLRouter([re_path(r"^ws/liveview/$", LiveViewConsumer.as_asgi())])
)
),
}
)
#+END_SRC
** 6. Create your first Action
Place where the functions and logic of the business logic are stored. We will start by creating an action to generate a random number and print it.
Create inside your App a folder called ~actions~, here will go all the actions for each page. Now we will create inside the folder a file named ~home.py~.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
# my-app/actions/home.py
from liveview.context_processors import get_global_context
from core import settings
from liveview.utils import (
get_html,
update_active_nav,
enable_lang,
loading,
)
from channels.db import database_sync_to_async
from django.templatetags.static import static
from django.urls import reverse
from django.utils.translation import gettext as _
from random import randint
template = "pages/home.html"
# Database
# Functions
async def get_context(consumer=None):
context = get_global_context(consumer=consumer)
# Update context
context.update(
{
"url": settings.DOMAIN_URL + reverse("home"),
"title": _("Home") + " | Home",
"meta": {
"description": _("Home page of the website"),
"image": f"{settings.DOMAIN_URL}{static('img/seo/og-image.jpg')}",
},
"active_nav": "home",
"page": template,
}
)
return context
@enable_lang
@loading
async def send_page(consumer, client_data, lang=None):
# Nav
await update_active_nav(consumer, "home")
# Main
my_context = await get_context(consumer=consumer)
html = await get_html(template, my_context)
data = {
"action": client_data["action"],
"selector": "#main",
"html": html,
}
data.update(my_context)
await consumer.send_html(data)
async def random_number(consumer, client_data, lang=None):
my_context = await get_context(consumer=consumer)
data = {
"action": client_data["action"],
"selector": "#output-random-number",
"html": randint(0, 10),
}
data.update(my_context)
await consumer.send_html(data)
#+END_SRC
There are several points in the above code to keep in mind.
- ~template~ is the name of the template that will be rendered.
- ~get_context()~ is a function that returns a dictionary with the context of the page.
- ~send_page()~ is the function that will be executed when the page is loaded.
- ~random_number()~ is the function that will be executed when the button is clicked.
** 7. Create the base template
Now we will create the base template, which will be the one that will be rendered when the page is loaded.
Create a folder called ~templates~, or use your template folder, inside your App and inside it create another folder called ~layouts~. Now create a file called ~base.html~.
#+BEGIN_SRC html
{# my-app/templates/layouts/base.html #}
{% load static i18n %}
{% get_current_language as CURRENT_LANGUAGE %}
{{ title }}
{% include 'components/header.html' %}
{% include page %}
#+END_SRC
In the future we will define ~main.js~, a minimal JavaScript to connect the events and the WebSockets client.
** 8. Create the page template
We will create the home page template, which will be the one that will be rendered when the page is loaded.
Create a folder called ~pages~ in your template folder and inside it create a file called ~home.html~.
#+BEGIN_SRC html
{# my-app/templates/pages/home.html #}
{% load static %}
#+END_SRC
As you can see, we have defined a button to launch the action of generating the random number (~button~) and the place where we will print the result (~output-random-number~).
** 9. Create frontend
Now we are going to create the frontend, the part where we will manage the JavaScript events and invoke the actions.
Download [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/assets/archive/refs/heads/main.zip][assets]] and unzip it in your static folder. You will be left with the following route: ~/static/js/~.
** 10. Create View
We will create the view that will render the page for the first time (like Server Side Rendering). The rest of the times will be rendered dynamically (like Single Page Application).
In a normal Django application we would create a view, ~views.py~, similar to the following:
#+BEGIN_SRC python
# my-app/views.py
from django.shortcuts import render
# Create your views here.
def home(request):
return render(request, "pages/home.html")
#+END_SRC
With LiveView, on the other hand, you will have the following structure.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
# my-app/views.py
from django.shortcuts import render
from .actions.home import get_context as get_home_context
from liveview.utils import get_html
async def home(request):
return render(request, "layouts/base.html", await get_home_context())
#+END_SRC
** 11. Create URL
Finally, we will create the URL that will render the page.
#+BEGIN_SRC python
# my-app/urls.py
from django.urls import path
from .views import home
urlpatterns = [
path("", home, name="home"),
]
#+END_SRC
** 12. Run the server
Run the server.
#+BEGIN_SRC sh
python manage.py runserver
#+END_SRC
And open the browser at ~http://localhost:8000/~. You should see the home page with a button that generates a random number.
#+ATTR_HTML: :class block-center
[[#/img/quickstart/minimal-template.webp][Random number]]
* Deploy
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-doc
:CUSTOM_ID: /docs/deploy/
:TITLE: Deploy
:DESCRIPTION: Deploy Django LiveView to production.
:END:
You can deploy Django LiveView using any web server like reverse proxy.
** Nginx
I recommend using Nginx. Here is an example of how to configure. Replace ~example.com~ with your domain and ~my-project~ with your folder name.
#+BEGIN_SRC nginx
server {
listen 80;
server_name example.com;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $server_name;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_redirect off;
}
location /static {
root /var/www/my-project;
}
location /media {
root /var/www/my-project;
}
location = /favicon.ico { access_log off; log_not_found off; }
}
#+END_SRC
It is important to note that the ~proxy_set_header~ lines are necessary for the WebSocket to work. You can see more about it in [[https://channels.readthedocs.io/en/latest/deploying.html][Channels]].
* FAQ
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-doc
:CUSTOM_ID: /docs/faq/
:TITLE: FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
:DESCRIPTION: Frequently asked questions about Django LiveView.
:END:
** Do I need to know JavaScript to use Django LiveView?
No, you don't need. You can create SPAs without using APIs, without JavaScript, and without learning anything new. If you know Python, you know how to use Django LiveView.
** Can I use JavaScript?
Yes, you can. You can use JavaScript to capture events, send and receive strings over a WebSockets channel.
** Can I use Django's native tools?
Of course. You can still use all of Django's native tools, such as its ORM, forms, plugins, etc.
** Do I need to use React, Vue, Angular or any other frontend framework?
No. All logic, rendering and state is in the backend.
** Can I use Django REST Framework or GraphQL?
Yes, you can.
** Who finances the project?
Only me and my free time.
* Tutorials
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-page
:CUSTOM_ID: /tutorials/
:TITLE: Tutorials
:DESCRIPTION: List of all tutorials.
:END:
- [[#/tutorials/make-a-blog/][Make a blog]]
- [[#/tutorials/add-a-commentary-system/][Add a commentary system]]
* Make a blog
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-page
:CUSTOM_ID: /tutorials/make-a-blog/
:TITLE: Make a blog
:DESCRIPTION: Create a blog using Django LiveView.
:END:
Below we will make a simple blog with classic features:
- A list with posts
- Single page post
- Controls to navegate between list posts and singles
- Pagination
- Search
If you want to include a system commentary, read the next tutorial.
** Creating models
Before starting, we will create the models that we will use in the blog.
** Adding fake data
** Preparing views (SSR)
** Making templates
** Including actions
** Adding the feature: infinite scroll
** Adding the feature: search
* Add a commentary system
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-page
:CUSTOM_ID: /tutorials/add-a-commentary-system/
:TITLE: Make a blog
:DESCRIPTION: Create a commentary system using Django LiveView.
:END:
** Creating models
** Adding fake data
** Preparing views (SSR)
** Making templates
** Including actions
** Getting data
** Showing
* Source code
:PROPERTIES:
:ONE: one-custom-default-page
:CUSTOM_ID: /source-code/
:TITLE: Source code
:DESCRIPTION: List of all related source code.
:END:
You can find all the source code in the following repositories:
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/liveview][LiveView]]: Source code of the Django framework and app published in pip.
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/docs][Website and Docs]]: All documentation, including this same page.
- Templates
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/starter-template][Starter]]: Check all the features of Django LiveView.
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/minimal-template][Minimal]]: The minimal template to get started.
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/assets][Assets]]: Frontend assets.
- Demos
- [[https://github.com/Django-LiveView/demo-snake][Snake]]: The classic game of Snake.