A django app that allows the easy addition of Stack Overflow's "Pagedown" Markdown editor to a django form field, whether in a custom app or the Django Admin
- Get the code:
pip install django-pagedown
- Add
pagedown
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
- Make sure to collect the static files:
python manage.py collectstatic --noinput
Note that this package will install a cloned copy (git submodule)of the Pagedown library from http://github.com/timmyomahony/pagedown/.
If you don't like (or are having problems with) PyPi, you can alternatively install:
- Via pip from GitHub:
pip install -e git+https://[email protected]/timmyomahony/django-pagedown.git#egg=django-pagedown
- Manually clone from Github:
git clone https://[email protected]/timmyomahony/django-pagedown.git
cd django-pagedown
git submodule update --init
Remember that this library doesn't render your markdown for you outside of the admin widget nor does it do any internal sanitization. Markdown can accept any valid HTML so you have to be careful and make sure you are rendering the output of any untrusted input safely (with django-markdown-deux
for example), otherwise you could have users embedding scripts in your pagedown text areas
Inside the Django Admin:
If you want to use the pagedown editor in a django admin field, there are numerous possible approaches:
To use it in all TextField
's in your admin form:
from pagedown.widgets import AdminPagedownWidget
from django.db import models
class FooModelAdmin(models.ModelAdmin):
formfield_overrides = {
models.TextField: {'widget': AdminPagedownWidget },
}
Alternatively, to only use it on particular fields, first create a form (in forms.py
):
from pagedown.widgets import AdminPagedownWidget
from django import forms
from models import FooModel
class FooModelForm(forms.ModelForm):
a_text_field = forms.CharField(widget=AdminPagedownWidget())
another_text_field = forms.CharField(widget=AdminPagedownWidget())
class Meta:
model = FooModel
and in your admin.py
:
from forms import FooModelForm
from models import FooModel
from django.contrib import admin
class FooModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
form = FooModelForm
admin.site.register(FooModel, FooModelAdmin)
Outside the Django Admin:
To use the widget outside of the django admin, first create a form similar to the above but using the basic PagedownWidget
:
from pagedown.widgets import PagedownWidget
from django import forms
from models import FooModel
class FooModelForm(forms.ModelForm):
a_text_field = forms.CharField(widget=PagedownWidget())
another_text_field = forms.CharField(widget=PagedownWidget())
class Meta:
model = FooModel
Then define your urls/views:
from forms import FooModelForm
from django.views.generic import FormView
from django.conf.urls import patterns, url
urlpatterns = patterns('',
url(r'^$', FormView.as_view(
template_name="baz.html",
form_class=FooModelForm)),
)
then create the template and load the javascipt and css required to create the editor:
<html>
<head>
{{ form.media }}
</head>
<body>
<form ...>
{{ form }}
</form>
</body>
</html>
You can control whether or not to show the dynamically rendered preview box below the pagedown widget in two ways:
-
Globally: by using the
PAGEDOWN_SHOW_PREVIEW
option in yoursettings.py
(this is mentioned further down the page). This will enable/disable the preview for all pagedown widgets throughout your application. -
Per Widget: by supplying a
show_preview
keyword argument when initialising your widget instance in your form. This gives you finer control over which of the fields can make use of the preview when rendering the pagedown widget. Note that this approach will take preference over thePAGEDOWN_SHOW_PREVIEW
option.... class FooModelForm(forms.ModelForm): foo = forms.CharField(widget=PagedownWidget(show_preview=False)) class Meta: model = FooModel
If you want to customize the HTML used to render the pagedown widget altogether, you can. There are two ways:
-
Globally: by default, the template used to render the pagedown widget is located at
pagedown/widgets/default.html
.- You can override this template by creating
pagedown/widgets/default.html
within your own template directory. This will take preference if you are using Django's default template loading system - You can use the
PAGEDOWN_DEFAULT_TEMPLATE
settings to point to a different template file
- You can override this template by creating
-
Per Widget: by supplying a
template
keyword argument when initialising your widget instance in your form. This should be the path to the template you wish to use to render this instance.... class FooModelForm(forms.ModelForm): foo = forms.CharField(widget=PagedownWidge(template="path/to/template.html")) class Meta: model = FooModel
If you want to change the CSS used to display the widgets, you also can. Again, there are two ways:
-
Globally: You can specify the CSS files to be included by the widget by providing a tuple of paths via a
PAGEDOWN_WIDGET_CSS
variable in yoursettings.py
# Import the default pagedown css first, then our custom CSS sheet # to avoid having to specify all the default styles PAGEDOWN_WIDGET_CSS = ('pagedown/demo/browser/demo.css', "pagedown/custom.css",)
-
Per Widget: by supplying a
css
keyword argument when initialising your widget instance in your form... class FooModelForm(forms.ModelForm): foo = forms.CharField(widget=PagedownWidge(css=("custom/css1.css", "custom/css2.css"))) class Meta: model = FooModel
The following options can be added to your default settings.py
file to control certain aspects of django-pagedown
. Note that changing these will affect all instances of the pagedown widget throughout your app.:
PAGEDOWN_SHOW_PREVIEW
(boolean): whether or not to show the dynamic markdown preview below the markdown text area for the pagedown widgets. The default isTrue
.PAGEDOWN_DEFAULT_TEMPLATE
(string): the template used to render the pagedown widget. The default template is located inpagedown/widgets/default.html
.PAGEDOWN_WIDGET_CSS
(tuple): the path to the CSS file to be used by the pagedown widget. The default path is `pagedown/
contrib.markdown
was depreciated in Django 1.5 meaning you can no longer use the markdown
filter in your template by default.
@wkcd has a good example of how to overcome by installing django-markdown-deux
:
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% load markdown_deux_tags %}
...
<p>{{ entry.body|markdown }}</p>
...
- Add support for images uploading or hooks into the likes of
django-filer
etc.