Django Admin Integration¶
In order to be able to edit the translations via the django.contrib.admin
application you need to register a special admin class for the translated
models. The admin class must derive from
modeltranslation.admin.TranslationAdmin which does some funky
patching on all your models registered for translation. Taken the
news example the most simple case would look like:
from django.contrib import admin
from news.models import News
from modeltranslation.admin import TranslationAdmin
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
pass
admin.site.register(News, NewsAdmin)
Tweaks Applied to the Admin¶
formfield_for_dbfield¶
The TranslationBaseModelAdmin class, which TranslationAdmin and all
inline related classes in modeltranslation derive from, implements a special
method which is formfield_for_dbfield(self, db_field, **kwargs). This
method does the following:
Copies the widget of the original field to each of its translation fields.
Checks if the original field was required and if so makes the default translation field required instead.
get_form/get_fieldsets¶
In addition the TranslationBaseModelAdmin class overrides get_form and
get_fieldsets to make the options fields,
exclude and fieldsets work in a transparent way. It basically does:
Removes the original field from every admin form by adding it to
excludeunder the hood.Replaces the - now removed - original fields with their corresponding translation fields.
Taken the fieldsets option as an example, where the title field is
registered for translation but not the news field:
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
fieldsets = [
(u'News', {'fields': ('title', 'news',)})
]
In this case get_fieldsets will return a patched fieldset which contains
the translation fields of title, but not the original field:
>>> a = NewsAdmin(NewsModel, site)
>>> a.get_fieldsets(request)
[(u'News', {'fields': ('title_de', 'title_en', 'news',)})]
TranslationAdmin in Combination with Other Admin Classes¶
If there already exists a custom admin class for a translated model and you don’t want or can’t edit that class directly there is another solution.
Taken a reusable blog app which defines a model Entry and a
corresponding admin class called EntryAdmin. This app is not yours and you
don’t want to touch it at all.
In the most common case you simply make use of Python’s support for multiple inheritance like this:
class MyTranslatedEntryAdmin(EntryAdmin, TranslationAdmin):
pass
The class is then registered for the admin.site (not to be confused with
modeltranslation’s translator). If EntryAdmin is already registered
through the blog app, it has to be unregistered first:
admin.site.unregister(Entry)
admin.site.register(Entry, MyTranslatedEntryAdmin)
Admin Classes that Override formfield_for_dbfield¶
In a more complex setup the original EntryAdmin might override
formfield_for_dbfield itself:
class EntryAdmin(model.Admin):
def formfield_for_dbfield(self, db_field, **kwargs):
# does some funky stuff with the formfield here
Unfortunately the first example won’t work anymore because Python can only
execute one of the formfield_for_dbfield methods. Since both admin classes
implement this method Python must make a decision and it chooses the first
class EntryAdmin. The functionality from TranslationAdmin will not be
executed and translation in the admin will not work for this class.
But don’t panic, here’s a solution:
class MyTranslatedEntryAdmin(EntryAdmin, TranslationAdmin):
def formfield_for_dbfield(self, db_field, **kwargs):
field = super(MyTranslatedEntryAdmin, self).formfield_for_dbfield(db_field, **kwargs)
self.patch_translation_field(db_field, field, **kwargs)
return field
This implements the formfield_for_dbfield such that both functionalities
will be executed. The first line calls the superclass method which in this case
will be the one of EntryAdmin because it is the first class inherited from.
The TranslationAdmin capsulates its functionality in the
patch_translation_field method and the formfield_for_dbfield
implementation of the TranslationAdmin class simply calls it. You can copy
this behaviour by calling it from a custom admin class and that’s done in the
example above. After that the field is fully patched for translation and
finally returned.
Admin Inlines¶
Added in version 0.2.
Support for tabular and stacked inlines, common and generic ones.
A translated inline must derive from one of the following classes:
modeltranslation.admin.TranslationTabularInline
modeltranslation.admin.TranslationStackedInline
modeltranslation.admin.TranslationGenericTabularInline
modeltranslation.admin.TranslationGenericStackedInline
Just like TranslationAdmin these classes implement a special method
formfield_for_dbfield which does all the patching.
For our example we assume that there is a new model called Image. The
definition is left out for simplicity. Our News model inlines the new
model:
from django.contrib import admin
from news.models import Image, News
from modeltranslation.admin import TranslationTabularInline
class ImageInline(TranslationTabularInline):
model = Image
class NewsAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('title',)
inlines = [ImageInline,]
admin.site.register(News, NewsAdmin)
Note
In this example only the Image model is registered in
translation.py. It’s not a requirement that NewsAdmin derives from
TranslationAdmin in order to inline a model which is registered for
translation.
Complex Example with Admin Inlines¶
In this more complex example we assume that the News and Image models
are registered in translation.py. The News model has an own custom
admin class called NewsAdmin and the Image model an own generic stacked
inline class called ImageInline. Furthermore we assume that NewsAdmin
overrides formfield_for_dbfield itself and the admin class is already
registered through the news app.
Note
The example uses the technique described in TranslationAdmin in combination with other admin classes.
Bringing it all together our code might look like this:
from django.contrib import admin
from news.admin import ImageInline
from news.models import Image, News
from modeltranslation.admin import TranslationAdmin, TranslationGenericStackedInline
class TranslatedImageInline(ImageInline, TranslationGenericStackedInline):
model = Image
class TranslatedNewsAdmin(NewsAdmin, TranslationAdmin):
inlines = [TranslatedImageInline,]
def formfield_for_dbfield(self, db_field, **kwargs):
field = super(TranslatedNewsAdmin, self).formfield_for_dbfield(db_field, **kwargs)
self.patch_translation_field(db_field, field, **kwargs)
return field
admin.site.unregister(News)
admin.site.register(News, NewsAdmin)
Using Tabbed Translation Fields¶
Added in version 0.3.
Modeltranslation supports separation of translation fields via jquery-ui tabs.
The proposed way to include it is through the inner Media class of a
TranslationAdmin class like this:
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
class Media:
js = (
'modeltranslation/js/force_jquery.js',
'//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8.24/jquery-ui.min.js',
'modeltranslation/js/tabbed_translation_fields.js',
)
css = {
'screen': ('modeltranslation/css/tabbed_translation_fields.css',),
}
Note
Here we stick to the jquery library shipped with Django. The
force_jquery.js script is necessary when using Django’s built-in
django.jQuery object. Otherwise the normal jQuery object won’t
be available to the included (non-namespaced) jquery-ui library.
Standard jquery-ui theming can be used to customize the look of tabs, the provided css file is supposed to work well with a default Django admin.
As an alternative, if want to use a more recent version of jquery, you can do so
by including this in your Media class instead:
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
class Media:
js = (
'//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js',
'//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.10.2/jquery-ui.min.js',
'modeltranslation/js/tabbed_translation_fields.js',
)
css = {
'screen': ('modeltranslation/css/tabbed_translation_fields.css',),
}
Tabbed Translation Fields Admin Classes¶
Added in version 0.7.
To ease the inclusion of the required static files for tabbed translation fields, the following admin classes are provided:
TabbedDjangoJqueryTranslationAdmin(aliased toTabbedTranslationAdmin)
TabbedExternalJqueryTranslationAdmin
Rather than inheriting from TranslationAdmin, simply subclass one of these
classes like this:
class NewsAdmin(TabbedTranslationAdmin):
pass
TranslationAdmin Options¶
TranslationAdmin.group_fieldsets¶
Added in version 0.6.
When this option is activated untranslated and translation fields are grouped
into separate fieldsets. The first fieldset contains the untranslated fields,
followed by a fieldset for each translation field. The translation field
fieldsets use the original field’s verbose_name as a label.
Activating the option is a simple way to reduce the visual clutter one might experience when mixing these different types of fields.
The group_fieldsets option expects a boolean. By default fields are not
grouped into fieldsets (group_fieldsets = False).
A few simple policies are applied:
A
fieldsetsoption takes precedence over thegroup_fieldsetsoption.Other default
ModelAdminoptions likeexcludeare respected.
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
group_fieldsets = True
Formfields with None-checkbox¶
There is the special widget which allow to choose whether empty field value should be stores as
empty string or None (see None-checkbox widget).
In TranslationAdmin some fields can use this widget regardless of their empty_values
setting:
class NewsAdmin(TranslationAdmin):
both_empty_values_fields = ('title', 'text')
Admin pages automatic language activation¶
Added in version 0.20.
From this version onward, Modeltranslation in admin pages automatically activates to document language instead of first language of the list.
In order to revert back to previous behaviour,
customize your admin base page (i.e. admin/base_site.html) adding this:
<script>
window.MODELTRANSLATION_AUTO_SELECT_CURRENT_LANGUAGE = false
</script>