Pagination
Django provides high-level and low-level ways to help you manage paginated data – that is, data that’s split across several pages, with “Previous/Next” links.
The Paginator
class
Under the hood, all methods of pagination use the Paginator
class. It does all the heavy lifting of actually splitting a QuerySet
into Page
objects.
Example
Give Paginator
a list of objects, plus the number of items you’d like to have on each page, and it gives you methods for accessing the items for each page:
>>> from django.core.paginator import Paginator >>> objects = ['john', 'paul', 'george', 'ringo'] >>> p = Paginator(objects, 2) >>> p.count 4 >>> p.num_pages 2 >>> type(p.page_range) <class 'range_iterator'> >>> p.page_range range(1, 3) >>> page1 = p.page(1) >>> page1 <Page 1 of 2> >>> page1.object_list ['john', 'paul'] >>> page2 = p.page(2) >>> page2.object_list ['george', 'ringo'] >>> page2.has_next() False >>> page2.has_previous() True >>> page2.has_other_pages() True >>> page2.next_page_number() Traceback (most recent call last): ... EmptyPage: That page contains no results >>> page2.previous_page_number() 1 >>> page2.start_index() # The 1-based index of the first item on this page 3 >>> page2.end_index() # The 1-based index of the last item on this page 4 >>> p.page(0) Traceback (most recent call last): ... EmptyPage: That page number is less than 1 >>> p.page(3) Traceback (most recent call last): ... EmptyPage: That page contains no results
Note
Note that you can give Paginator
a list/tuple, a Django QuerySet
, or any other object with a count()
or __len__()
method. When determining the number of objects contained in the passed object, Paginator
will first try calling count()
, then fallback to using len()
if the passed object has no count()
method. This allows objects such as Django’s QuerySet
to use a more efficient count()
method when available.
Paginating a ListView
django.views.generic.list.ListView
provides a builtin way to paginate the displayed list. You can do this by adding a paginate_by
attribute to your view class, for example:
from django.views.generic import ListView from myapp.models import Contact class ContactList(ListView): paginate_by = 2 model = Contact
This limits the number of objects per page and adds a paginator
and page_obj
to the context
. To allow your users to navigate between pages, add links to the next and previous page, in your template like this:
{% for contact in page_obj %} {# Each "contact" is a Contact model object. #} {{ contact.full_name|upper }}<br> ... {% endfor %} <div class="pagination"> <span class="step-links"> {% if page_obj.has_previous %} <a href="?page=1">« first</a> <a href="?page={{ page_obj.previous_page_number }}">previous</a> {% endif %} <span class="current"> Page {{ page_obj.number }} of {{ page_obj.paginator.num_pages }}. </span> {% if page_obj.has_next %} <a href="?page={{ page_obj.next_page_number }}">next</a> <a href="?page={{ page_obj.paginator.num_pages }}">last »</a> {% endif %} </span> </div>
Using Paginator
in a view function
Here’s an example using Paginator
in a view function to paginate a queryset:
from django.core.paginator import Paginator from django.shortcuts import render from myapp.models import Contact def listing(request): contact_list = Contact.objects.all() paginator = Paginator(contact_list, 25) # Show 25 contacts per page. page_number = request.GET.get('page') page_obj = paginator.get_page(page_number) return render(request, 'list.html', {'page_obj': page_obj})
In the template list.html
, you can include navigation between pages in the same way as in the template for the ListView
above.
© Django Software Foundation and individual contributors
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.0/topics/pagination/