django.urls functions for use in URLconfs
path()
-
path(route, view, kwargs=None, name=None)
Returns an element for inclusion in urlpatterns
. For example:
from django.urls import include, path urlpatterns = [ path('index/', views.index, name='main-view'), path('bio/<username>/', views.bio, name='bio'), path('articles/<slug:title>/', views.article, name='article-detail'), path('articles/<slug:title>/<int:section>/', views.section, name='article-section'), path('weblog/', include('blog.urls')), ... ]
The route
argument should be a string or gettext_lazy()
(see Translating URL patterns) that contains a URL pattern. The string may contain angle brackets (like <username>
above) to capture part of the URL and send it as a keyword argument to the view. The angle brackets may include a converter specification (like the int
part of <int:section>
) which limits the characters matched and may also change the type of the variable passed to the view. For example, <int:section>
matches a string of decimal digits and converts the value to an int
. See How Django processes a request for more details.
The view
argument is a view function or the result of as_view()
for class-based views. It can also be an django.urls.include()
.
The kwargs
argument allows you to pass additional arguments to the view function or method. See Passing extra options to view functions for an example.
See Naming URL patterns for why the name
argument is useful.
re_path()
-
re_path(route, view, kwargs=None, name=None)
Returns an element for inclusion in urlpatterns
. For example:
from django.urls import include, re_path urlpatterns = [ re_path(r'^index/$', views.index, name='index'), re_path(r'^bio/(?P<username>\w+)/$', views.bio, name='bio'), re_path(r'^weblog/', include('blog.urls')), ... ]
The route
argument should be a string or gettext_lazy()
(see Translating URL patterns) that contains a regular expression compatible with Python’s re
module. Strings typically use raw string syntax (r''
) so that they can contain sequences like \d
without the need to escape the backslash with another backslash. When a match is made, captured groups from the regular expression are passed to the view – as named arguments if the groups are named, and as positional arguments otherwise. The values are passed as strings, without any type conversion.
The view
, kwargs
and name
arguments are the same as for path()
.
include()
-
include(module, namespace=None)
-
include(pattern_list)
-
include((pattern_list, app_namespace), namespace=None)
-
A function that takes a full Python import path to another URLconf module that should be “included” in this place. Optionally, the application namespace and instance namespace where the entries will be included into can also be specified.
Usually, the application namespace should be specified by the included module. If an application namespace is set, the
namespace
argument can be used to set a different instance namespace.include()
also accepts as an argument either an iterable that returns URL patterns or a 2-tuple containing such iterable plus the names of the application namespaces.Parameters:
See Including other URLconfs and URL namespaces and included URLconfs.
register_converter()
-
register_converter(converter, type_name)
The function for registering a converter for use in path()
route
s.
The converter
argument is a converter class, and type_name
is the converter name to use in path patterns. See Registering custom path converters for an example.
django.conf.urls functions for use in URLconfs
static()
-
static.static(prefix, view=django.views.static.serve, **kwargs)
Helper function to return a URL pattern for serving files in debug mode:
from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls.static import static urlpatterns = [ # ... the rest of your URLconf goes here ... ] + static(settings.MEDIA_URL, document_root=settings.MEDIA_ROOT)
url()
-
url(regex, view, kwargs=None, name=None)
This function is an alias to django.urls.re_path()
.
Deprecated since version 3.1: Alias of django.urls.re_path()
for backwards compatibility.
handler400
-
handler400
A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called if the HTTP client has sent a request that caused an error condition and a response with a status code of 400.
By default, this is django.views.defaults.bad_request()
. If you implement a custom view, be sure it accepts request
and exception
arguments and returns an HttpResponseBadRequest
.
handler403
-
handler403
A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called if the user doesn’t have the permissions required to access a resource.
By default, this is django.views.defaults.permission_denied()
. If you implement a custom view, be sure it accepts request
and exception
arguments and returns an HttpResponseForbidden
.
handler404
-
handler404
A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called if none of the URL patterns match.
By default, this is django.views.defaults.page_not_found()
. If you implement a custom view, be sure it accepts request
and exception
arguments and returns an HttpResponseNotFound
.
handler500
-
handler500
A callable, or a string representing the full Python import path to the view that should be called in case of server errors. Server errors happen when you have runtime errors in view code.
By default, this is django.views.defaults.server_error()
. If you implement a custom view, be sure it accepts a request
argument and returns an HttpResponseServerError
.
© Django Software Foundation and individual contributors
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/urls/