Python 3 compatible ratings for Django.
Add ratings to any Django model with a template tag.
Install from PyPI:
pip install django-star-ratings
add star_ratings
to INSTALLED_APPS
:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( ... 'star_ratings' )
sync your database:
python manage.py migrate
add the following to your urls.py:
url(r'^ratings/', include('star_ratings.urls', namespace='ratings', app_name='ratings')),
Make sure 'django.core.context_processors.request',
is in
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS
.
Add the following javascript and stylesheet to your template
{% load static %} <html> ... <link rel="stylesheet" href="{% static 'star-ratings/css/star-ratings.css' %}"> <script type="text/javascript" src="{% static 'star-ratings/js/dist/star-ratings.min.js' %}"></script> ... </html>
To enable ratings for a model add the following tag in your template
{% load ratings %} <html> ... {% ratings object %} ... </html>
The template tag takes two arguments:
icon_height
: defaults to 32icon_width
: defaults to 32
To prohibit users from altering their ratings set
STAR_RATINGS_RERATE = False
in settings.py
To change the number of rating stars, set STAR_RATINGS_RANGE
(defaults to 5)
To change the star graphic, add a sprite sheet to
/static/star-ratings/images/stars.png
with the states aligned
horizontally. The stars should be laid out in three states: full, empty
and active.
The easiest way to order by ratings is to add a GenericRelation
to
the Rating
model from your model:
class Foo(models.Model): bar = models.CharField(max_length=100) ratings = GenericRelation(Rating, related_query_name='foos') Foo.objects.filter(ratings__isnull=False).order_by('ratings__average')
To run the test use:
$> ./runtests.py