Please follow these coding standards when writing code for inclusion in Django.
Please conform to the indentation style dictated in the .editorconfig
file. We recommend using a text editor with EditorConfig support to avoid
indentation and whitespace issues. The Python files use 4 spaces for
indentation and the HTML files use 2 spaces.
Unless otherwise specified, follow PEP 8.
Use flake8 to check for problems in this area. Note that our setup.cfg
file contains some excluded files (deprecated modules we don’t care about
cleaning up and some third-party code that Django vendors) as well as some
excluded errors that we don’t consider as gross violations. Remember that
PEP 8 is only a guide, so respect the style of the surrounding code as a
primary goal.
An exception to PEP 8 is our rules on line lengths. Don’t limit lines of
code to 79 characters if it means the code looks significantly uglier or is
harder to read. We allow up to 119 characters as this is the width of GitHub
code review; anything longer requires horizontal scrolling which makes review
more difficult. This check is included when you run flake8
. Documentation,
comments, and docstrings should be wrapped at 79 characters, even though
PEP 8 suggests 72.
Use four spaces for indentation.
Use four space hanging indentation rather than vertical alignment:
raise AttributeError(
'Here is a multiline error message '
'shortened for clarity.'
)
Instead of:
raise AttributeError('Here is a multiline error message '
'shortened for clarity.')
This makes better use of space and avoids having to realign strings if the length of the first line changes.
Use single quotes for strings, or a double quote if the string contains a single quote. Don’t waste time doing unrelated refactoring of existing code to conform to this style.
Avoid use of “we” in comments, e.g. “Loop over” rather than “We loop over”.
Use underscores, not camelCase, for variable, function and method names
(i.e. poll.get_unique_voters()
, not poll.getUniqueVoters()
).
Use InitialCaps
for class names (or for factory functions that
return classes).
In docstrings, follow the style of existing docstrings and PEP 257.
In tests, use
assertRaisesMessage()
and
assertWarnsMessage()
instead of assertRaises()
and
assertWarns()
so you can check the
exception or warning message. Use assertRaisesRegex()
and assertWarnsRegex()
only if you need regular
expression matching.
In test docstrings, state the expected behavior that each test demonstrates. Don’t include preambles such as “Tests that” or “Ensures that”.
Reserve ticket references for obscure issues where the ticket has additional details that can’t be easily described in docstrings or comments. Include the ticket number at the end of a sentence like this:
def test_foo():
"""
A test docstring looks like this (#123456).
"""
...
Use isort to automate import sorting using the guidelines below.
Quick start:
$ pip install isort
$ isort -rc .
...\> pip install isort
...\> isort -rc .
This runs isort
recursively from your current directory, modifying any
files that don’t conform to the guidelines. If you need to have imports out
of order (to avoid a circular import, for example) use a comment like this:
import module # isort:skip
Put imports in these groups: future, standard library, third-party libraries,
other Django components, local Django component, try/excepts. Sort lines in
each group alphabetically by the full module name. Place all import module
statements before from module import objects
in each section. Use absolute
imports for other Django components and relative imports for local components.
On each line, alphabetize the items with the upper case items grouped before the lowercase items.
Break long lines using parentheses and indent continuation lines by 4 spaces. Include a trailing comma after the last import and put the closing parenthesis on its own line.
Use a single blank line between the last import and any module level code, and use two blank lines above the first function or class.
For example (comments are for explanatory purposes only):
# future
from __future__ import unicode_literals
# standard library
import json
from itertools import chain
# third-party
import bcrypt
# Django
from django.http import Http404
from django.http.response import (
Http404, HttpResponse, HttpResponseNotAllowed, StreamingHttpResponse,
cookie,
)
# local Django
from .models import LogEntry
# try/except
try:
import yaml
except ImportError:
yaml = None
CONSTANT = 'foo'
class Example:
# ...
Use convenience imports whenever available. For example, do this:
from django.views import View
instead of:
from django.views.generic.base import View
In Django template code, put one (and only one) space between the curly brackets and the tag contents.
Do this:
{{ foo }}
Don’t do this:
{{foo}}
In Django views, the first parameter in a view function should be called
request
.
Do this:
def my_view(request, foo):
# ...
Don’t do this:
def my_view(req, foo):
# ...
Field names should be all lowercase, using underscores instead of camelCase.
Do this:
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=20)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
Don’t do this:
class Person(models.Model):
FirstName = models.CharField(max_length=20)
Last_Name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
The class Meta
should appear after the fields are defined, with
a single blank line separating the fields and the class definition.
Do this:
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=20)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
class Meta:
verbose_name_plural = 'people'
Don’t do this:
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=20)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
class Meta:
verbose_name_plural = 'people'
Don’t do this, either:
class Person(models.Model):
class Meta:
verbose_name_plural = 'people'
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=20)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=40)
The order of model inner classes and standard methods should be as follows (noting that these are not all required):
class Meta
def __str__()
def save()
def get_absolute_url()
If choices
is defined for a given model field, define each choice as
a tuple of tuples, with an all-uppercase name as a class attribute on the
model. Example:
class MyModel(models.Model):
DIRECTION_UP = 'U'
DIRECTION_DOWN = 'D'
DIRECTION_CHOICES = (
(DIRECTION_UP, 'Up'),
(DIRECTION_DOWN, 'Down'),
)
django.conf.settings
¶Modules should not in general use settings stored in django.conf.settings
at the top level (i.e. evaluated when the module is imported). The explanation
for this is as follows:
Manual configuration of settings (i.e. not relying on the
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
environment variable) is allowed and possible as
follows:
from django.conf import settings
settings.configure({}, SOME_SETTING='foo')
However, if any setting is accessed before the settings.configure
line,
this will not work. (Internally, settings
is a LazyObject
which
configures itself automatically when the settings are accessed if it has not
already been configured).
So, if there is a module containing some code as follows:
from django.conf import settings
from django.urls import get_callable
default_foo_view = get_callable(settings.FOO_VIEW)
…then importing this module will cause the settings object to be configured. That means that the ability for third parties to import the module at the top level is incompatible with the ability to configure the settings object manually, or makes it very difficult in some circumstances.
Instead of the above code, a level of laziness or indirection must be used,
such as django.utils.functional.LazyObject
,
django.utils.functional.lazy()
or lambda
.
import
statements that are no longer used when you change code.
flake8 will identify these imports for you. If an unused import needs to
remain for backwards-compatibility, mark the end of with # NOQA
to
silence the flake8 warning.AUTHORS
file distributed with Django
– not scattered throughout the codebase itself. Feel free to include a
change to the AUTHORS
file in your patch if you make more than a
single trivial change.For details about the JavaScript code style used by Django, see JavaScript.
May 01, 2019