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Django-JSONEditor

Django-JSONEditor is an online structured JSON input widget for Django appropriate for various JSONField's provided for Django.

Code of the javascript JSONEditor online editor has been got from the http://jsoneditoronline.org/.

See the latest versions of the javascript online JSON Editor here: https://github.com/josdejong/jsoneditor

Sample views:

json editor

Installation

Latest version from the GIT repository::

pip install "git+git://github.com/nnseva/django-jsoneditor.git"

Stable version from the PyPi repository::

pip install django-jsoneditor

Note that you should use one of original JSONField packages to provide the JSONField itself.

Configuration

You should append jsoneditor into the INSTALLED_APPS of your settings.py file:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    # ...
    'jsoneditor',
    # ...
)

You can use CDN repositories to get JSONEditor javascript code, or host it yourself, instead of the packaged one using the following two settings in your settings.py file:

JSON_EDITOR_JS = 'whatever-your-want.js'
JSON_EDITOR_CSS = 'whatever-your-want.css'

Just look to the http://cdnjs.com/libraries/jsoneditor and select the preferred one, like:

JSON_EDITOR_JS = 'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jsoneditor/8.6.4/jsoneditor.js'
JSON_EDITOR_CSS = 'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jsoneditor/8.6.4/jsoneditor.css'

Custom JSONEditor initialization

You can change initial parameters for the jsoneditor.JSONEditor javascript constructor initial call for your own purposes using JSON_EDITOR_INIT_JS settings. Copy the jsoneditor/static/django-jsoneditor/init.js file to your own static storage, change initial values of the django_jsoneditor_init object and setup the JSON_EDITOR_INIT_JS variable of the settings file to point your own modified copy of the file.

Note that the django original static file subsystem is used to refer to the init file.

For example, let's say your project has a myapp application, and you would like to init all available modes of the JSONEditor instead of two allowed by default.

  • copy the jsoneditor/static/django-jsoneditor/init.js to myapp/static/jsoneditor-init.js file
  • change content of the myapp/static/jsoneditor-init.js to:
django_jsoneditor_init = {
    mode: 'tree',
    modes: ['code', 'form', 'text', 'tree', 'view'] // all modes
}
  • insert into your settings.py file the following code:
JSON_EDITOR_INIT_JS = "jsoneditor-init.js"

(note that the static file subsystem refers to static files without static prefix)

You can extend the JSON_EDITOR_INIT_JS file as you wish; it will be used on every page where the JSONEditor widget is used just before the django-jsonfield.js file.

Custom Ace initialization

In the same fashion, you can also set options for the Ace editor that is initialized when either starting with or switching to 'code' mode. These options can be found here: https://github.com/ajaxorg/ace/wiki/Configuring-Ace. This can for example come in handy when wanting to customize for example the height or looks of the editor. The default of this file can be found in jsoneditor/static/django-jsoneditor/ace_options.js, which is empty. A custom one can be pointed to by adding the following line to your settings.py:

JSON_EDITOR_ACE_OPTIONS_JS = "[your_ace_options_file].js"

Per-field customization

You can also override JSONEditor and Ace initialization on a per-field basis. To do this, pass the desired init_options and/or ace_option to the widget's initializer. For example, let's say you want to make a certain field read-only:

from django.contrib import admin
from django.db.models.fields.json import JSONField
from jsoneditor.forms import JSONEditor


class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    formfield_overrides = {
        JSONField: {
            "widget": JSONEditor(
                init_options={"mode": "view", "modes": ["view", "code", "tree"]},
                ace_options={"readOnly": True},
            )
        }
    }

These values will override any project-level options in the custom javascript files described above.

Use

You can use the JSONEditor widget for fields in selected Admin classes like:

admin.py:

from django.contrib import admin
from django.db.models.fields.json import JSONField
from jsoneditor.forms import JSONEditor


class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    formfield_overrides = {
        JSONField: {'widget': JSONEditor},
    }

Or use the original JSONField implementation fixed by the package.

Right now there are the following fixed implementations:

To use the fixed implementation instead of the original one, just replace your import with the desired one. For example, for Django 3.0 and above:

models.py:

from django.db import models

# from json_field import JSONField replaced by:
from jsoneditor.fields.django3_jsonfield import JSONField
# Create your models here.

class TestModel(models.Model):
    my_field = JSONField()

You can access the underlying JSONEditor JS objects in your JavaScript via dictionary named jsonEditors. This dictionary's keys are the IDs of the fields generated by this component in the form: "id"+[your form field name]+"_json_jsoneditor", e.g. id_template_parameters_json_jsoneditor. The values in the dictionary are the instances of the correspondent JSONEditor objects.

Jsonschema

You can pass a jsonschema as an arguement to JSONEditor widget so that jsoneditor can validate user inputs. Example:

from django import forms
from jsoneditor.forms import JSONEditor

class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    def formfield_for_dbfield(self, db_field, request, **kwargs):
        field = super().formfield_for_dbfield(db_field, request, **kwargs)
        if isinstance(field, forms.fields.JSONField):
            field.widget = JSONEditor(jsonschema={
                "type": "array",
                "items": {
                    "type": "string"
                }
            })
        return field

Custom Style

You can pass the style in attrs params for JSONEditor widget so that jsoneditor render with the style what you setup. Example:

from json_field import JSONField
from jsoneditor.forms import JSONEditor

class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    formfield_overrides = {
        JSONField: {'widget': JSONEditor(attrs={'style': 'width: 620px;'})}
    }

Custom Encoders

There are situations where you may prefer to use a custom JSONEncoder class. For example, you may want to use Django's DjangoJSONEncoder to handle timestamps in a Django-friendly way. You can do this by passing the encoder param as an initialization argument.

from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder

class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    formfield_overrides = {
        JSONField: {'widget': JSONEditor(encoder=DjangoJSONEncoder)} # will now encode/decode python datetime and timestamp objects!
    }

Collecting bounties

You are free to give some bounties on https://www.bountysource.com/ to force solving existent or new issues