Polymorphic serializers for Django REST Framework.
django-rest-polymorphic
allows you to easily define serializers for your inherited models that you have created using django-polymorphic
library.
Install using pip
:
$ pip install django-rest-polymorphic
Define your polymorphic models:
# models.py
from django.db import models
from polymorphic.models import PolymorphicModel
class Project(PolymorphicModel):
topic = models.CharField(max_length=30)
class ArtProject(Project):
artist = models.CharField(max_length=30)
class ResearchProject(Project):
supervisor = models.CharField(max_length=30)
Define serializers for each polymorphic model the way you did it when you used django-rest-framework
:
# serializers.py
from rest_framework import serializers
from .models import Project, ArtProject, ResearchProject
class ProjectSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = Project
fields = ('topic', )
class ArtProjectSerializer(serializers.HyperlinkedModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = ArtProject
fields = ('topic', 'artist', 'url')
extra_kwargs = {
'url': {'view_name': 'project-detail', 'lookup_field': 'pk'},
}
class ResearchProjectSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = ResearchProject
fields = ('topic', 'supervisor')
Note that if you extend HyperlinkedModelSerializer
instead of ModelSerializer
you need to define extra_kwargs
to direct the URL to the appropriate view for your polymorphic serializer.
Then you have to create a polymorphic serializer that serves as a mapper between models and serializers which you have defined above:
# serializers.py
from rest_polymorphic.serializers import PolymorphicSerializer
class ProjectPolymorphicSerializer(PolymorphicSerializer):
model_serializer_mapping = {
Project: ProjectSerializer,
ArtProject: ArtProjectSerializer,
ResearchProject: ResearchProjectSerializer
}
Create viewset with serializer_class equals to your polymorphic serializer:
# views.py
from rest_framework import viewsets
from .models import Project
from .serializers import ProjectPolymorphicSerializer
class ProjectViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
queryset = Project.objects.all()
serializer_class = ProjectPolymorphicSerializer
Test it:
$ http GET "http://localhost:8000/projects/"
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Length: 227
Content-Type: application/json
[
{
"resourcetype": "Project",
"topic": "John's gathering"
},
{
"artist": "T. Turner",
"resourcetype": "ArtProject",
"topic": "Sculpting with Tim",
"url": "http://localhost:8000/projects/2/"
},
{
"resourcetype": "ResearchProject",
"supervisor": "Dr. Winter",
"topic": "Swallow Aerodynamics"
}
]
$ http POST "http://localhost:8000/projects/" resourcetype="ArtProject" topic="Guernica" artist="Picasso"
HTTP/1.0 201 Created
Content-Length: 67
Content-Type: application/json
{
"artist": "Picasso",
"resourcetype": "ArtProject",
"topic": "Guernica",
"url": "http://localhost:8000/projects/4/"
}
As you can see from the example above, in order to specify the type of your polymorphic model, you need to send a request with resource type field. The value of resource type should be the name of the model.
If you want to change the resource type field name from resourcetype
to something else, you should override resource_type_field_name
attribute:
class ProjectPolymorphicSerializer(PolymorphicSerializer):
resource_type_field_name = 'projecttype'
...
If you want to change the behavior of resource type, you should override to_resource_type
method:
class ProjectPolymorphicSerializer(PolymorphicSerializer):
...
def to_resource_type(self, model_or_instance):
return model_or_instance._meta.object_name.lower()
Now, the request for creating new object will look like this:
$ http POST "http://localhost:8000/projects/" projecttype="artproject" topic="Guernica" artist="Picasso"