Documentation is hosted at readthedocs.io
This package provides functionality to create Django-based database applications in a quick and customizable way. Similar concepts are CRUD (create-read-update-delete) frameworks or RAD (rapid application development) tools.
BasxBread relies in many regards on the Django web framework. Familiarity with Django is highly recommended and assumed for readers of the documentation.
pip install basx-bread
The following are the required step to get a new project quickly up and running. For seasoned Django users there should be nothing new for the most parts. In that case only the section Registering the UI might be worth reading.
python3 -m venv .venv
. .venv/bin/activate # this is for bash, for windows use the script .venv/bin/Activate.ps1, there are also scripts for csh and fish
pip install basx-bread # should run without problems, but users reported problems in some Mac setups due to native libraries missing
django-admin startproject --template $( pip show basx-bread | grep '^Location: ' | cut -c 11- )/basxbread/resources/project_template/ myproject . # template-project for basxbread
# adding a Django "app", Django projects consist of different apps with different models, pretty standard
# can also be achieved with "python manage.py startapp mymodels" but it would create a few unnecessary files
mkdir mymodels mymodels/migrations
touch mymodels/__init__.py mymodels/migrations/__init__.py
echo -e 'from django.apps import AppConfig\n\n\nclass Mymodels(AppConfig):\n name = "mymodels"' > mymodels/apps.py
After this the file mymodels/models.py
needs to be created and filled with your database models. Then add "mymodels"
to the list of INSTALLED_APPS
inside myproject/settings/base.py
.
In order to get started with the UI quickly the following code can be put into mymodels/urls.py
.
The code below assumes there exists a single model inside mymodels/models.py
called MyModel
.
from basxbread.utils import quickregister
from . import models
urlpatterns = []
quickregister(urlpatterns, models.MyModel)
The root URL list in myproject/urls.py
needs to be extended with an item path("myapp", include("mymodels.urls"))
.
Finally run the following commands to initialize the database and start the development server.
python manage.py makemigrations
python manage.py migrate
python manage.py createsuperuser
python manage.py runserver
The application can now be accessed via http://127.0.0.1:8000.
Most of the code that is being written for BasxBread is developed while doing payed work. That way the development and maintenance of the framework can be done in a sustainable manner.
BasxBread is currently running on a range of custom database applications that are used in production. Most parts of the framework are now on a level that we consider production ready. However, there are some additions and improvments that we still would like to work on. Those are listed here.
Refactorings:
(Maybe move this stuff into Github issues)
- We should really go over our documentation...
- Change implementation of some things where not the HTML/REST-paradigm is used but a custom javascript hack. This might reduce some of the "asthetical" behaviour, like clickable table rows. However, for customization and composition of different UI elements it is always preferable to use standard HTML behaviour and features where possibel.
- Current-menu-item-selection. Right now the currently active menu item is only detected via prefix-matching of the current URL. This can lead sometimes to incorrect behaviour, if two menu items have a similar prefix. There should be an unambigous way to determine the currently active menu item, maybe even for pages that are deeper in the navigation hierarchy
- Pre-defined querysets with direct links for BrowseViews. BrowseViews would benefit of a short-cut system, where frequently used filters can be defined in the code and are displayed as links in the datatable header.
- Improve definition of URL patterns and navigation hierarchy. No idea what would be a good, generic approach, maybe take some stuff from DRF.
New features
- Data analytics with graphs [analytics]: In order to allow producing nice graphs, exploring all the data and getting statistical insights a data analytics-tool would be really nice to have.
- Editing models via the web UI [modeledit]: This is a feature which almost all of the bigger database frameworks and CRM support. But BasxBread main goal is to empower the developer and end-user accessible model definitions increase developer friction substantialy. However, there are many cases where a project would benefit if certain changes can be done without having to update code and make a new deployment. Therefore we are experimenting with a feature that would allow users to add and modify certain models via the web-interface. The implementation would still rely on code-defined models. The web-UI would translate the desired changes into an automated version of what the developer would normally do, i.e. updating the model definition in the source code, creating migrations, running migrations and restart the application server.
- Customizable menu [custommenu]: Currently the navigation menu must be defined via code. Allowing the configuration of the menu via database would be an advantage for users. Two things to keep in mind for this are: It must still be easy for developers to quickly add menus to test models and custom pages. And also, the current feature set (e.g. icons and permissions) for menu items should be supported in a database implementation.
- More/better customization of custom forms.
- Add feature do define custom layouts.