django-eventtools is a lightweight library designed to handle repeating and one-off event occurrences for display on a website.
Download the source from https://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-eventtools/
and run python setup.py install
, or:
> pip install django-eventtools
Django 1.8 or higher is required.
Given the following models:
from django.db import models
from eventtools.models import BaseEvent, BaseOccurrence
class MyEvent(BaseEvent):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
class MyOccurrence(BaseOccurrence):
event = models.ForeignKey(MyEvent)
Create a sample event & occurrences
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from myapp.models import MyEvent
>>> event = MyEvent.objects.create(title='Test event')
>>> once_off = MyOccurrence.objects.create(
event=event,
start=datetime(2016, 1, 1, 12, 0),
end=datetime(2016, 1, 1, 2, 0))
>>> christmas = MyOccurrence.objects.create(
event=event,
start=datetime(2015, 12, 25, 7, 0),
end=datetime(2015, 12, 25, 22, 0),
repeat='RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY')
>>> daily = MyOccurrence.objects.create(
event=event,
start=datetime(2016, 1, 1, 7, 0),
end=datetime(2016, 1, 1, 8, 0),
repeat='RRULE:FREQ=DAILY')
Event and Occurrence instances, and their associated querysets, all support
the all_occurrences
method, which takes two optional arguments - from_date
and to_date
, which may be dates or datetimes. from_date
and to_date
default to None
. The method returns a python generator
yielding tuples in the format (start, end, instance)
- for example:
>>> MyEvent.objects.all().all_occurrences()
>>> event.all_occurrences(from_date=datetime(2015, 1, 1, 10, 0))
>>> event.occurrence_set.all().all_occurrences(to_date=date(2016, 1, 1))
>>> occurrence.all_occurrences(from_date=date(2016, 1, 1),
to_date=date(2016, 12, 31))
instance
is an instance of the corresponding BaseOccurrence subclass.
A next_occurrence
method is also provided, taking the same arguments,
but returning a single occurrence tuple.
>>> event.next_occurrence()
>>> event.next_occurrence(from_date=date(2016, 1, 1))
The method first_occurrence
also returns a single occurrence tuple, but
takes no arguments.
Event and Occurrence querysets can be filtered, but note that a from_date
filtered queryset may contain false positives because it's not possible to tell
for sure if a event will happen after a certain date without evaluating
repetition rules, meaning it can't be part of a database query. If you need a
queryset filtered exactly, pass exact=True
- this will filter the queryset by
id, based on generated occurrences. Be careful with this option though as it
may be very slow and/or CPU-hungry. For example
>>> MyEvent.objects.for_period(from_date=date(2015, 1, 1),
to_date=date(2015, 12, 31))
>>> event.occurrence_set.for_period(from_date=date(2015, 1, 1), exact=True)
Note to_date
filtering is always accurate, because the query only needs to
consider the event's first occurrence.
Event and Occurrence querysets can also be sorted by their next occurrence
using the sort_by_next
method. By default this sorts instances by their
first occurrence; the optional from_date
argument will sort by the next
occurrence after from_date
. For example
>>> MyEvent.objects.all().sort_by_next()
>>> event.occurrence_set.for_period(from_date=date(2015, 1, 1)) \
>>> .sort_by_next(date(2015, 1, 1))
Note that this method returns a sorted list, not a queryset.
Occurrences can repeat using any interval that can be expressed as an
rrulestr.
To customise the available options, set EVENTTOOLS_REPEAT_CHOICES
in
your django settings. The default value is
EVENTTOOLS_REPEAT_CHOICES = (
("RRULE:FREQ=DAILY", 'Daily'),
("RRULE:FREQ=WEEKLY", 'Weekly'),
("RRULE:FREQ=MONTHLY", 'Monthly'),
("RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY", 'Yearly'),
)
Set EVENTTOOLS_REPEAT_CHOICES = None
to make repeat a plain-text field.
Cancelling or modifying a single occurrence repetition is not currently supported, but can be implemented by overriding a couple of methods. For example, the following allows cancellations or one-off modifications to the start time of a repetition:
from eventtools.models import (BaseEvent, BaseOccurrence, default_naive)
from django.db import models
class MyEvent(BaseEvent):
pass
class MyEventOccurrence(BaseOccurrence):
event = models.ForeignKey(MyEvent)
overrides = models.ManyToManyField('MyEventOccurrenceOverride', blank=True)
def get_repeater(self):
rule = super().get_repeater() # gets rruleset from parent method
ruleset.rrule(rule)
for override in self.overrides.all():
ruleset.exdate(default_naive(override.start)) # remove occurrence
if override.modified_start: # reschedule occurrence if defined
ruleset.rdate(default_naive(override.modified_start))
return ruleset
class MyEventOccurrenceOverride(models.Model):
start = models.DateTimeField() # must match targeted repetition exactly
# new start, leave blank to cancel
modified_start = models.DateTimeField(blank=True, null=True)
Note that start times must match exactly, so if the MyEventOccurrence start is changed, any previously-matching overrides will no longer be applied.
Use tox (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/tox):
> pip install tox
> cd path-to/django-eventtools
> tox