Django app for linking to help pages with short tokens.
There are various factors that affect what help page an application should link to:
- There may be a number of relevant books
- The version of the application might affect which book to display
- The application's language might affect which book to display
This small Django app provides a means to use "help tokens" on the application pages, and then use those tokens, and various other settings, to determine the actual URL to use.
Help-tokens provides a context processor, and a redirection URL. Configuration is in a number of settings.
Help-tokens reads these Django settings to create URLs:
HELP_TOKENS_INI_FILE: Path to a .ini file containing help token definitions. The format of the ini file is described below.
HELP_TOKENS_BOOKS: a dictionary mapping book slugs to URLs. For example:
HELP_TOKENS_BOOKS = { 'learner': 'http://edx.readthedocs.io/projects/learner-guide', 'course_author': 'http://edx.readthedocs.io/projects/running-a-course', }
HELP_TOKENS_VERSION: a string used as part of the final URL, to choose the correct version of the book. For example, "latest".
HELP_TOKENS_LANGUAGE_CODE: the language code to use as part of the book URL, mapped through the [locales] section of the ini file.
The .ini file pointed to by HELP_TOKENS_INI_FILE contains the definitions of the help tokens themselves.
The [pages] section defines the help tokens. Each help token definition consists of a book slug (defined in HELP_TOKENS_BOOKS), a colon, and a URL path. The default token is used for missing tokens. For example:
[pages] default = learner:index.html instructor = learner:SFD_instructor_dash_help.html course = learner:index.html cohortmanual = course_author:course_features/cohorts/cohort_config.html#assign-learners-to-cohorts-manually cohortautomatic = course_author:course_features/cohorts/cohorts_overview.html#all-automated-assignment
The [locales] section defines language codes, used with HELP_TOKENS_LANGUAGE_CODE to determine the language portion of the URL:
[locales] default = en en = en en_us = en
The context processor is "help_tokens.context_processor". It adds a function get_online_help_info. Call it with a help token, and it will return a dict with a doc_url entry, the help URL. You can use it like this in a template:
<a href="${get_online_help_info('visibility')['doc_url']}">...</a>
This interface is a bit verbose, but is to maintain backward compatibility with a previous implementation of this context processor.
The help_tokens.urls URLs define a view that redirects to a help URL. You can include it in your app:
# For redirecting to help pages. url(r'^help_token/', include('help_tokens.urls')),
Then visiting help_token/foobar will redirect to the URL defined by the "foobar" help token.
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