A Django application that provides country choices for use with forms, flag icons static files, and a country field for models.
pip install django-countries
- Add
django_countries
toINSTALLED_APPS
For more accurate sorting of translated country names, install the optional pyuca package.
A country field for Django models that provides all ISO 3166-1 countries as choices.
CountryField
is based on Django's CharField
, providing choices
corresponding to the official ISO 3166-1 list of countries (with a default
max_length
of 2).
Consider the following model using a CountryField
:
from django.db import models
from django_countries.fields import CountryField
class Person(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
country = CountryField()
Any Person
instance will have a country
attribute that you can use to
get details of the person's country:
>>> person = Person(name='Chris', country='NZ')
>>> person.country
Country(code='NZ')
>>> person.country.name
'New Zealand'
>>> person.country.flag
'/static/flags/nz.gif'
This object (person.country
in the example) is a Country
instance,
which is described below.
Use blank_label
to set the label for the initial blank choice shown in
forms:
country = CountryField(blank_label='(select country)')
This field can also allow multiple selections of countries (saved as a comma separated string). The field will always output a list of countries in this mode. For example:
class Incident(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
countries = CountryField(multiple=True)
>>> for country in Incident.objects.get(title='Pavlova dispute').countries:
... print(country.name)
Australia
New Zealand
An object used to represent a country, instantiated with a two character country code, three character code, or numeric code.
It can be compared to other objects as if it was a string containing the country code and when evaluated as text, returns the country code.
- name
- Contains the full country name.
- flag
- Contains a URL to the flag. If you page could have lots of different flags
then consider using
flag_css
instead to avoid excessive HTTP requests. - flag_css
Output the css classes needed to display an HTML element as the correct flag from within a single sprite image that contains all flags. For example:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% static 'flags/sprite.css' %}"> <i class="{{ country.flag_css }}"></i>
For multiple flag resolutions, use
sprite-hq.css
instead and add theflag2x
,flag3x
, orflag4x
class. For example:<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% static 'flags/sprite-hq.css' %}"> Normal: <i class="{{ country.flag_css }}"></i> Bigger: <i class="flag2x {{ country.flag_css }}"></i>
You might also want to consider using
aria-label
for better accessibility:<i class="{{ country.flag_css }}" aria-label="{% blocktrans with country_code=country.code %} {{ country_code }} flag {% endblocktrans %}"></i>
- unicode_flag
- A unicode glyph for the flag for this country. Currently well-supported in iOS and OS X. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regional_Indicator_Symbol for details.
- code
- The two letter country code for this country.
- alpha3
- The three letter country code for this country.
- numeric
- The numeric country code for this country (as an integer).
- numeric_padded
- The numeric country code as a three character 0-padded string.
A widget is included that can show the flag image after the select box (updated with JavaScript when the selection changes).
When you create your form, you can use this custom widget like normal:
from django_countries.widgets import CountrySelectWidget
class PersonForm(forms.ModelForm):
class Meta:
model = models.Person
fields = ('name', 'country')
widgets = {'country': CountrySelectWidget()}
Pass a layout
text argument to the widget to change the positioning of the
flag and widget. The default layout is:
'{widget}<img class="country-select-flag" id="{flag_id}" style="margin: 6px 4px 0" src="{country.flag}">'
If you want to use the countries in a custom form, use the model field's custom form field to ensure the translatable strings for the country choices are left lazy until the widget renders:
from django_countries.fields import CountryField
class CustomForm(forms.Form):
country = CountryField().formfield()
Use CountryField(blank=True)
for non-required form fields, and
CountryField(blank_label='(Select country)')
to use a custom label for the
initial blank option.
You can also use the CountrySelectWidget as the widget for this field if you want the flag image after the select box.
Use the django_countries.countries
object instance as an iterator of ISO
3166-1 country codes and names (sorted by name).
For example:
>>> from django_countries import countries
>>> dict(countries)['NZ']
'New Zealand'
>>> for code, name in list(countries)[:3]:
... print("{name} ({code})".format(name=name, code=code))
...
Afghanistan (AF)
Åland Islands (AX)
Albania (AL)
Country names are translated using Django's standard gettext
.
If you would like to help by adding a translation, please visit
https://www.transifex.com/projects/p/django-countries/
If you have your country code stored in a different place than a CountryField you can use the template tag to get a Country object and have access to all of its properties:
{% load countries %}
{% get_country 'BR' as country %}
{{ country.name }}
If you need a list of countries, there's also a simple tag for that:
{% load countries %}
{% get_countries as countries %}
<select>
{% for country in countries %}
<option value="{{ country.code }}">{{ country.name }}</option>
{% endfor %}
</select>
Country names are taken from the official ISO 3166-1 list. If your project
requires the use of alternative names, the inclusion or exclusion of specific
countries then use the COUNTRIES_OVERRIDE
setting.
A dictionary of names to override the defaults. The values can also use a more complex dictionary format.
Note that you will need to handle translation of customised country names.
Setting a country's name to None
will exclude it from the country list.
For example:
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
COUNTRIES_OVERRIDE = {
'NZ': _('Middle Earth'),
'AU': None,
'US': {'names': [
_('United States of America'),
_('America'),
],
}
If you have a specific list of countries that should be used, use
COUNTRIES_ONLY
:
COUNTRIES_ONLY = ['NZ', 'AU']
or to specify your own country names, use a dictionary or two-tuple list (string items will use the standard country name):
COUNTRIES_ONLY = [
'US',
'GB',
('NZ', _('Middle Earth')),
('AU', _('Desert')),
]
Provide a list of country codes as the COUNTRIES_FIRST
setting and they
will be shown first in the countries list (in the order specified) before all
the alphanumerically sorted countries.
If you want to sort these initial countries too, set the
COUNTRIES_FIRST_SORT
setting to True
.
By default, these initial countries are not repeated again in the
alphanumerically sorted list. If you would like them to be repeated, set the
COUNTRIES_FIRST_REPEAT
setting to True
.
Finally, you can optionally separate these 'first' countries with an empty
choice by providing the choice label as the COUNTRIES_FIRST_BREAK
setting.
The COUNTRIES_FLAG_URL
setting can be used to set the url for the flag
image assets. It defaults to:
COUNTRIES_FLAG_URL = 'flags/{code}.gif'
The URL can be relative to the STATIC_URL setting, or an absolute URL.
The location is parsed using Python's string formatting and is passed the following arguments:
- code
- code_upper
For example: COUNTRIES_FLAG_URL = 'flags/16x10/{code_upper}.png'
No checking is done to ensure that a static flag actually exists.
Alternatively, you can specify a different URL on a specific CountryField
:
class Person(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
country = CountryField(
countries_flag_url='//flags.example.com/{code}.png')
To customize an individual field, rather than rely on project level settings,
create a Countries
subclass which overrides settings.
To override a setting, give the class an attribute matching the lowercased
setting without the COUNTRIES_
prefix.
Then just reference this class in a field. For example, this CountryField
uses a custom country list that only includes the G8 countries:
from django_countries import Countries
class G8Countries(Countries):
only = [
'CA', 'FR', 'DE', 'IT', 'JP', 'RU', 'GB',
('EU', _('European Union'))
]
class Vote(models.Model):
country = CountryField(countries=G8Countries)
approve = models.BooleanField()
For COUNTRIES_ONLY
and COUNTRIES_OVERRIDE
, you can also provide a
dictionary rather than just a translatable string for the country name.
The options within the dictionary are:
name
ornames
(required)- Either a single translatable name for this country or a list of multiple
translatable names. If using multiple names, the first name takes preference
when using
COUNTRIES_FIRST
or theCountry.name
. alpha3
(optional)- An ISO 3166-1 three character code (or an empty string to nullify an existing code for this country.
numeric
(optional)- An ISO 3166-1 numeric country code (or
None
to nullify an existing code for this country. The numeric codes 900 to 999 are left available by the standard for user-assignment.
Other Python packages can add attributes to the Country object by using entry points in their setup script.
For example, you could create a django_countries_phone
package which had a
with the following entry point in the setup.py
file. The entry point name
(phone
) will be the new attribute name on the Country object. The attribute
value will be the return value of the get_phone
function (called with the
Country instance as the sole argument).
setup(
...
entry_points={
'django_countries.Country': 'phone = django_countries_phone.get_phone'
},
...
)
Django Countries ships with a CountryFieldMixin
to make the
CountryField model field compatible with DRF serializers. Use the following
mixin with your model serializer:
from django_countries.serializers import CountryFieldMixin
class CountrySerializer(CountryFieldMixin, serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = models.Person
fields = ('name', 'email', 'country')
This mixin handles both standard and multi-choice country fields.
For lower level use (or when not dealing with model fields), you can use the
included CountryField
serializer field. For example:
from django_countries.serializer_fields import CountryField
class CountrySerializer(serializers.Serializer):
country = CountryField()
You can optionally instantiate the field with the countries
argument to
specify a custom Countries instance.
By default, the field will output just the country code. If you would rather
have more verbose output, instantiate the field with country_dict=True
,
which will result in the field having the following output structure:
{"code": "NZ", "name": "New Zealand"}
Either the code or this dict output structure are acceptable as input
irregardless of the country_dict
argument's value.
When you request OPTIONS against a resource (using the DRF metadata support) the countries will be returned in the response as choices:
OPTIONS /api/address/ HTTP/1.1
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Allow: GET, POST, HEAD, OPTIONS
{
"actions": {
"POST": {
"country": {
"type": "choice",
"label": "Country",
"choices": [
{
"display_name": "Australia",
"value": "AU"
},
[...]
{
"display_name": "United Kingdom",
"value": "GB"
}
]
}
}
A Country
graphene object type is included that can be used when generating
your schema.
import graphene
from graphene_django.types import DjangoObjectType
from django_countries.graphql.types import Country
class Person(ObjectType):
country = graphene.Field(Country)
class Meta:
model = models.Person
fields = ["name", "country"]
The object type has the following fields available:
name
for the full country namecode
for the ISO 3166-1 two character country codealpha3
for the ISO 3166-1 three character country codenumeric
for the ISO 3166-1 numeric country codeiocCode
for the International Olympic Committee country code