Django Integration

MDB backend integration with Django for Standard

This article shows you how to integrate Django backend application with MDB Standard UI Kit.


Prerequisites

Before starting the project make sure to install the following utilities:


Creating a new Django application

Let's create a fresh Django application so that we can go through all the steps together. For this tutorial we'll be using MySQL database.

Note: Depending on your OS you may need to use different commands. Copy the commands appropriate for your operating system.

Step 1

Creating Django API.

Install Django on your computer.

Note: If you are getting errors, try typing these commands in cmd instead of in the VSC terminal or check your Python environment settings.

        
            
        python3 -m pip install django
      
        
    
        
            
        py -m pip install Django
      
        
    

Step 2

Now we have to install the necessary modules that are needed for the Django backend to work properly.

To create Django web API we will need Django Rest Framework. We should also install module that will be responsible for handling CORS issues in our development application.

        
            
        pip install djangorestframework
        pip install django-cors-headers
      
        
    

Step 3

Navigate to your project directory, i.e. my-django-app.

Let's create a Django project by typing the code below. We are naming our project exampleApp but you can go with whatever you want.

        
            
        django-admin startproject exampleApp
      
        
    

Step 4

Now that we have the project installed, let's create a new app in which we will put all the functions we will need. Navigate to the newly created directory with django project and enter the following code.

        
            
      cd exampleApp
      python3 manage.py startapp toDoApp
      
        
    
        
            
      cd exampleApp
      py manage.py startapp toDoApp
      
        
    

Step 5

Register the app and new modules in settings.py. If you are not sure about the name of your app, go to toDoApp/apps.py and copy the class name. We have to register corsheaders in middlware section as well.

        
            
        ...

        INSTALLED_APPS = [
            'django.contrib.admin',
            'django.contrib.auth',
            'django.contrib.contenttypes',
            'django.contrib.sessions',
            'django.contrib.messages',
            'django.contrib.staticfiles',
            'rest_framework',
            'corsheaders',
            'toDoApp.apps.TodoappConfig'
        ]

        CORS_ORIGIN_ALLOW_ALL = True

        MIDDLEWARE = [
            'corsheaders.middleware.CorsMiddleware', 
            'django.middleware.security.SecurityMiddleware',
            'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
            'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
            'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
            'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
            'django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware',
            'django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware',
        ]

        ...
      
        
    

Step 6

Now we have to create a model needed for our app. We need an id field, its value will be autofilled. We also need name and desc fields with the max length set as below.

        
            
      from django.db import models

      # Create your models here.
      
      
      class Tasks(models.Model):
          id = models.AutoField(primary_key=True)
          name = models.CharField(max_length=60)
          desc = models.CharField(max_length=255)
      

      
        
    

Step 7

Django requires installing mysqlclient in version 1.4.0 or higher so it can work with MySQL properly. Without it, you wouldn't be able to communicate with a database and manipulate its contents.

        
            
        pip install mysqlclient
      
        
    

Step 8

Creating a MySQL database.

In order to create a new database you need to run the following command.

Note: If you don't have MDB CLI installed yet, you can do it with NPM: npm install -g mdb-cli. Now log in with your MDB account, type: mdb login. If you don't have account yet you can create one using mdb register command.

        
            
          mdb database init -db mysql8
        
        
    
  • Create a new user
  • Provide username, password, database name and description.

CLI will display your username, password, database name and connections string. You will need this data in the next step. Now you can go to phpMyAdmin where you will be able to handle the administration of the MySQL database.

Note: the password must contain at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number, one special symbol and have minimum length of 8.

Step 9

In the settings.py, go to the DATABASES section, and add the database connection details. Change the values between brackets for the ones you got after creating a new MySQL Database from our starter.

        
            
        DATABASES = {
            'default': {
                'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
                'NAME': '[Your database name]',
                'USER': '[Your user name]',
                'PASSWORD': '[Your password]',
                'HOST': 'mysql.db.mdbgo.com',
                'PORT': '3306'
            }
        }
      
        
    

Step 10

Make migration with our models to the database.

        
            
        python3 manage.py makemigrations toDoApp
      
        
    
        
            
        py manage.py makemigrations toDoApp
      
        
    

Step 11

In toDoApp/migrations/0001_initial.py file check if everything is correct and then migrate the data. Now you can see the changes after logging in to https://phpmyadmin.mdbgo.com/

        
            
        python3 manage.py migrate toDoApp
      
        
    
        
            
        py manage.py migrate toDoApp
      
        
    

Step 12

Open views.py and start working on API methods we'll be using. We are going to create GET and POST endpoints that will support the functionality of the front-end app.

        
            
      from django.shortcuts import render, redirect
      from django.views.decorators.csrf import csrf_exempt

      from toDoApp.models import Tasks


      # Create your views here.

      @csrf_exempt
      def TaskList(request):
      
          if request.method == 'GET':
              tasks = Tasks.objects.all()
              context = {'tasks':tasks}
              return render(request, 'index.html', context)
      
          if request.method == 'POST':
              id = request.POST.get('id')
              if id == '':
                  task = Tasks.objects.create(
                      name = request.POST.get('name'),
                      desc = request.POST.get('desc')
                  )
                  task.save()
                  return redirect('tasks')
              else:
                  task = Tasks.objects.get(id=id)
                  task.name = request.POST.get('name')
                  task.desc = request.POST.get('desc')
                  task.save()
                  return redirect('tasks')
      
      def TaskDelete(request, pk):
          task = Tasks.objects.get(id=pk)
          task.delete()
          return redirect('tasks')

      
        
    

Step 13

In the toDoApp directory create a new urls.py file where we will define routes for our API methods.

        
            
    from django.contrib import admin
    from django.urls import path, include
    
    urlpatterns = [
        path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
        path('', include('toDoApp.urls'))
    ]
    
        
    

Step 14

Add new path to urls.py in the main project directory.

        
            
    from django.urls import path
    from toDoApp import views

    urlpatterns = [
        path('', views.TaskList, name='tasks'),
        path('<str:pk>', views.TaskDelete, name="delete"),
    ]
    
        
    

Step 15

In the toDoApp directory create a templates folder and create file index.html inside it. Paste there code from the snippet below as placeholder content.

        
            
      <html lang="en">
      <head>
        <meta charset="UTF-8" />
        <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no" />
        <title>Material Design for Bootstrap</title>
        <!-- Font Awesome -->
        <link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/font-awesome/6.0.0/css/all.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />
        <!-- Google Fonts -->
        <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:300,400,500,700&display=swap" rel="stylesheet" />
      </head>
      <body>
        <div class="container py-4 px-3 mx-auto">
          <h1>Hello, MDB and Django!</h1>
          <button class="btn btn-primary">Primary button</button>
        </div>
      </body>
      </html>
    
        
    

Step 16

Now we can make migrations, restart the server and go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/. You should see an unstyled placeholder page there.

        
            
        python3 manage.py makemigrations
        python3 manage.py migrate
        python3 manage.py runserver
      
        
    
        
            
        py manage.py makemigrations
        py manage.py migrate
        py manage.py runserver
      
        
    

Install MDB

In this section we will add MDB styles and JavaScript files to the example page.

Step 1

From the base project directory type the following command in the terminal. It will change the directory to toDoApp/static and initialize MDB CLI. From the list of starters select Standard.

Note: If you don't have MDB CLI installed yet, you can do it with NPM: npm install -g mdb-cli. Now log in with your MDB account, type: mdb login. If you don't have account yet you can create one using mdb register command.

        
            
          cd toDoApp
          mkdir static
          cd static
          mdb frontend init mdb5-free-standard
        
        
    

Step 2

At the beginning of the index.html file add {% load static %} and in the head import static CSS files.

        
            
          {% load static %}

          <link href="{% static 'mdb5-free-standard/css/mdb.min.css' %}" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"/>
        
        
    

Step 3

At the end of the body tag in the index.html file import static JS files.

        
            
          <script src="{% static 'mdb5-free-standard/js/mdb.min.js' %}"></script>
        
        
    
Now you're done

With MDB's CSS and JS fully loaded, after restarting the server your example page should work and you should see MDB styles applied to its content.


To Do App with MDB

In this section, we will present the capabilities of Django used with the MDB package by creating an example To Do App.

Step 1

Change the content of the body tag in the index.html file to content of the snippet below but don't remove the script tag that imports JavaScript files.

        
            
          <div class="container mt-5">
            <!-- Button trigger modal -->
            <div class="row pt-5">
                <div class="col text-center">
                    <button class="btn btn-primary" data-mdb-toggle="modal" data-mdb-target="#TaskModal" id="addTaskButton">Add task</button>
                </div>
            </div>
    
            <!-- Modal Add -->
            <div class="modal top fade" id="TaskModal" tabindex="-1" aria-labelledby="TaskModalLabel" aria-hidden="true">
                <div class="modal-dialog">
                    <div class="modal-content">
                        <div class="modal-header">
                            <h5 class="modal-title" id="taskModalLabel">Add task</h5>
                            <button type="button" class="btn-close" data-mdb-dismiss="modal" aria-label="Close"></button>
                        </div>
                        <form action="/" method="POST" id="taskForm">
                            <div class="modal-body">
                                    {% csrf_token %}
                                    <div class="form-outline mb-4">
                                        <input name='name' type="text" id="editNameInput" class="form-control"/>
                                        <label class="form-label" for="editNameInput">Name</label>
                                    </div>
                                    <div class="form-outline mb-4">
                                        <input name="desc" type="text" id="editDescInput" class="form-control">
                                        <label class="form-label" for="editDescInput">Description</label>
                                    </div>
                                    <input name="id" type="hidden" id="taskId" >
                            </div>
                            <div class="modal-footer">
                                <button type="button" class="btn btn-secondary" data-mdb-dismiss="modal">
                                    Close
                                </button>
                                <button type="submit" class="btn btn-primary" id="confirmButton">Confirm</button>
                            </div>
                        </form>
                    </div>
                </div>
            </div>
    
            <!-- List of tasks -->
            <div class="row mt-3 p-5">
                <div class="col d-flex justify-content-center align-items-center">
                    <ul class="list-group list-group-light" style="min-width: 22rem;">
                        {% for task in tasks %}
                        <li class="list-group-item d-flex justify-content-between align-items-center gap-5" id="{{task.id}}">
                            <div>
                                <div class="fw-bold name">{{task.name}}</div>
                                <div class="fw-bold desc">{{task.desc}}</div>
                            </div>
                            <div class="d-flex align-items-center">
                                <a class="btn btn-primary btn-floating me-2" data-mdb-toggle="modal" data-mdb-target="#TaskModal" onclick="setModalValues('{{task.id}}')">
                                    <span class="fas fa-pen text-white"></span>
                                </a>
                                <form action="{% url 'delete' task.id %}" class="my-0">
                                    {% csrf_token %}
                                    <button type="submit" class="btn btn-danger btn-floating">
                                        <span class="fas fa-trash text-white" title="delete"></span>
                                    </button>
                                </form>
                            </div>
                        </li>
                        {% endfor %}
                    </ul>
                </div>
            </div>
        </div>
        
        
    

Step 2

At the end of the body tag in index.html add code from the snippet below.

        
            
          <script>
            const editNameInput = document.getElementById('editNameInput');
            const editDescInput = document.getElementById('editDescInput');
            const taskId = document.getElementById('taskId');
            const taskForm = document.getElementById('taskForm');
            const taskModalLabel = document.getElementById('taskModalLabel');

            function setModalValues(id) {
                const task = document.getElementById(id)
                editNameInput.value = task.querySelector('.name').innerText;
                editDescInput.value = task.querySelector('.desc').innerText;
                taskId.value = id;
                taskModalLabel.innerText = 'Edit task';
            }

            const addTaskButton = document.querySelector('#addTaskButton');
            addTaskButton.addEventListener('click', () => {
                taskForm.reset();
                taskModalLabel.innerText = 'Add task';
            })
          </script>
        
        
    

After refreshing the page, you should see a simple To Do app connected to a MySQL database.


Optimization

If you want to further optimize your application please visit:


Backend features

Django:

This example was created with the use of Django. Our app is connected to MySQL database and is ready to receive get and post requests.

MDB CLI:

The database in this example was created using MDB CLI with Graphical User Interface available under phpmyadmin.mdbgo.com


Frontend features

MDB UI KIT:

We have successfully added MDB UI Kit to the created app, with which we can build basic views very quickly.

Views and Layouts:

We have successfully integrated the backend with the MDB package and can send basic requests to backend Django application.