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path: root/rest_framework/utils/encoders.py
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2013-05-24Clean up OPTIONS implementationTom Christie
2013-02-04Cleanup importsTom Christie
Mostly adding `from __future__ import unicode_literals` everywhere.
2013-01-15Add timedelta encoder to the JSONEncoder class.James Cleveland
Whilst this commit adds *encoding* of timedeltas to a string of a floating point value of the seconds, you must add your own serializer field for whatever timedelta model field you are using. This is because Django doesn't support any kind of timedelta field out-of-the-box, so you have to either implement your own or use django-timedelta. If this is the case and you want to serialise timedelta input, you will have to implement your own special field to use for the timedelta, which is not included in core as it is based on a 3rd party library. Here is an example: import datetime import timedelta from django import forms from django.core import validators from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _ from rest_framework.fields import WritableField class TimedeltaField(WritableField): type_name = 'TimedeltaField' form_field_class = forms.FloatField default_error_messages = { 'invalid': _("'%s' value must be in seconds."), } def from_native(self, value): if value in validators.EMPTY_VALUES: return None try: return datetime.timedelta(seconds=float(value)) except (TypeError, ValueError): msg = self.error_messages['invalid'] % value raise ValidationError(msg) Which is based on the FloatField. This field can then be used in your serializer like this: from yourapp.fields import TimedeltaField class YourSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer): duration = TimedeltaField()
2013-01-05deprecate simplejsonJuan Riaza
2012-10-10Fix yaml renderingTom Christie
2012-09-20Change package name: djangorestframework -> rest_frameworkTom Christie