[Django]-Django-admin: Add extra row with totals

42👍

Yes, you can do it in many ways, but most django-ist way to do is:

First override the default django listing view… And give a new template file directory

ModelAdmin.changelist_view(self, request, extra_context=None)

Like:

class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):

    # A template for a very customized change view:
    change_list_template = 'admin/myapp/extras/sometemplate_change_form.html'

    def get_total(self):
        #functions to calculate whatever you want...
        total = YourModel.objects.all().aggregate(tot=Sum('total'))['tot']
        return total

    def changelist_view(self, request, extra_context=None):
        my_context = {
            'total': self.get_total(),
        }
        return super(MyModelAdmin, self).changelist_view(request,
            extra_context=my_context)

So, you add your list view context a ‘total’ that keeps your total value and pass it to the template.

if change_list_template will set, django uses that template, otherwise, it uses standard django template.

If def changelist_view(self, request, extra_context=None) is called, django uses that function to create the content, otherwise it uses default django views.

Then create a admin/myapp/extras/sometemplate_change_form.html file and place your {{total}} to any place you want.

A guide to how to override admin templates
And here is how to override admin views

UPDATE: I add a simple aggregate to calculate total. you can edit it to set it as your needs.

UPDATE 2: ModelAdmin template override option fixed from ModelAdmin.change_form_template to ModelAdmin.change_list_template. (thank you c4urself). Yes, but changing the default django admin template is a really bad choice, since it is used by many other ModelAdmin’s and it might cause problems if related templates are updated.

NB:
The Total doesn’t change when using filters, see comment below.

👤Mp0int

39👍

I think the Django way to do this is to override the ChangeList class which django’s admin app uses. You do this in django 1.2 by calling the get_changelist method in your admin class. In my example: TomatoAdmin calls this method returning a custom ChangeList calss. This ChangeList class: MyChangeList simply adds an extra attribute to the context of change_list.html.

Make sure that change_list.html is in the following directory:

app_label/change_list.html

in the example this is: templates/admin/tomato/change_list.html

models.py (A simple model with an integer field)

class CherryTomato(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    num_in_box = models.IntegerField()

admin.py (your Admin class and a custom ChangeList class)

from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.admin.views.main import ChangeList
from django.db.models import Count, Sum

from tomatoes.tomato.models import CherryTomato

class MyChangeList(ChangeList):

    def get_results(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(MyChangeList, self).get_results(*args, **kwargs)
        q = self.result_list.aggregate(tomato_sum=Sum('num_in_box'))
        self.tomato_count = q['tomato_sum']

class TomatoAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):

    def get_changelist(self, request):
        return MyChangeList

    class Meta:
        model = CherryTomato

    list_display = ('name', 'num_in_box')

admin.site.register(CherryTomato, TomatoAdmin)

change_list.html (relevant bit only, copy/paste the existing one and extend it)

  {% block result_list %}
      {% if action_form and actions_on_top and cl.full_result_count %}{% admin_actions %}{% endif %}
      {% result_list cl %}
      {% if action_form and actions_on_bottom and cl.full_result_count %}{% admin_actions %}{% endif %}
      Tomatoes on this page: {{ cl.tomato_count }}
  {% endblock %}

I’ll leave it up to you how to style this the way you want it.

18👍

This thread is going on for a while, but I’m probably not the last one that is looking for such a feature. Therefore, I created a package that makes it easy to add totals.

Checkout https://github.com/douwevandermeij/admin-totals

Usage:

from admin_totals.admin import ModelAdminTotals
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db.models import Sum, Avg

@admin.register(MyModel)
class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdminTotals):
    list_display = ['col_a', 'col_b', 'col_c']
    list_totals = [('col_b', Sum), ('col_c', Avg)]

Feel free to fork it and improve it.

7👍

Ok, so there is a way to do this, involving adding in a couple of new template tags and extending the admin templates.

First off, in your app’s templatetags folder, you create an admin_totals.py file containing a template tag to create a totals row:

from django.template import Library

register = Library()

def totals_row(cl):
    total_functions = getattr(cl.model_admin, 'total_functions', {})
    totals = []
    for field_name in cl.list_display:
        if field_name in total_functions:
            values = [getattr(i, field_name) for i in cl.result_list]
            totals.append(total_functions[field_name](values))
        else:
            totals.append('')
    return {'cl': cl, 'totals_row': totals}
totals_row = register.inclusion_tag("myapp/totals_row.html")(totals_row)

Then you need the template for said row in myapp/totals_row.html (wherever your templates are):

<table id="result_totals">
    <tfoot>
        <tr>
            {% for total in totals_row %}<td>{{ total }}</td>{% endfor %}
        </tr>
    </tfoot>
</table>

Then you need to wire that into a custom admin template inheriting from Django’s default, such as myapp/mymodel_admin.html:

{% extends "admin/change_list.html" %}

{% load admin_totals %}

{% block result_list %}
{{ block.super }}
{% totals_row cl %}
{% endblock %}

Finally, you wire that into the configuration in your admin.py file in your app:

class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):

    list_display = ('name', 'date', 'numerical_awesomeness')
    total_functions = {'numerical_awesomeness': sum}

    change_list_template = 'myapp/mymodel_admin.html'

That should wire in the custom admin template for your new model, displaying the totals row. You can also extend it with other summary functions other than sum, should you so wish.

One small point left: the totals row isn’t actually in the results table, because that would require some fairly gnarly copying and pasting of the Django admin templates. For bonus points, you can add in the following smidge of JavaScript to the bottom of your totals_row.html file:

<script type="text/javascript">
    django.jQuery('#result_list').append(django.jQuery('#result_totals tfoot')[0])
    django.jQuery('#result_totals').remove()
</script>

One caveat: all this will only reflect the totals for the items currently displayed, rather than for all items in existence. One way around this is to set list_per_page to some infeasibly large number on your ModelAdmin class, if you don’t mind the potential performance hit.

4👍

There is also the package “django-admin-changelist-stats” that can give summary statistics. I have successfully used it in a Django 1.6 project.

IMO use c4urself’s solution for fine-grained template customization, but if its only aggregates (sum/avg/min/max) of tables you are after then this solution is pretty good.

From its website


This simple application provides stats and aggregation capabilities for the Django admin changelist view.
It allows to display stats at the end of the changelist page in a easy way, just adding one option to the model admin object.

More information,including examples, at its bitbucket repository webpage
https://bitbucket.org/frankban/django-admin-changelist-stats/src

👤Sachin

3👍

To calculate by applying the filters:

def changelist_view(self, request, extra_context=None):
    extra_context = extra_context or {}
    extra_context['total'] = sum([item.cash for item in self.get_queryset(request)])
    return super().changelist_view(request, extra_context=extra_context)

def get_queryset(self, request):
    qs = super().get_queryset(request)
    return qs.filter(**request.GET.dict())

2👍

In the original question it was clarified in a comment that they are interested in all the objects on the current page. If you are instead interested in all the objects in the database, but with filters applied, you could take a route similar to c4urself’s answer, but with the following core bit:

from django.contrib import admin
from django.db.models import Sum

from tomatoes.tomato.models import CherryTomato

class TomatoAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):

    def get_changelist_instance(self, request):
        cl = super().get_changelist_instance(request)
        q = cl.get_queryset(request).aggregate(tomato_sum=Sum('num_in_box'))
        cl.tomato_count = q['tomato_sum']
        return cl

    class Meta:
        model = CherryTomato

    list_display = ('name', 'num_in_box')

0👍

if you create a custom view overiding the admin view you should be able to take the queryset along with the current page information and slice the data to create a total appropriate to the current page. if you want a true total than I still see a custom overridden admin view as the option you are looking for.

-3👍

AFAIK there’s no way to do this without creating a custom view. The concept is a little flawed anyway, because a user would expect such a row to show the total for only the visible objects, rather than all the objects in the queryset. Thus, any pagination would result in confusion.

As an aside, you can add extra columns to an admin list view by doing something like the following:

class ItemAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    model = Item

    list_display = ('field1', 'field2', 'extra_field')

    def extra_field(self, obj):
        return u'%s' % do_something_with(obj)

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