1👍
✅
You haven’t passed the query
object to your template. The haystack examples inherit from SearchView
class view, you’ve used function based views . I am guessing that’s the problem.
EDIT:
The real reason for this issue is that you’re urls.py
points /main/search
to haystack and thus the search
function in the view isn’t called.
The solution would be to use something like SearchView
and add the hotCat
value into the context_dict. Then point the /main/search
to this view.
Eg:
class OwnSearchView(SearchView):
template='search/search.html',
form_class=SearchForm
def get_context_data(self, *args, **kwargs):
context = super(OwnSearchView, self).get_context_data(*args, **kwargs)
# do something
context['hotCat'] = 'hotCat' #get this however you like
return context
And then in your urls.py
url(r'^main/search/', OwnSearchView.as_view(), name='haystack_search'),
)
You will need to add the variable values according to your code. Haystack docs have further details regarding the form_class
and queryset
.
Source:stackexchange.com