mirror of https://github.com/django/django.git
Edited docs/syndication_feeds.txt changes from [4982]
git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@4988 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
parent
13641ae92f
commit
a02e13c7da
|
@ -114,10 +114,9 @@ Note:
|
|||
`object-relational mapper`_, ``items()`` doesn't have to return model
|
||||
instances. Although you get a few bits of functionality "for free" by
|
||||
using Django models, ``items()`` can return any type of object you want.
|
||||
* If you are creating an Atom feed, rather than the default RSS feed, you
|
||||
will want to set the ``subtitle`` attribute instead of the
|
||||
``description`` attribute. See `Publishing Atom and RSS feeds in
|
||||
tandem`_, later, for an example.
|
||||
* If you're creating an Atom feed, rather than an RSS feed, set the
|
||||
``subtitle`` attribute instead of the ``description`` attribute. See
|
||||
`Publishing Atom and RSS feeds in tandem`_, later, for an example.
|
||||
|
||||
One thing's left to do. In an RSS feed, each ``<item>`` has a ``<title>``,
|
||||
``<link>`` and ``<description>``. We need to tell the framework what data to
|
||||
|
@ -302,7 +301,7 @@ Publishing Atom and RSS feeds in tandem
|
|||
---------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Some developers like to make available both Atom *and* RSS versions of their
|
||||
feeds. That's easy to do with Django: Just create a subclass of your ``feed``
|
||||
feeds. That's easy to do with Django: Just create a subclass of your ``Feed``
|
||||
class and set the ``feed_type`` to something different. Then update your
|
||||
URLconf to add the extra versions.
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -322,16 +321,20 @@ Here's a full example::
|
|||
|
||||
class AtomSiteNewsFeed(RssSiteNewsFeed):
|
||||
feed_type = Atom1Feed
|
||||
subtitle = description
|
||||
subtitle = RssSiteNewsFeed.description
|
||||
|
||||
.. Note::
|
||||
In Atom feeds, there is no feed-level description element. There *is* a
|
||||
subtitle element, however. Your RSS feed description may be too verbose
|
||||
for a subtitle, so Django does not automatically put the feed description
|
||||
into the subtitle element. Instead, you should create a ``subtitle``
|
||||
attribute in your model, containing an appropriate string. In the above
|
||||
example, we have used the RSS feed's description, since it is quite short
|
||||
already.
|
||||
In this example, the RSS feed uses a ``description`` while the Atom feed
|
||||
uses a ``subtitle``. That's because Atom feeds don't provide for a
|
||||
feed-level "description," but they *do* provide for a "subtitle."
|
||||
|
||||
If you provide a ``description`` in your ``Feed`` class, Django will *not*
|
||||
automatically put that into the ``subtitle`` element, because a subtitle
|
||||
and description are not necessarily the same thing. Instead, you should
|
||||
define a ``subtitle`` attribute.
|
||||
|
||||
In the above example, we simply set the Atom feed's ``subtitle`` to the
|
||||
RSS feed's ``description``, because it's quite short already.
|
||||
|
||||
And the accompanying URLconf::
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue