How to use django-pagination

django-pagination allows for easy Digg-style pagination without modifying your views.

There are really 5 steps to setting it up with your projects (not including installation, which is covered in INSTALL.txt in this same directory.)

  1. List this application in the INSTALLED_APPS portion of your settings file. Your settings file might look something like:

    INSTALLED_APPS = (
        # ...
        'pagination',
    )
    
  2. Install the pagination middleware. Your settings file might look something like:

    MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
        # ...
        'pagination.middleware.PaginationMiddleware',
    )
    
  3. Add this line at the top of your template to load the pagination tags:

    {% load pagination_tags %}

  4. Decide on a variable that you would like to paginate, and use the autopaginate tag on that variable before iterating over it. This could take one of two forms (using the canonical object_list as an example variable):

    {% autopaginate object_list %}

    This assumes that you would like to have the default 20 results per page. If you would like to specify your own amount of results per page, you can specify that like so:

    {% autopaginate object_list 10 %}

    Note that this replaces object_list with the list for the current page, so you can iterate over the object_list like you normally would.

  5. Now you want to display the current page and the available pages, so somewhere after having used autopaginate, use the paginate inclusion tag:

    {% paginate %}

    This does not take any arguments, but does assume that you have already called autopaginate, so make sure to do so first.

That's it! You have now paginated object_list and given users of the site a way to navigate between the different pages--all without touching your views.