Paginator
Django provides a few classes that help you manage paginated data – that is, data that’s split across several pages, with “Previous/Next” links. These classes live in django/core/paginator.py.
Paginator
class
class Paginator
(object_list, per_page, orphans=0, allow_empty_first_page=True)
A paginator acts like a sequence of Page
when using len()
or iterating it directly.
Changed in Django 3.1:
Support for iterating over Paginator
was added.
Required. A list, tuple, QuerySet
, or other sliceable object with a count()
or __len__()
method. For consistent pagination, QuerySet
s should be ordered, e.g. with an order_by()
clause or with a default ordering
on the model.
Performance issues paginating large QuerySet
s
If you’re using a QuerySet
with a very large number of items, requesting high page numbers might be slow on some databases, because the resulting LIMIT
/OFFSET
query needs to count the number of OFFSET
records which takes longer as the page number gets higher.
Required. The maximum number of items to include on a page, not including orphans (see the orphans
optional argument below).
Optional. Use this when you don’t want to have a last page with very few items. If the last page would normally have a number of items less than or equal to orphans
, then those items will be added to the previous page (which becomes the last page) instead of leaving the items on a page by themselves. For example, with 23 items, per_page=10
, and orphans=3
, there will be two pages; the first page with 10 items and the second (and last) page with 13 items. orphans
defaults to zero, which means pages are never combined and the last page may have one item.
Paginator.``allow_empty_first_page
Optional. Whether or not the first page is allowed to be empty. If False
and object_list
is empty, then an EmptyPage
error will be raised.
Methods
Returns a Page
object with the given 1-based index, while also handling out of range and invalid page numbers.
If the page isn’t a number, it returns the first page. If the page number is negative or greater than the number of pages, it returns the last page.
Raises an EmptyPage
exception only if you specify Paginator(..., allow_empty_first_page=False)
and the object_list
is empty.
Returns a Page
object with the given 1-based index. Raises InvalidPage
if the given page number doesn’t exist.
Attributes
The total number of objects, across all pages.
Note
When determining the number of objects contained in object_list
, Paginator
will first try calling object_list.count()
. If object_list
has no count()
method, then Paginator
will fall back to using len(object_list)
. This allows objects, such as QuerySet
, to use a more efficient count()
method when available.
The total number of pages.
A 1-based range iterator of page numbers, e.g. yielding [1, 2, 3, 4]
.
Page
class
You usually won’t construct Page
objects by hand – you’ll get them by iterating Paginator
, or by using Paginator.page()
.
class Page
(object_list, number, paginator)
A page acts like a sequence of Page.object_list
when using len()
or iterating it directly.
Methods
Returns True
if there’s a next page.
Returns True
if there’s a previous page.
Returns True
if there’s a next or previous page.
Returns the next page number. Raises InvalidPage
if next page doesn’t exist.
Returns the previous page number. Raises InvalidPage
if previous page doesn’t exist.
Returns the 1-based index of the first object on the page, relative to all of the objects in the paginator’s list. For example, when paginating a list of 5 objects with 2 objects per page, the second page’s start_index()
would return 3
.
Returns the 1-based index of the last object on the page, relative to all of the objects in the paginator’s list. For example, when paginating a list of 5 objects with 2 objects per page, the second page’s end_index()
would return 4
.
Attributes
The list of objects on this page.
The 1-based page number for this page.
The associated Paginator
object.
Exceptions
A base class for exceptions raised when a paginator is passed an invalid page number.
The Paginator.page()
method raises an exception if the requested page is invalid (i.e. not an integer) or contains no objects. Generally, it’s enough to catch the InvalidPage
exception, but if you’d like more granularity, you can catch either of the following exceptions:
Raised when page()
is given a value that isn’t an integer.
Raised when page()
is given a valid value but no objects exist on that page.
Both of the exceptions are subclasses of InvalidPage
, so you can handle them both with except InvalidPage
.