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Django 5 By Example - Fifth Edition

You're reading from   Django 5 By Example - Fifth Edition Build powerful and reliable Python web applications from scratch

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Product type Book
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805125457
Pages 820 pages
Edition 5th Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Antonio Melé Antonio Melé
Author Profile Icon Antonio Melé
Antonio Melé
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Blog Application FREE CHAPTER 2. Enhancing Your Blog and Adding Social Features 3. Extending Your Blog Application 4. Building a Social Website 5. Implementing Social Authentication 6. Sharing Content on Your Website 7. Tracking User Actions 8. Building an Online Shop 9. Managing Payments and Orders 10. Extending Your Shop 11. Adding Internationalization to Your Shop 12. Building an E-Learning Platform 13. Creating a Content Management System 14. Rendering and Caching Content 15. Building an API 16. Building a Chat Server 17. Going Live 18. Other Books You May Enjoy
19. Index

Writing a consumer

Consumers are the equivalent of Django views for asynchronous applications. As mentioned, they handle WebSockets in a very similar way to how traditional views handle HTTP requests. Consumers are ASGI applications that can handle messages, notifications, and other things. Unlike Django views, consumers are built for long-running communication. URLs are mapped to consumers through routing classes that allow you to combine and stack consumers.

Let’s implement a basic consumer that can accept WebSocket connections and echoes every message it receives from the WebSocket back to it. This initial functionality will allow the student to send messages to the consumer and receive back the messages it sends.

Create a new file inside the chat application directory and name it consumers.py. Add the following code to it:

import json
from channels.generic.websocket import WebsocketConsumer
class ChatConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
    def connect(self):
     ...
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