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django-currencies allows you to define different currencies, and includes template tags/filters to allow easy conversion between them.

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django-currencies

django-currencies allows you to define different currencies, and includes template tags/filters to allow easy conversion between them.

For more details, see the documentation at Read The Docs.

Authored by Panos Laganakos, and some great contributors.

Installation

  1. Either clone this repository into your project, or install with pip:

    pip install django-currencies
  2. You'll need to add currencies to INSTALLED_APPS in your project's settings file:

    import django
    
    INSTALLED_APPS += (
        'currencies',
    )
    
    if django.VERSION < (1, 7):
        INSTALLED_APPS += (
            'south',
        )

3a. Either have the currencies.context_processors.currencies processor:

TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS += (
    'django.core.context_processors.request',  # must be enabled
    'currencies.context_processors.currencies',
)

3b. Or use the template tag currency_context:

{% load currency %}
{% currency_context %}
  1. Update your urls.py file :

    urlpatterns += patterns('',
        url(r'^currencies/', include('currencies.urls')),
    )

Then run ./manage.py syncdb to create the required database tables

Please see example application. This application is used to manually test the functionalities of this package. This also serves as a good example.

You need Django 1.4 or above to run that. It might run on older versions but that is not tested.

Upgrading from 0.3.3

Upgrading from 0.3.3 is likely to cause problems trying to apply a migration when the tables already exist. In this case a fake migration needs to be applied:

./manage.py migrate currencies 0001 --fake

Configuration

django-currencies has built-in integration with openexchangerates.org, Yahoo Finance and Currency ISO.

Management Commands

You can use the management commands currencies and updatecurrencies to maintain the currencies in the database. The former will import any currencies that are defined on the selected source. The latter will update all the database currencies against the rates returned by the source. Any currency missing on the source will be left untouched.

You can selectively import currencies, for example the commands below will import USD and EUR currencies only, or use a variable from the settings that points to an iterable respectively:

./manage.py currencies --import=USD --import=EUR
./manage.py currencies -i SHOP_CURRENCIES

The command automatically looks for variables CURRENCIES or SHOP_CURRENCIES in settings if -i is not specified. For more information on the additional switches --force and --verbosity try ./manage.py help currencies.

updatecurrencies can automatically change the base rate of the imported exchange rates by specifying the --base switch like so:

./manage.py updatecurrencies oxr --base=USD
./manage.py updatecurrencies yahoo -b SHOP_DEFAULT_CURRENCY

The command automatically looks for variables CURRENCIES_BASE or SHOP_DEFAULT_CURRENCY in settings if -b is not specified.

OpenExchangeRates

This is the default source or select it specifically using oxr as positional argument to either command.

You will need to specify your API key in your settings file:

OPENEXCHANGERATES_APP_ID = "c2b2efcb306e075d9c2f2d0b614119ea"

Requirements: requests (python3-compatible fork of OpenExchangeRatesClient is integrated due to abandoned project)

Yahoo Finance

Select this source by specifying yahoo as positional argument.

Requirements: BeautifulSoup4 and requests

Currency ISO

Select this source by specifying iso as positional argument.

Requirements: requests

Integration Live Feeds
  Currencies Rates Symbols Other Info
oxr    
yahoo
iso  

Other info includes ISO4217 number and exponent, country and city names, and alternative currency names.

Usage

First of all, load the currency in every template where you want to use it:

{% load currency %}

Use:

{% change_currency [price] [currency_code] %}

for example:

{% change_currency product.price "USD" %}

<!-- or if you have the ``currencies.context_processors.currencies`` available -->
{% change_currency product.price CURRENCY.code %}

or use the filter:

{{ [price]|currency:[currency_code] }}

for example:

{{ product.price|currency:"USD" }}

or set the CURRENCY_CODE context variable with a POST to the included view:

{% url 'currencies_set_currency' [currency_code] %}

or use the template tag currency_context:

{% currency_context %}

which gives the three context variables: CURRENCIES, CURRENCY_CODE and CURRENCY.

Template

Included is a template for a Bootstrap 3 & fontawesome compatible navbar currency chooser. The navbar item will display if there are more than 1 active currencies. There is a navbar parameter dropdown_extra_class which is used to supply extra classes to the dropdown:

{% block navbar-nav %}
    ...
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
        ...
        {% with dropdown_extra_class="collapsed-nav" %}
        {% include "currencies/navbar/currency-chooser-bs3fa.html" %}
        {% endwith %}

Note

The currency choice may not be reflected on the navbar if your view is not re-rendered. This may be the case if you are viewing a default page in Django CMS for example. This is due to the context processor not being triggered because the RequestContext is not re-generated.

License

django-currencies is released under the BSD license.

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django-currencies allows you to define different currencies, and includes template tags/filters to allow easy conversion between them.

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