Hey Marco,

I have forked your library on GitHub and added the management command
to build a list of urls and output the file in the format that is
specified by django-js-utils.

https://github.com/Dimitri-Gnidash/django-js-utils

Cheers

On Mar 24, 11:37 am, Marco Louro <mlo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> That's also already done, 
> checkhttps://github.com/django-extensions/django-extensions/blob/master/dj...,
> it can be easily converted to JSON (I have a branch that does it, but
> it's not up-to-date).
>
> I also have the urls module in JavaScript already, but as part of a
> larger library (https://github.com/mlouro/olivejs/blob/master/olive/
> urls/urls.js), both have been used in projects.
>
> An example:
>
> /* below is the output from "manage.py show_urls" in JSON format */
> olive.urls.load({
>     'dashboard': '/dashboard/',
>     'time_edit': '/projects/<project_id>/time/save/<time_id>/',
>     'task_edit': '/projects/<project_id>/task/save/<task_id>/'
>
> });
>
> olive.urls.get('task_edit', {
>         'project_id': 2,
>         'task_id': 1
>     })
>
> On Mar 24, 3:31 pm, Matt Robenolt <youdontevenk...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I think the biggest problem with translating the reverse() lookup is the
> > lack of kwargs and named capture groups in Javascript regex. So a pattern
> > such as: /page/(?P<page_id>\d+)/ would not translate whatsoever. Then on the
> > Javascript side, we wouldn't be able to use:  reverse('goto_page', [],
> > {page_id: 5});  It would have nowhere to map up the page_id variable to. We
> > could probably get away with some sort of pseudo regex rules in Javascript.

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