Beispiel #1
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 def __repr__(self):
     """
     Fields are represented using their initial calling arguments.
     This allows us to create descriptive representations for serializer
     instances that show all the declared fields on the serializer.
     """
     return unicode_to_repr(representation.field_repr(self))
Beispiel #2
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr('<%s(queryset=%s, field=%s, date_field=%s)>' % (
         self.__class__.__name__,
         smart_repr(self.queryset),
         smart_repr(self.field),
         smart_repr(self.date_field)
     ))
Beispiel #3
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr('<%s(queryset=%s)>' % (
         self.__class__.__name__,
         smart_repr(self.queryset)
     ))
Beispiel #4
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr('%s()' % self.__class__.__name__)
Beispiel #5
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr(
         '%s(%s)' % (self.__class__.__name__, unicode_repr(self.default)))
 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr('<%s value=%s errors=%s>' % (
         self.__class__.__name__, self.value, self.errors
     ))
Beispiel #7
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr(representation.list_repr(self, indent=1))
Beispiel #8
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 def __repr__(self):
     return unicode_to_repr(representation.serializer_repr(self, indent=1))