== What Are Signals? == Signals allow you to make Django call custom methods after common actions using a dispatcher. Beyond that, I really don't know much else. Please help expand this documentation, if you can. The author of Zyons [http://feh.holsman.net/articles/2006/06/13/django-signals talks about signals a bit here]. == Built-In Signals == Django has the following build in signalers: * class_prepared * pre_init * post_init * pre_save * post_save * pre_delete * post_delete * post_syncdb All the above are related to classes in your models.py files. == Custom Signals == You can send custom signals from the dispatcher, as well. In the following example from [http://feh.holsman.net/articles/2006/06/13/django-signals this intro to signals], a signal called "object_viewed" is sent whenever the following bit is called: {{{ dispatcher.send(signal=signals.object_viewed, request=request, object=object) }}} == Example == The following is taken from [http://zyons.com/ Zyons], the only place I've seen signals used so far. Unless I'm completely incorrect, the following code has the dispatcher call "increment_tag_summary" before a TagUserObject object is saved, and "decrement_tag_summary" after a TagUserObject object is deleted. === models.py === {{{ from django.db.models import signals from django.dispatch import dispatcher [...] def increment_tag_summary(sender, instance, signal, *args, **kwargs): [...] def decrement_tag_summary(sender, instance, signal, *args, **kwargs): [...] dispatcher.connect( increment_tag_summary , signal=signals.pre_save, sender=TagUserObject ) dispatcher.connect( decrement_tag_summary , signal=signals.post_delete, sender=TagUserObject ) }}}