Django 5: Een REST API bouwen met Django REST Framework
Volledige handleiding voor het bouwen van een professionele REST API met Django 5 en DRF. Serializers, ViewSets, JWT-authenticatie en best practices uitgelegd.

Django REST Framework (DRF) blijft de gouden standaard voor het bouwen van REST API's met Python. In combinatie met Django 5 biedt het framework een uitstekende ontwikkelervaring dankzij krachtige serializers, geautomatiseerde ViewSets en een flexibel authenticatiesysteem. Deze handleiding behandelt het volledige proces van het opzetten van een professionele API, van installatie tot testen.
Django REST Framework 3.15 biedt volledige Django 5-ondersteuning, aanzienlijke prestatieverbeteringen en betere integratie met native Python-typen. Deze combinatie blijft de voorkeurskeuze voor Python API's in productie.
Installatie en configuratie van het project
Het opzetten van een Django-project met DRF vereist een aantal configuratiestappen. Het gebruik van een virtuele omgeving en een duidelijke projectstructuur vergemakkelijkt het langetermijnonderhoud.
# terminal
# Create virtual environment and install dependencies
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate # Linux/Mac
# venv\Scripts\activate # Windows
# Install Django 5 and DRF
pip install django djangorestframework
pip install django-filter # Advanced filtering
pip install djangorestframework-simplejwt # JWT authentication
# Create Django project
django-admin startproject config .
python manage.py startapp apiDeze commando's maken een Django-project aan met een speciale api-applicatie voor REST-endpoints.
# config/settings.py
INSTALLED_APPS = [
'django.contrib.admin',
'django.contrib.auth',
'django.contrib.contenttypes',
'django.contrib.sessions',
'django.contrib.messages',
'django.contrib.staticfiles',
# Third-party apps
'rest_framework',
'rest_framework_simplejwt',
'django_filters',
# Local apps
'api',
]
REST_FRAMEWORK = {
# Default authentication classes
'DEFAULT_AUTHENTICATION_CLASSES': [
'rest_framework_simplejwt.authentication.JWTAuthentication',
'rest_framework.authentication.SessionAuthentication',
],
# Default permissions: authentication required
'DEFAULT_PERMISSION_CLASSES': [
'rest_framework.permissions.IsAuthenticated',
],
# Global pagination
'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.PageNumberPagination',
'PAGE_SIZE': 20,
# Filter backends
'DEFAULT_FILTER_BACKENDS': [
'django_filters.rest_framework.DjangoFilterBackend',
'rest_framework.filters.SearchFilter',
'rest_framework.filters.OrderingFilter',
],
}Deze configuratie stelt JWT-authenticatie, standaardpaginering en filterbackends in voor de volledige API.
Datamodellen aanmaken
Django-modellen vertegenwoordigen de datastructuur van de API. Een doordacht modelontwerp vereenvoudigt het aanmaken van serializers en views.
# api/models.py
from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import AbstractUser
from django.core.validators import MinValueValidator, MaxValueValidator
import uuid
class User(AbstractUser):
"""Custom user model with additional fields."""
id = models.UUIDField(
primary_key=True,
default=uuid.uuid4,
editable=False
)
bio = models.TextField(blank=True, max_length=500)
avatar = models.URLField(blank=True)
created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
updated_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
class Meta:
ordering = ['-created_at']
def __str__(self):
return self.username
class Category(models.Model):
"""Category for organizing articles."""
name = models.CharField(max_length=100, unique=True)
slug = models.SlugField(max_length=100, unique=True)
description = models.TextField(blank=True)
created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
class Meta:
verbose_name_plural = 'categories'
ordering = ['name']
def __str__(self):
return self.name
class Article(models.Model):
"""Blog article with author and category relations."""
STATUS_CHOICES = [
('draft', 'Draft'),
('published', 'Published'),
('archived', 'Archived'),
]
id = models.UUIDField(
primary_key=True,
default=uuid.uuid4,
editable=False
)
title = models.CharField(max_length=200)
slug = models.SlugField(max_length=200, unique=True)
content = models.TextField()
excerpt = models.TextField(max_length=300, blank=True)
# Author relation
author = models.ForeignKey(
User,
on_delete=models.CASCADE,
related_name='articles'
)
# Category relation
category = models.ForeignKey(
Category,
on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
null=True,
related_name='articles'
)
status = models.CharField(
max_length=20,
choices=STATUS_CHOICES,
default='draft'
)
views_count = models.PositiveIntegerField(default=0)
published_at = models.DateTimeField(null=True, blank=True)
created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
updated_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
class Meta:
ordering = ['-created_at']
def __str__(self):
return self.titleHet gebruik van UUID's als primaire sleutels verbetert de beveiliging (onvoorspelbare identifiers) en vergemakkelijkt datadistributie.
Een aangepast User-model dient altijd aan het begin van een project gedefinieerd te worden, zelfs zonder extra velden. Het achteraf wijzigen van het User-model na de eerste migraties is complex en foutgevoelig.
Serializers: datatransformatie en validatie
Serializers vormen de kern van DRF. Deze klassen transformeren Python-objecten naar JSON en omgekeerd, en valideren tegelijkertijd binnenkomende data.
# api/serializers.py
from rest_framework import serializers
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from django.contrib.auth.password_validation import validate_password
from .models import Article, Category
User = get_user_model()
class UserSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""Serializer for reading user data."""
# Computed field: number of published articles
articles_count = serializers.SerializerMethodField()
class Meta:
model = User
fields = [
'id', 'username', 'email', 'bio',
'avatar', 'articles_count', 'created_at'
]
# Read-only fields
read_only_fields = ['id', 'created_at']
def get_articles_count(self, obj):
"""Count user's published articles."""
return obj.articles.filter(status='published').count()
class UserCreateSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""Serializer for user creation with password validation."""
password = serializers.CharField(
write_only=True,
required=True,
validators=[validate_password],
style={'input_type': 'password'}
)
password_confirm = serializers.CharField(
write_only=True,
required=True,
style={'input_type': 'password'}
)
class Meta:
model = User
fields = [
'id', 'username', 'email', 'password',
'password_confirm', 'bio', 'avatar'
]
def validate(self, attrs):
"""Verify that both passwords match."""
if attrs['password'] != attrs['password_confirm']:
raise serializers.ValidationError({
'password_confirm': 'Passwords do not match.'
})
return attrs
def create(self, validated_data):
"""Create user with hashed password."""
# Remove confirmation field
validated_data.pop('password_confirm')
# Use create_user to hash the password
user = User.objects.create_user(**validated_data)
return user
class CategorySerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""Serializer for categories with article counter."""
articles_count = serializers.IntegerField(
source='articles.count',
read_only=True
)
class Meta:
model = Category
fields = ['id', 'name', 'slug', 'description', 'articles_count']
class ArticleListSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""Lightweight serializer for article listings."""
# Display username instead of UUID
author = serializers.StringRelatedField()
category = serializers.StringRelatedField()
class Meta:
model = Article
fields = [
'id', 'title', 'slug', 'excerpt',
'author', 'category', 'status',
'views_count', 'published_at', 'created_at'
]
class ArticleDetailSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
"""Complete serializer for article details."""
# Include full author data
author = UserSerializer(read_only=True)
category = CategorySerializer(read_only=True)
# Write fields (accepts ID)
category_id = serializers.PrimaryKeyRelatedField(
queryset=Category.objects.all(),
source='category',
write_only=True,
required=False
)
class Meta:
model = Article
fields = [
'id', 'title', 'slug', 'content', 'excerpt',
'author', 'category', 'category_id',
'status', 'views_count',
'published_at', 'created_at', 'updated_at'
]
read_only_fields = ['id', 'author', 'views_count', 'created_at', 'updated_at']
def create(self, validated_data):
"""Automatically assign the author to the logged-in user."""
validated_data['author'] = self.context['request'].user
return super().create(validated_data)De scheiding tussen ArticleListSerializer (lichtgewicht) en ArticleDetailSerializer (volledig) optimaliseert de prestaties door onnodige data bij lijstweergaven te vermijden.
Klaar om je Django gesprekken te halen?
Oefen met onze interactieve simulatoren, flashcards en technische tests.
ViewSets en automatische routers
ViewSets bundelen CRUD-operaties in één enkele klasse. In combinatie met routers genereren ze automatisch API-URL's.
# api/views.py
from rest_framework import viewsets, status, filters
from rest_framework.decorators import action
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.permissions import IsAuthenticated, AllowAny, IsAdminUser
from django_filters.rest_framework import DjangoFilterBackend
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from django.utils import timezone
from .models import Article, Category
from .serializers import (
UserSerializer, UserCreateSerializer,
ArticleListSerializer, ArticleDetailSerializer,
CategorySerializer
)
from .permissions import IsAuthorOrReadOnly
from .filters import ArticleFilter
User = get_user_model()
class UserViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
ViewSet for user management.
Generated endpoints:
- GET /users/ : user list
- POST /users/ : creation (registration)
- GET /users/{id}/ : detail
- PUT/PATCH /users/{id}/ : update
- DELETE /users/{id}/ : delete
- GET /users/me/ : logged-in user profile
"""
queryset = User.objects.all()
filter_backends = [filters.SearchFilter, filters.OrderingFilter]
search_fields = ['username', 'email']
ordering_fields = ['created_at', 'username']
def get_serializer_class(self):
"""Use different serializer for creation."""
if self.action == 'create':
return UserCreateSerializer
return UserSerializer
def get_permissions(self):
"""Dynamic permissions based on action."""
if self.action == 'create':
# Open registration
return [AllowAny()]
if self.action in ['update', 'partial_update', 'destroy']:
# Modification: owner or admin
return [IsAuthenticated()]
return [IsAuthenticated()]
@action(detail=False, methods=['get'])
def me(self, request):
"""Return the logged-in user's profile."""
serializer = self.get_serializer(request.user)
return Response(serializer.data)
@action(detail=False, methods=['patch'])
def update_profile(self, request):
"""Update the logged-in user's profile."""
serializer = self.get_serializer(
request.user,
data=request.data,
partial=True
)
serializer.is_valid(raise_exception=True)
serializer.save()
return Response(serializer.data)
class CategoryViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
ViewSet for category management.
Only admins can create/update/delete.
"""
queryset = Category.objects.all()
serializer_class = CategorySerializer
lookup_field = 'slug'
filter_backends = [filters.SearchFilter]
search_fields = ['name', 'description']
def get_permissions(self):
"""Public read, admin-only write."""
if self.action in ['list', 'retrieve']:
return [AllowAny()]
return [IsAdminUser()]
class ArticleViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
ViewSet for article management.
Features:
- Filter by category, status, author
- Text search
- Sort by date, views
- Custom actions (publish, archive)
"""
queryset = Article.objects.select_related('author', 'category')
filter_backends = [DjangoFilterBackend, filters.SearchFilter, filters.OrderingFilter]
filterset_class = ArticleFilter
search_fields = ['title', 'content', 'excerpt']
ordering_fields = ['created_at', 'published_at', 'views_count']
ordering = ['-created_at']
lookup_field = 'slug'
def get_serializer_class(self):
"""Lightweight serializer for lists, complete for detail."""
if self.action == 'list':
return ArticleListSerializer
return ArticleDetailSerializer
def get_permissions(self):
"""Permissions based on action."""
if self.action in ['list', 'retrieve']:
return [AllowAny()]
if self.action == 'create':
return [IsAuthenticated()]
# Update/delete: author or admin
return [IsAuthorOrReadOnly()]
def get_queryset(self):
"""Filter articles based on user."""
queryset = super().get_queryset()
user = self.request.user
# Unauthenticated users: published articles only
if not user.is_authenticated:
return queryset.filter(status='published')
# Admins: all articles
if user.is_staff:
return queryset
# Authenticated users: published + their own articles
from django.db.models import Q
return queryset.filter(
Q(status='published') | Q(author=user)
)
def retrieve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
"""Increment view counter on each retrieval."""
instance = self.get_object()
instance.views_count += 1
instance.save(update_fields=['views_count'])
serializer = self.get_serializer(instance)
return Response(serializer.data)
@action(detail=True, methods=['post'])
def publish(self, request, slug=None):
"""Publish a draft article."""
article = self.get_object()
if article.status == 'published':
return Response(
{'error': 'Article already published.'},
status=status.HTTP_400_BAD_REQUEST
)
article.status = 'published'
article.published_at = timezone.now()
article.save()
serializer = self.get_serializer(article)
return Response(serializer.data)
@action(detail=True, methods=['post'])
def archive(self, request, slug=None):
"""Archive a published article."""
article = self.get_object()
article.status = 'archived'
article.save()
serializer = self.get_serializer(article)
return Response(serializer.data)Aangepaste acties (@action) voegen specifieke endpoints toe zoals /articles/{slug}/publish/ zonder nieuwe views te hoeven aanmaken.
Aangepaste permissies
Permissies regelen de toegang tot resources. DRF maakt het mogelijk om herbruikbare permissies te creëren voor complexe bedrijfsregels.
# api/permissions.py
from rest_framework import permissions
class IsAuthorOrReadOnly(permissions.BasePermission):
"""
Custom permission:
- Read: everyone
- Write: object author or admin only
"""
def has_object_permission(self, request, view, obj):
# GET, HEAD, OPTIONS methods are always allowed
if request.method in permissions.SAFE_METHODS:
return True
# Write allowed only for author or admins
return obj.author == request.user or request.user.is_staff
class IsOwnerOrAdmin(permissions.BasePermission):
"""
Permission for user resources:
- Users can access their own resources
- Admins can access everything
"""
def has_object_permission(self, request, view, obj):
# Check if object is the user themselves
if hasattr(obj, 'id') and obj.id == request.user.id:
return True
# Check if object belongs to the user
if hasattr(obj, 'user') and obj.user == request.user:
return True
# Admins have access to everything
return request.user.is_staffDeze permissies werken op objectniveau (has_object_permission) voor fijnmazige toegangscontrole per resource.
Aangepaste filters met django-filter
Filters stellen API-clients in staat om data te doorzoeken en te filteren op basis van verschillende criteria.
# api/filters.py
import django_filters
from .models import Article
class ArticleFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
"""
Custom filters for articles.
Usage examples:
- /articles/?category=tech
- /articles/?status=published
- /articles/?author=username
- /articles/?created_after=2026-01-01
- /articles/?min_views=100
"""
# Filter by category slug
category = django_filters.CharFilter(
field_name='category__slug',
lookup_expr='exact'
)
# Filter by author username
author = django_filters.CharFilter(
field_name='author__username',
lookup_expr='exact'
)
# Filter by creation date (after)
created_after = django_filters.DateFilter(
field_name='created_at',
lookup_expr='gte'
)
# Filter by creation date (before)
created_before = django_filters.DateFilter(
field_name='created_at',
lookup_expr='lte'
)
# Filter by minimum views
min_views = django_filters.NumberFilter(
field_name='views_count',
lookup_expr='gte'
)
# Filter by title (contains)
title = django_filters.CharFilter(
field_name='title',
lookup_expr='icontains'
)
class Meta:
model = Article
fields = ['status', 'category', 'author']Deze filters genereren automatisch documentatie in de browsable DRF-interface.
Filters op tekstvelden met icontains kunnen traag zijn bij grote tabellen. Voor full-text zoeken verdient PostgreSQL met SearchVector of Elasticsearch de voorkeur.
URL-configuratie en routers
De DRF-router genereert automatisch RESTful URL's op basis van geregistreerde ViewSets.
# api/urls.py
from django.urls import path, include
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
from rest_framework_simplejwt.views import (
TokenObtainPairView,
TokenRefreshView,
TokenVerifyView,
)
from .views import UserViewSet, CategoryViewSet, ArticleViewSet
# Create router with automatic URL generation
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'users', UserViewSet, basename='user')
router.register(r'categories', CategoryViewSet, basename='category')
router.register(r'articles', ArticleViewSet, basename='article')
urlpatterns = [
# Router-generated URLs
path('', include(router.urls)),
# JWT authentication endpoints
path('auth/token/', TokenObtainPairView.as_view(), name='token_obtain_pair'),
path('auth/token/refresh/', TokenRefreshView.as_view(), name='token_refresh'),
path('auth/token/verify/', TokenVerifyView.as_view(), name='token_verify'),
]# config/urls.py
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path, include
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
# All API URLs under /api/
path('api/', include('api.urls')),
]Deze configuratie stelt de volgende endpoints beschikbaar:
POST /api/auth/token/: JWT-token verkrijgenPOST /api/auth/token/refresh/: token vernieuwenGET/POST /api/users/: gebruikers ophalen en aanmakenGET/PUT/PATCH/DELETE /api/users/{id}/: bewerkingen op een gebruiker- En zo verder voor categorieën en artikelen.
Geavanceerde JWT-configuratie
JWT-authenticatie vereist een configuratie die is afgestemd op zowel beveiliging als gebruikerservaring.
# config/settings.py
from datetime import timedelta
SIMPLE_JWT = {
# Access token lifetime
'ACCESS_TOKEN_LIFETIME': timedelta(minutes=30),
# Refresh token lifetime
'REFRESH_TOKEN_LIFETIME': timedelta(days=7),
# Automatic refresh token rotation
'ROTATE_REFRESH_TOKENS': True,
# Blacklist old tokens after rotation
'BLACKLIST_AFTER_ROTATION': True,
# Signing algorithm
'ALGORITHM': 'HS256',
# Signing key (use secret key in production)
'SIGNING_KEY': SECRET_KEY,
# Authorization header prefix
'AUTH_HEADER_TYPES': ('Bearer',),
# Fields included in token
'USER_ID_FIELD': 'id',
'USER_ID_CLAIM': 'user_id',
}Tokenrotatie (ROTATE_REFRESH_TOKENS) versterkt de beveiliging door oude tokens na elke vernieuwing ongeldig te maken.
Geautomatiseerde API-tests
DRF biedt ingebouwde testtools om het gedrag van de API te valideren.
# api/tests/test_articles.py
from django.test import TestCase
from django.urls import reverse
from rest_framework.test import APIClient
from rest_framework import status
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from api.models import Article, Category
User = get_user_model()
class ArticleAPITestCase(TestCase):
"""Tests for article endpoints."""
def setUp(self):
"""Set up test data."""
self.client = APIClient()
# Create test user
self.user = User.objects.create_user(
username='testuser',
email='test@example.com',
password='testpass123'
)
# Create category
self.category = Category.objects.create(
name='Tech',
slug='tech',
description='Technology articles'
)
# Create published article
self.article = Article.objects.create(
title='Test Article',
slug='test-article',
content='Detailed test content.',
excerpt='Short summary',
author=self.user,
category=self.category,
status='published'
)
def test_list_articles_unauthenticated(self):
"""Published articles are accessible without authentication."""
url = reverse('article-list')
response = self.client.get(url)
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_200_OK)
self.assertEqual(len(response.data['results']), 1)
def test_list_articles_filters_drafts(self):
"""Drafts are not visible to unauthenticated users."""
# Create a draft
Article.objects.create(
title='Draft Article',
slug='draft-article',
content='Draft content',
author=self.user,
status='draft'
)
url = reverse('article-list')
response = self.client.get(url)
# Only published article is visible
self.assertEqual(len(response.data['results']), 1)
def test_create_article_authenticated(self):
"""An authenticated user can create an article."""
self.client.force_authenticate(user=self.user)
url = reverse('article-list')
data = {
'title': 'New Article',
'slug': 'new-article',
'content': 'New article content.',
'category_id': self.category.id,
}
response = self.client.post(url, data, format='json')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_201_CREATED)
self.assertEqual(Article.objects.count(), 2)
# Author is automatically assigned
self.assertEqual(
Article.objects.get(slug='new-article').author,
self.user
)
def test_create_article_unauthenticated(self):
"""An unauthenticated user cannot create an article."""
url = reverse('article-list')
data = {
'title': 'Unauthorized Article',
'slug': 'unauthorized-article',
'content': 'Content',
}
response = self.client.post(url, data, format='json')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_401_UNAUTHORIZED)
def test_update_own_article(self):
"""An author can update their own article."""
self.client.force_authenticate(user=self.user)
url = reverse('article-detail', kwargs={'slug': self.article.slug})
data = {'title': 'Modified Title'}
response = self.client.patch(url, data, format='json')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_200_OK)
self.article.refresh_from_db()
self.assertEqual(self.article.title, 'Modified Title')
def test_update_other_user_article(self):
"""A user cannot update another user's article."""
other_user = User.objects.create_user(
username='other',
email='other@example.com',
password='otherpass123'
)
self.client.force_authenticate(user=other_user)
url = reverse('article-detail', kwargs={'slug': self.article.slug})
data = {'title': 'Modified Title'}
response = self.client.patch(url, data, format='json')
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_403_FORBIDDEN)
def test_publish_action(self):
"""The publish action changes the article status."""
draft = Article.objects.create(
title='Draft',
slug='draft',
content='Draft content',
author=self.user,
status='draft'
)
self.client.force_authenticate(user=self.user)
url = reverse('article-publish', kwargs={'slug': draft.slug})
response = self.client.post(url)
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_200_OK)
draft.refresh_from_db()
self.assertEqual(draft.status, 'published')
self.assertIsNotNone(draft.published_at)
def test_filter_by_category(self):
"""Filtering by category works correctly."""
url = reverse('article-list')
response = self.client.get(url, {'category': 'tech'})
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_200_OK)
self.assertEqual(len(response.data['results']), 1)
def test_search_articles(self):
"""Text search works."""
url = reverse('article-list')
response = self.client.get(url, {'search': 'Test'})
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, status.HTTP_200_OK)
self.assertEqual(len(response.data['results']), 1)De tests worden uitgevoerd met het commando python manage.py test api.tests.
Foutafhandeling en gestandaardiseerde responses
Consistente foutafhandeling verbetert de ontwikkelervaring voor API-consumenten.
# api/exceptions.py
from rest_framework.views import exception_handler
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework import status
def custom_exception_handler(exc, context):
"""
Custom exception handler to standardize error responses.
Response format:
{
"success": false,
"error": {
"code": "ERROR_CODE",
"message": "Error description",
"details": {...} # Optional
}
}
"""
# Call the default handler
response = exception_handler(exc, context)
if response is not None:
# Standardize response format
custom_response = {
'success': False,
'error': {
'code': get_error_code(exc),
'message': get_error_message(response.data),
'details': response.data if isinstance(response.data, dict) else None
}
}
response.data = custom_response
return response
def get_error_code(exc):
"""Return an error code based on exception type."""
error_codes = {
'ValidationError': 'VALIDATION_ERROR',
'AuthenticationFailed': 'AUTHENTICATION_FAILED',
'NotAuthenticated': 'NOT_AUTHENTICATED',
'PermissionDenied': 'PERMISSION_DENIED',
'NotFound': 'NOT_FOUND',
'MethodNotAllowed': 'METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED',
'Throttled': 'RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED',
}
return error_codes.get(exc.__class__.__name__, 'UNKNOWN_ERROR')
def get_error_message(data):
"""Extract a readable error message from response data."""
if isinstance(data, dict):
if 'detail' in data:
return str(data['detail'])
# Collect validation messages
messages = []
for field, errors in data.items():
if isinstance(errors, list):
messages.extend([f"{field}: {e}" for e in errors])
else:
messages.append(f"{field}: {errors}")
return '; '.join(messages) if messages else 'Validation error'
return str(data)# config/settings.py
REST_FRAMEWORK = {
# ... other configurations
'EXCEPTION_HANDLER': 'api.exceptions.custom_exception_handler',
}Conclusie
Django REST Framework in combinatie met Django 5 biedt een compleet ecosysteem voor het bouwen van professionele REST API's. De kracht van serializers, de flexibiliteit van ViewSets en de native JWT-authenticatie maken het mogelijk om snel robuuste en veilige API's te ontwikkelen.
Checklist voor een kwalitatieve Django API
- Aparte serializers voor lezen en schrijven gebruiken
- Aangepaste permissies voor toegangscontrole implementeren
- Filters voor zoeken en sorteren configureren
- JWT-authenticatie met tokenrotatie instellen
- Unittests voor elk endpoint schrijven
- Het formaat van foutresponses standaardiseren
- De API documenteren via DRF Spectacular of drf-yasg
Begin met oefenen!
Test je kennis met onze gespreksimulatoren en technische tests.
De DRF-aanpak bevordert hergebruik en compositie: serializers, permissies en filters combineren tot API's die op de lange termijn onderhoudbaar blijven. Automatische documentatie en de browsable interface versnellen de ontwikkeling en vergemakkelijken de integratie voor frontendteams.
Tags
Delen
Gerelateerde artikelen

Django en Python sollicitatievragen: De Top 25 in 2026
De 25 meest voorkomende Django- en Python-sollicitatievragen. ORM, views, middleware, DRF, signals en optimalisatie met gedetailleerde antwoorden en codevoorbeelden.

Django Sollicitatievragen: ORM, Middleware en DRF Diepgaand Behandeld
Uitgebreide gids voor Django sollicitatievragen over ORM-optimalisatie, middleware-architectuur en Django REST Framework. Met productie-ready codevoorbeelden voor Django 5.2.

Symfony 7: API Platform en Best Practices
Volledige gids voor het bouwen van professionele REST API's met Symfony 7 en API Platform 4. State Providers, Processors, validatie en serialisatie uitgelegd met praktische voorbeelden.