django-intercom-io¶
django-intercom-io makes it easy for you to add support for intercom.io to your Django website.
Development¶
The source repository can be found at https://github.com/eldarion/django-intercom-io
Contents¶
ChangeLog¶
0.4¶
- change has function to use user.pk instead of email address
0.3¶
- add user id
0.2¶
- pass user to context for rendering template
0.1¶
- initial release
Installation¶
To install
pip install django-intercom-io
Add
"intercom"
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
setting:INSTALLED_APPS = [ # other apps "intercom", ]
Usage¶
At the top of your base template add:
{% load intercom_tags %}
And just before the </body>
tag add:
{% intercom_js user %}
And if you want a feedback/support link, put:
<a id="Intercom" href="#">Support</a>
somewhere (e.g. in your nav bar) as explained by the intercom.io documentation.
In your settings file set INTERCOM_APP_ID
and optionally (if you use a user hash for security) INTERCOM_USER_HASH_KEY
with the values
provided by intercom.io.
Custom Data¶
intercom.io lets you send custom, per-user data to its site. django-intercom lets individual apps contribute what custom data they want to provide.
If you have an INTERCOM_APPS
setting, it should be a list of apps that have an intercom
module in them containing a custom_data
function. This function should take a user
and return a dictionary to be sent to intercom.io as custom data.
For example, if you have an app called foo
with a Foo
model, you might add:
INTERCOM_APPS = [
"foo",
]
to your settings and then in foo/intercom.py
have:
from foo.models import Foo
def custom_data(user):
return {
"foo_count" : Foo.objects.filter(user=user).count(),
}