Metadata-Version: 2.3
Name: django-nps
Version: 1.2
Summary: Django app supporting Net Promoter Score (NPS) surveys.
License: MIT
Author: YunoJuno
Author-email: code@yunojuno.com
Maintainer: YunoJuno
Maintainer-email: code@yunojuno.com
Requires-Python: >=3.10,<4.0
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Framework :: Django :: 4.2
Classifier: Framework :: Django :: 5.0
Classifier: Framework :: Django :: 5.1
Classifier: Framework :: Django :: 5.2
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
Requires-Dist: django (>=4.2,<6.0)
Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/yunojuno/django-nps
Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/yunojuno/django-nps
Description-Content-Type: text/plain

# Django NPS

Django app supporting Net Promoter Score (NPS) surveys

## Compatibility

This package supports Django 4.2+, Python 3.10+.

## Background - Net Promoter Score

The NPS is a measure of customer loyalty that is captured by asking your customers a single
question:

> How likely is it that you would recommend our [company|product|service] to a friend or colleague?"

The answer to this question is a number from 0-10 (inclusive). These scores are then broken out into
three distinct groups: 'detractors' (0-6), 'neutral' (7-8) and 'promoters' (9-10). The NPS is then
the difference between the number of promoters and detractors (as a percentage of the whole
population).

For example, if you ask 100 people, and you get the following results:

```
detractors: 20%
neutrals:   10%
promoters:  70%
```

Then your NPS is 70 - 20 = 50. _(NPS is expressed as a number, not a %)_

NPS was originally developed at the strategy consultants Bain & Company by Fred Reichheld in 2003.
They retain the registered trademark for NPS, and you can read all about the history of it on their
site "[Net Promoter System](http://netpromotersystem.com/about/index.aspx)".

## Usage

This app is used to store the individual scores, and calculate the NPS based on these. It does not
contain any templates for displaying the question itself, neither does it put any restriction around
how often you ask the question, or to whom. It is up to the app developer to determine how this
should work - each score is timestamped and linked to a Django User object, so you can easily work
out the time elapsed since the last time they were asked.

For example, if you want to ensure that you only survey users every X days, you can add a context
property to the template using the `display_to_user` method:

```python
>>> # only show the survey every 90 days
>>> UserScore.objects.days_since_user_score(request.user) > 90
True
```

If you then show the survey - the output of which is a single value (the score) together with an
optional reason ("what is the main reason for your score"), is then posted to the `post_score`
endpoint, which registers the user score.

The NPS value itself can be calculated on any queryset of `UserScore` objects - which allows you to
track the score based on any attribute of the score itself or the underlying user. For instance, if
you have custom user profiles, you may wish to segment your NPS by characteristics of those
profiles.

```python
>>> # December's NPS
>>> UserScore.objects.filter(timestamp__month=12).net_promoter_score()
50
```

The `post_score` endpoint returns a `JsonResponse` which contains a `'success': True|False` value
together with the `UserScore` details:

```python
{
    "success": True,
    "score": {"id": 1, "user": 1, "score": 0, "group": "detractor"}
}
```

If the score was rejected, the errors are returned in place of the score (errors are a list of
lists, as returned from the Django `Form.errors` property):

```python
{
    "success": False,
    "errors": [["score", "Score must be between 0-10"]]
}
```

The app contains a piece of middleware, `NPSMiddleware`, which will add an attribute to the
`HttpRequest` object called `show_nps`. If you add the middleware to your settings:

```python
# settings.py
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
    # standard django middleware
    'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
    'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
    'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
    ...
    'net_promoter_score.NPSMiddleware',
)
```

You can then use this value in your templates:

```html
<!-- show_nps template = {{request.show_nps}} -->
{% if request.show_nps %}
<div>HTML goes here</div>
{% endif %}
```

## Settings

**NPS_DISPLAY_INTERVAL**

The number of days between surveys, integer, defaults to 30. This value is used by the default
`show_nps` function to determine whether someone should be shown the survey.

**NPS_DISPLAY_FUNCTION**

A function that takes an `HttpRequest` object as its only argument, and which returns True if you
want to show the survey. This function is used by the `net_promoter_score.show_nps` function. It
defaults to return True if the request user has either never seen the survey, or hasn't seen it for
more days than the `NPS_DISPLAY_INTERVAL`.

This function should be overridden if you want fine-grained control over the process - it's the main
hook into the app.

## Tests

There is a full suite of tests for the app, which are best run through `tox`. If you wish to run the
tests outside of tox, you should install the requirements first:

```
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ python manage.py test
```

## License

MIT

## Contributing

Usual rules apply:

1. Fork to your own account
2. Create a branch, fix the issue / add the feature
3. Submit PR

Please take care to follow the coding style - and PEP8.

## Acknowledgements

Credit is due to **epantry** for the
[original project](https://github.com/epantry/django-netpromoterscore) from which this was forked.

Thanks also to the kind people at **Eldarion** ([website](http://eldarion.com/)) for releasing the
PyPI package name.

