| ========================== |
| Creating forms from models |
| ========================== |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.forms |
|
|
| ``ModelForm`` |
| ============= |
| .. class:: ModelForm |
|
|
| If you're building a database-driven app, chances are you'll have forms that |
| map closely to Django models. For instance, you might have a ``BlogComment`` |
| model, and you want to create a form that lets people submit comments. In this |
| case, it would be redundant to define the field types in your form, because |
| you've already defined the fields in your model. |
|
|
| For this reason, Django provides a helper class that lets you create a ``Form`` |
| class from a Django model. |
|
|
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import ModelForm |
| >>> from myapp.models import Article |
|
|
| # Create the form class. |
| >>> class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| ... class Meta: |
| ... model = Article |
| ... fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter"] |
| ... |
|
|
| # Creating a form to add an article. |
| >>> form = ArticleForm() |
|
|
| # Creating a form to change an existing article. |
| >>> article = Article.objects.get(pk=1) |
| >>> form = ArticleForm(instance=article) |
|
|
| Field types |
| ----------- |
|
|
| The generated ``Form`` class will have a form field for every model field |
| specified, in the order specified in the ``fields`` attribute. |
|
|
| Each model field has a corresponding default form field. For example, a |
| ``CharField`` on a model is represented as a ``CharField`` on a form. A model |
| ``ManyToManyField`` is represented as a ``MultipleChoiceField``. Here is the |
| full list of conversions: |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| =================================== ================================================== |
| Model field Form field |
| =================================== ================================================== |
| :class:`AutoField` Not represented in the form |
|
|
| :class:`BigAutoField` Not represented in the form |
|
|
| :class:`BigIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` with |
| ``min_value`` set to -9223372036854775808 |
| and ``max_value`` set to 9223372036854775807. |
|
|
| :class:`BinaryField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField`, if |
| :attr:`~.Field.editable` is set to |
| ``True`` on the model field, otherwise not |
| represented in the form. |
|
|
| :class:`BooleanField` :class:`~django.forms.BooleanField`, or |
| :class:`~django.forms.NullBooleanField` if |
| ``null=True``. |
|
|
| :class:`CharField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField` with |
| ``max_length`` set to the model field's |
| ``max_length`` and |
| :attr:`~django.forms.CharField.empty_value` |
| set to ``None`` if ``null=True``. |
|
|
| :class:`DateField` :class:`~django.forms.DateField` |
|
|
| :class:`DateTimeField` :class:`~django.forms.DateTimeField` |
|
|
| :class:`DecimalField` :class:`~django.forms.DecimalField` |
|
|
| :class:`DurationField` :class:`~django.forms.DurationField` |
|
|
| :class:`EmailField` :class:`~django.forms.EmailField` |
|
|
| :class:`FileField` :class:`~django.forms.FileField` |
|
|
| :class:`FilePathField` :class:`~django.forms.FilePathField` |
|
|
| :class:`FloatField` :class:`~django.forms.FloatField` |
|
|
| :class:`ForeignKey` :class:`~django.forms.ModelChoiceField` |
| (see below) |
|
|
| :class:`ImageField` :class:`~django.forms.ImageField` |
|
|
| :class:`IntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` |
|
|
| ``IPAddressField`` ``IPAddressField`` |
|
|
| :class:`GenericIPAddressField` :class:`~django.forms.GenericIPAddressField` |
|
|
| :class:`JSONField` :class:`~django.forms.JSONField` |
|
|
| :class:`ManyToManyField` :class:`~django.forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField` |
| (see below) |
|
|
| :class:`PositiveBigIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` |
|
|
| :class:`PositiveIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` |
|
|
| :class:`PositiveSmallIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` |
|
|
| :class:`SlugField` :class:`~django.forms.SlugField` |
|
|
| :class:`SmallAutoField` Not represented in the form |
|
|
| :class:`SmallIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` |
|
|
| :class:`TextField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField` with |
| ``widget=forms.Textarea`` |
|
|
| :class:`TimeField` :class:`~django.forms.TimeField` |
|
|
| :class:`URLField` :class:`~django.forms.URLField` |
|
|
| :class:`UUIDField` :class:`~django.forms.UUIDField` |
| =================================== ================================================== |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.forms |
|
|
| As you might expect, the ``ForeignKey`` and ``ManyToManyField`` model field |
| types are special cases: |
|
|
| * ``ForeignKey`` is represented by ``django.forms.ModelChoiceField``, |
| which is a ``ChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| * ``ManyToManyField`` is represented by |
| ``django.forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField``, which is a |
| ``MultipleChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| In addition, each generated form field has attributes set as follows: |
|
|
| * If the model field has ``blank=True``, then ``required`` is set to |
| ``False`` on the form field. Otherwise, ``required=True``. |
|
|
| * The form field's ``label`` is set to the ``verbose_name`` of the model |
| field, with the first character capitalized. |
|
|
| * The form field's ``help_text`` is set to the ``help_text`` of the model |
| field. |
|
|
| * If the model field has ``choices`` set, then the form field's ``widget`` |
| will be set to ``Select``, with choices coming from the model field's |
| ``choices``. The choices will normally include the blank choice which is |
| selected by default. If the field is required, this forces the user to |
| make a selection. The blank choice will not be included if the model |
| field has ``blank=False`` and an explicit ``default`` value (the |
| ``default`` value will be initially selected instead). |
|
|
| Finally, note that you can override the form field used for a given model |
| field. See `Overriding the default fields`_ below. |
|
|
| A full example |
| -------------- |
|
|
| Consider this set of models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
| from django.forms import ModelForm |
|
|
| TITLE_CHOICES = [ |
| ("MR", "Mr."), |
| ("MRS", "Mrs."), |
| ("MS", "Ms."), |
| ] |
|
|
|
|
| class Author(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| title = models.CharField(max_length=3, choices=TITLE_CHOICES) |
| birth_date = models.DateField(blank=True, null=True) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.name |
|
|
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| authors = models.ManyToManyField(Author) |
|
|
|
|
| class AuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"] |
|
|
|
|
| class BookForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Book |
| fields = ["name", "authors"] |
|
|
|
|
| With these models, the ``ModelForm`` subclasses above would be roughly |
| equivalent to this (the only difference being the ``save()`` method, which |
| we'll discuss in a moment.):: |
|
|
| from django import forms |
|
|
|
|
| class AuthorForm(forms.Form): |
| name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) |
| title = forms.CharField( |
| max_length=3, |
| widget=forms.Select(choices=TITLE_CHOICES), |
| ) |
| birth_date = forms.DateField(required=False) |
|
|
|
|
| class BookForm(forms.Form): |
| name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) |
| authors = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(queryset=Author.objects.all()) |
|
|
| .. _validation-on-modelform: |
|
|
| Validation on a ``ModelForm`` |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| There are two main steps involved in validating a ``ModelForm``: |
|
|
| 1. :doc:`Validating the form </ref/forms/validation>` |
| 2. :ref:`Validating the model instance <validating-objects>` |
|
|
| Just like normal form validation, model form validation is triggered implicitly |
| when calling :meth:`~django.forms.Form.is_valid()` or accessing the |
| :attr:`~django.forms.Form.errors` attribute and explicitly when calling |
| ``full_clean()``, although you will typically not use the latter method in |
| practice. |
|
|
| ``Model`` validation (:meth:`Model.full_clean() |
| <django.db.models.Model.full_clean()>`) is triggered from within the form |
| validation step, right after the form's ``clean()`` method is called. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| The cleaning process modifies the model instance passed to the |
| ``ModelForm`` constructor in various ways. For instance, any date fields on |
| the model are converted into actual date objects. Failed validation may |
| leave the underlying model instance in an inconsistent state and therefore |
| it's not recommended to reuse it. |
|
|
| .. _overriding-modelform-clean-method: |
|
|
| Overriding the ``clean()`` method |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| You can override the ``clean()`` method on a model form to provide additional |
| validation in the same way you can on a normal form. |
|
|
| A model form instance attached to a model object will contain an ``instance`` |
| attribute that gives its methods access to that specific model instance. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| The ``ModelForm.clean()`` method sets a flag that makes the :ref:`model |
| validation <validating-objects>` step validate the uniqueness of model |
| fields that are marked as ``unique``, ``unique_together`` or |
| ``unique_for_date|month|year``. |
|
|
| If you would like to override the ``clean()`` method and maintain this |
| validation, you must call the parent class's ``clean()`` method. |
|
|
| Interaction with model validation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| As part of the validation process, ``ModelForm`` will call the ``clean()`` |
| method of each field on your model that has a corresponding field on your form. |
| If you have excluded any model fields, validation will not be run on those |
| fields. See the :doc:`form validation </ref/forms/validation>` documentation |
| for more on how field cleaning and validation work. |
|
|
| The model's ``clean()`` method will be called before any uniqueness checks are |
| made. See :ref:`Validating objects <validating-objects>` for more information |
| on the model's ``clean()`` hook. |
|
|
| .. _considerations-regarding-model-errormessages: |
|
|
| Considerations regarding model's ``error_messages`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Error messages defined at the |
| :attr:`form field <django.forms.Field.error_messages>` level or at the |
| :ref:`form Meta <modelforms-overriding-default-fields>` level always take |
| precedence over the error messages defined at the |
| :attr:`model field <django.db.models.Field.error_messages>` level. |
|
|
| Error messages defined on :attr:`model fields |
| <django.db.models.Field.error_messages>` are only used when the |
| ``ValidationError`` is raised during the :ref:`model validation |
| <validating-objects>` step and no corresponding error messages are defined at |
| the form level. |
|
|
| You can override the error messages from ``NON_FIELD_ERRORS`` raised by model |
| validation by adding the :data:`~django.core.exceptions.NON_FIELD_ERRORS` key |
| to the ``error_messages`` dictionary of the ``ModelForm``’s inner ``Meta`` class:: |
|
|
| from django.core.exceptions import NON_FIELD_ERRORS |
| from django.forms import ModelForm |
|
|
|
|
| class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| error_messages = { |
| NON_FIELD_ERRORS: { |
| "unique_together": "%(model_name)s's %(field_labels)s are not unique.", |
| } |
| } |
|
|
| .. _topics-modelform-save: |
|
|
| The ``save()`` method |
| --------------------- |
|
|
| Every ``ModelForm`` also has a ``save()`` method. This method creates and saves |
| a database object from the data bound to the form. A subclass of ``ModelForm`` |
| can accept an existing model instance as the keyword argument ``instance``; if |
| this is supplied, ``save()`` will update that instance. If it's not supplied, |
| ``save()`` will create a new instance of the specified model: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from myapp.models import Article |
| >>> from myapp.forms import ArticleForm |
|
|
| # Create a form instance from POST data. |
| >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST) |
|
|
| # Save a new Article object from the form's data. |
| >>> new_article = f.save() |
|
|
| # Create a form to edit an existing Article, but use |
| # POST data to populate the form. |
| >>> a = Article.objects.get(pk=1) |
| >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST, instance=a) |
| >>> f.save() |
|
|
| Note that if the form :ref:`hasn't been validated |
| <validation-on-modelform>`, calling ``save()`` will do so by checking |
| ``form.errors``. A ``ValueError`` will be raised if the data in the form |
| doesn't validate -- i.e., if ``form.errors`` evaluates to ``True``. |
|
|
| If an optional field doesn't appear in the form's data, the resulting model |
| instance uses the model field :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.default`, if |
| there is one, for that field. This behavior doesn't apply to fields that use |
| :class:`~django.forms.CheckboxInput`, |
| :class:`~django.forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple`, or |
| :class:`~django.forms.SelectMultiple` (or any custom widget whose |
| :meth:`~django.forms.Widget.value_omitted_from_data` method always returns |
| ``False``) since an unchecked checkbox and unselected ``<select multiple>`` |
| don't appear in the data of an HTML form submission. Use a custom form field or |
| widget if you're designing an API and want the default fallback behavior for a |
| field that uses one of these widgets. |
|
|
| This ``save()`` method accepts an optional ``commit`` keyword argument, which |
| accepts either ``True`` or ``False``. If you call ``save()`` with |
| ``commit=False``, then it will return an object that hasn't yet been saved to |
| the database. In this case, it's up to you to call ``save()`` on the resulting |
| model instance. This is useful if you want to do custom processing on the |
| object before saving it, or if you want to use one of the specialized |
| :ref:`model saving options <ref-models-force-insert>`. ``commit`` is ``True`` |
| by default. |
|
|
| Another side effect of using ``commit=False`` is seen when your model has |
| a many-to-many relation with another model. If your model has a many-to-many |
| relation and you specify ``commit=False`` when you save a form, Django cannot |
| immediately save the form data for the many-to-many relation. This is because |
| it isn't possible to save many-to-many data for an instance until the instance |
| exists in the database. |
|
|
| To work around this problem, every time you save a form using ``commit=False``, |
| Django adds a ``save_m2m()`` method to your ``ModelForm`` subclass. After |
| you've manually saved the instance produced by the form, you can invoke |
| ``save_m2m()`` to save the many-to-many form data. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # Create a form instance with POST data. |
| >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST) |
|
|
| # Create, but don't save the new author instance. |
| >>> new_author = f.save(commit=False) |
|
|
| # Modify the author in some way. |
| >>> new_author.some_field = "some_value" |
|
|
| # Save the new instance. |
| >>> new_author.save() |
|
|
| # Now, save the many-to-many data for the form. |
| >>> f.save_m2m() |
|
|
| Calling ``save_m2m()`` is only required if you use ``save(commit=False)``. |
| When you use a ``save()`` on a form, all data -- including many-to-many data -- |
| is saved without the need for any additional method calls. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # Create a form instance with POST data. |
| >>> a = Author() |
| >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST, instance=a) |
|
|
| # Create and save the new author instance. There's no need to do anything else. |
| >>> new_author = f.save() |
|
|
| Other than the ``save()`` and ``save_m2m()`` methods, a ``ModelForm`` works |
| exactly the same way as any other ``forms`` form. For example, the |
| ``is_valid()`` method is used to check for validity, the ``is_multipart()`` |
| method is used to determine whether a form requires multipart file upload (and |
| hence whether ``request.FILES`` must be passed to the form), etc. See |
| :ref:`binding-uploaded-files` for more information. |
|
|
| .. _modelforms-selecting-fields: |
|
|
| Selecting the fields to use |
| --------------------------- |
|
|
| It is strongly recommended that you explicitly set all fields that should be |
| edited in the form using the ``fields`` attribute. Failure to do so can easily |
| lead to security problems when a form unexpectedly allows a user to set certain |
| fields, especially when new fields are added to a model. Depending on how the |
| form is rendered, the problem may not even be visible on the web page. |
|
|
| The alternative approach would be to include all fields automatically, or |
| remove only some. This fundamental approach is known to be much less secure |
| and has led to serious exploits on major websites (e.g. `GitHub |
| <https://github.blog/2012-03-04-public-key-security-vulnerability-and-mitigation/>`_). |
|
|
| There are, however, two shortcuts available for cases where you can guarantee |
| these security concerns do not apply to you: |
|
|
| 1. Set the ``fields`` attribute to the special value ``'__all__'`` to indicate |
| that all fields in the model should be used. For example:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import ModelForm |
|
|
|
|
| class AuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| fields = "__all__" |
|
|
| 2. Set the ``exclude`` attribute of the ``ModelForm``’s inner ``Meta`` class to |
| a list of fields to be excluded from the form. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| class PartialAuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| exclude = ["title"] |
|
|
| Since the ``Author`` model has the 3 fields ``name``, ``title`` and |
| ``birth_date``, this will result in the fields ``name`` and ``birth_date`` |
| being present on the form. |
|
|
| If either of these are used, the order the fields appear in the form will be the |
| order the fields are defined in the model, with ``ManyToManyField`` instances |
| appearing last. |
|
|
| In addition, Django applies the following rule: if you set ``editable=False`` on |
| the model field, *any* form created from the model via ``ModelForm`` will not |
| include that field. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Any fields not included in a form by the above logic |
| will not be set by the form's ``save()`` method. Also, if you |
| manually add the excluded fields back to the form, they will not |
| be initialized from the model instance. |
|
|
| Django will prevent any attempt to save an incomplete model, so if |
| the model does not allow the missing fields to be empty, and does |
| not provide a default value for the missing fields, any attempt to |
| ``save()`` a ``ModelForm`` with missing fields will fail. To |
| avoid this failure, you must instantiate your model with initial |
| values for the missing, but required fields:: |
|
|
| author = Author(title="Mr") |
| form = PartialAuthorForm(request.POST, instance=author) |
| form.save() |
|
|
| Alternatively, you can use ``save(commit=False)`` and manually set |
| any extra required fields:: |
|
|
| form = PartialAuthorForm(request.POST) |
| author = form.save(commit=False) |
| author.title = "Mr" |
| author.save() |
|
|
| See the `section on saving forms`_ for more details on using |
| ``save(commit=False)``. |
|
|
| .. _section on saving forms: `The save() method`_ |
|
|
| .. _modelforms-overriding-default-fields: |
|
|
| Overriding the default fields |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| The default field types, as described in the `Field types`_ table above, are |
| sensible defaults. If you have a ``DateField`` in your model, chances are you'd |
| want that to be represented as a ``DateField`` in your form. But ``ModelForm`` |
| gives you the flexibility of changing the form field for a given model. |
|
|
| To specify a custom widget for a field, use the ``widgets`` attribute of the |
| inner ``Meta`` class. This should be a dictionary mapping field names to widget |
| classes or instances. |
|
|
| For example, if you want the ``CharField`` for the ``name`` attribute of |
| ``Author`` to be represented by a ``<textarea>`` instead of its default |
| ``<input type="text">``, you can override the field's widget:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import ModelForm, Textarea |
| from myapp.models import Author |
|
|
|
|
| class AuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"] |
| widgets = { |
| "name": Textarea(attrs={"cols": 80, "rows": 20}), |
| } |
|
|
| The ``widgets`` dictionary accepts either widget instances (e.g., |
| ``Textarea(...)``) or classes (e.g., ``Textarea``). Note that the ``widgets`` |
| dictionary is ignored for a model field with a non-empty ``choices`` attribute. |
| In this case, you must override the form field to use a different widget. |
|
|
| Similarly, you can specify the ``labels``, ``help_texts`` and ``error_messages`` |
| attributes of the inner ``Meta`` class if you want to further customize a field. |
|
|
| For example if you wanted to customize the wording of all user facing strings for |
| the ``name`` field:: |
|
|
| from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _ |
|
|
|
|
| class AuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"] |
| labels = { |
| "name": _("Writer"), |
| } |
| help_texts = { |
| "name": _("Some useful help text."), |
| } |
| error_messages = { |
| "name": { |
| "max_length": _("This writer's name is too long."), |
| }, |
| } |
|
|
| You can also specify ``field_classes`` or ``formfield_callback`` to customize |
| the type of fields instantiated by the form. |
|
|
| For example, if you wanted to use ``MySlugFormField`` for the ``slug`` |
| field, you could do the following:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import ModelForm |
| from myapp.models import Article |
|
|
|
|
| class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Article |
| fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"] |
| field_classes = { |
| "slug": MySlugFormField, |
| } |
|
|
| or:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import ModelForm |
| from myapp.models import Article |
|
|
|
|
| def formfield_for_dbfield(db_field, **kwargs): |
| if db_field.name == "slug": |
| return MySlugFormField() |
| return db_field.formfield(**kwargs) |
|
|
|
|
| class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Article |
| fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"] |
| formfield_callback = formfield_for_dbfield |
|
|
| Finally, if you want complete control over of a field -- including its type, |
| validators, required, etc. -- you can do this by declaratively specifying |
| fields like you would in a regular ``Form``. |
|
|
| If you want to specify a field's validators, you can do so by defining |
| the field declaratively and setting its ``validators`` parameter:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import CharField, ModelForm |
| from myapp.models import Article |
|
|
|
|
| class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| slug = CharField(validators=[validate_slug]) |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| model = Article |
| fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"] |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When you explicitly instantiate a form field like this, it is important to |
| understand how ``ModelForm`` and regular ``Form`` are related. |
|
|
| ``ModelForm`` is a regular ``Form`` which can automatically generate |
| certain fields. The fields that are automatically generated depend on |
| the content of the ``Meta`` class and on which fields have already been |
| defined declaratively. Basically, ``ModelForm`` will **only** generate fields |
| that are **missing** from the form, or in other words, fields that weren't |
| defined declaratively. |
|
|
| Fields defined declaratively are left as-is, therefore any customizations |
| made to ``Meta`` attributes such as ``widgets``, ``labels``, ``help_texts``, |
| or ``error_messages`` are ignored; these only apply to fields that are |
| generated automatically. |
|
|
| Similarly, fields defined declaratively do not draw their attributes like |
| ``max_length`` or ``required`` from the corresponding model. If you want to |
| maintain the behavior specified in the model, you must set the relevant |
| arguments explicitly when declaring the form field. |
|
|
| For example, if the ``Article`` model looks like this:: |
|
|
| class Article(models.Model): |
| headline = models.CharField( |
| max_length=200, |
| null=True, |
| blank=True, |
| help_text="Use puns liberally", |
| ) |
| content = models.TextField() |
|
|
| and you want to do some custom validation for ``headline``, while keeping |
| the ``blank`` and ``help_text`` values as specified, you might define |
| ``ArticleForm`` like this:: |
|
|
| class ArticleForm(ModelForm): |
| headline = MyFormField( |
| max_length=200, |
| required=False, |
| help_text="Use puns liberally", |
| ) |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| model = Article |
| fields = ["headline", "content"] |
|
|
| You must ensure that the type of the form field can be used to set the |
| contents of the corresponding model field. When they are not compatible, |
| you will get a ``ValueError`` as no implicit conversion takes place. |
|
|
| See the :doc:`form field documentation </ref/forms/fields>` for more information |
| on fields and their arguments. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 4.2 |
|
|
| The ``Meta.formfield_callback`` attribute was added. |
|
|
| Enabling localization of fields |
| ------------------------------- |
|
|
| By default, the fields in a ``ModelForm`` will not localize their data. To |
| enable localization for fields, you can use the ``localized_fields`` |
| attribute on the ``Meta`` class. |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import ModelForm |
| >>> from myapp.models import Author |
| >>> class AuthorForm(ModelForm): |
| ... class Meta: |
| ... model = Author |
| ... localized_fields = ['birth_date'] |
|
|
| If ``localized_fields`` is set to the special value ``'__all__'``, all fields |
| will be localized. |
|
|
| Form inheritance |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| As with basic forms, you can extend and reuse ``ModelForms`` by inheriting |
| them. This is useful if you need to declare extra fields or extra methods on a |
| parent class for use in a number of forms derived from models. For example, |
| using the previous ``ArticleForm`` class: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> class EnhancedArticleForm(ArticleForm): |
| ... def clean_pub_date(self): |
| ... ... |
| ... |
|
|
| This creates a form that behaves identically to ``ArticleForm``, except there's |
| some extra validation and cleaning for the ``pub_date`` field. |
|
|
| You can also subclass the parent's ``Meta`` inner class if you want to change |
| the ``Meta.fields`` or ``Meta.exclude`` lists: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> class RestrictedArticleForm(EnhancedArticleForm): |
| ... class Meta(ArticleForm.Meta): |
| ... exclude = ["body"] |
| ... |
|
|
| This adds the extra method from the ``EnhancedArticleForm`` and modifies |
| the original ``ArticleForm.Meta`` to remove one field. |
|
|
| There are a couple of things to note, however. |
|
|
| * Normal Python name resolution rules apply. If you have multiple base |
| classes that declare a ``Meta`` inner class, only the first one will be |
| used. This means the child's ``Meta``, if it exists, otherwise the |
| ``Meta`` of the first parent, etc. |
|
|
| * It's possible to inherit from both ``Form`` and ``ModelForm`` simultaneously, |
| however, you must ensure that ``ModelForm`` appears first in the MRO. This is |
| because these classes rely on different metaclasses and a class can only have |
| one metaclass. |
|
|
| * It's possible to declaratively remove a ``Field`` inherited from a parent class by |
| setting the name to be ``None`` on the subclass. |
|
|
| You can only use this technique to opt out from a field defined declaratively |
| by a parent class; it won't prevent the ``ModelForm`` metaclass from generating |
| a default field. To opt-out from default fields, see |
| :ref:`modelforms-selecting-fields`. |
|
|
| Providing initial values |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| As with regular forms, it's possible to specify initial data for forms by |
| specifying an ``initial`` parameter when instantiating the form. Initial |
| values provided this way will override both initial values from the form field |
| and values from an attached model instance. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> article = Article.objects.get(pk=1) |
| >>> article.headline |
| 'My headline' |
| >>> form = ArticleForm(initial={"headline": "Initial headline"}, instance=article) |
| >>> form["headline"].value() |
| 'Initial headline' |
|
|
| .. _modelforms-factory: |
|
|
| ModelForm factory function |
| -------------------------- |
|
|
| You can create forms from a given model using the standalone function |
| :func:`~django.forms.models.modelform_factory`, instead of using a class |
| definition. This may be more convenient if you do not have many customizations |
| to make: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import modelform_factory |
| >>> from myapp.models import Book |
| >>> BookForm = modelform_factory(Book, fields=["author", "title"]) |
|
|
| This can also be used to make modifications to existing forms, for example by |
| specifying the widgets to be used for a given field: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import Textarea |
| >>> Form = modelform_factory(Book, form=BookForm, widgets={"title": Textarea()}) |
|
|
| The fields to include can be specified using the ``fields`` and ``exclude`` |
| keyword arguments, or the corresponding attributes on the ``ModelForm`` inner |
| ``Meta`` class. Please see the ``ModelForm`` :ref:`modelforms-selecting-fields` |
| documentation. |
|
|
| ... or enable localization for specific fields: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Form = modelform_factory(Author, form=AuthorForm, localized_fields=["birth_date"]) |
|
|
| .. _model-formsets: |
|
|
| Model formsets |
| ============== |
|
|
| .. class:: models.BaseModelFormSet |
|
|
| Like :doc:`regular formsets </topics/forms/formsets>`, Django provides a couple |
| of enhanced formset classes to make working with Django models more |
| convenient. Let's reuse the ``Author`` model from above: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import modelformset_factory |
| >>> from myapp.models import Author |
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"]) |
|
|
| Using ``fields`` restricts the formset to use only the given fields. |
| Alternatively, you can take an "opt-out" approach, specifying which fields to |
| exclude: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, exclude=["birth_date"]) |
|
|
| This will create a formset that is capable of working with the data associated |
| with the ``Author`` model. It works just like a regular formset: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> formset = AuthorFormSet() |
| >>> print(formset) |
| <input type="hidden" name="form-TOTAL_FORMS" value="1" id="id_form-TOTAL_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-INITIAL_FORMS" value="0" id="id_form-INITIAL_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-MIN_NUM_FORMS" value="0" id="id_form-MIN_NUM_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-MAX_NUM_FORMS" value="1000" id="id_form-MAX_NUM_FORMS"> |
| <div><label for="id_form-0-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-0-name" type="text" name="form-0-name" maxlength="100"></div> |
| <div><label for="id_form-0-title">Title:</label><select name="form-0-title" id="id_form-0-title"> |
| <option value="" selected>---------</option> |
| <option value="MR">Mr.</option> |
| <option value="MRS">Mrs.</option> |
| <option value="MS">Ms.</option> |
| </select><input type="hidden" name="form-0-id" id="id_form-0-id"></div> |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` uses |
| :func:`~django.forms.formsets.formset_factory` to generate formsets. This |
| means that a model formset is an extension of a basic formset that knows |
| how to interact with a particular model. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When using :ref:`multi-table inheritance <multi-table-inheritance>`, forms |
| generated by a formset factory will contain a parent link field (by default |
| ``<parent_model_name>_ptr``) instead of an ``id`` field. |
|
|
| Changing the queryset |
| --------------------- |
|
|
| By default, when you create a formset from a model, the formset will use a |
| queryset that includes all objects in the model (e.g., |
| ``Author.objects.all()``). You can override this behavior by using the |
| ``queryset`` argument: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O")) |
|
|
| Alternatively, you can create a subclass that sets ``self.queryset`` in |
| ``__init__``:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet |
| from myapp.models import Author |
|
|
|
|
| class BaseAuthorFormSet(BaseModelFormSet): |
| def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| super().__init__(*args, **kwargs) |
| self.queryset = Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O") |
|
|
| Then, pass your ``BaseAuthorFormSet`` class to the factory function: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory( |
| ... Author, fields=["name", "title"], formset=BaseAuthorFormSet |
| ... ) |
|
|
| If you want to return a formset that doesn't include *any* preexisting |
| instances of the model, you can specify an empty QuerySet: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.none()) |
|
|
| Changing the form |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| By default, when you use ``modelformset_factory``, a model form will |
| be created using :func:`~django.forms.models.modelform_factory`. |
| Often, it can be useful to specify a custom model form. For example, |
| you can create a custom model form that has custom validation:: |
|
|
| class AuthorForm(forms.ModelForm): |
| class Meta: |
| model = Author |
| fields = ["name", "title"] |
|
|
| def clean_name(self): |
| # custom validation for the name field |
| ... |
|
|
| Then, pass your model form to the factory function:: |
|
|
| AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, form=AuthorForm) |
|
|
| It is not always necessary to define a custom model form. The |
| ``modelformset_factory`` function has several arguments which are |
| passed through to ``modelform_factory``, which are described below. |
|
|
| Specifying widgets to use in the form with ``widgets`` |
| ------------------------------------------------------ |
|
|
| Using the ``widgets`` parameter, you can specify a dictionary of values to |
| customize the ``ModelForm``’s widget class for a particular field. This |
| works the same way as the ``widgets`` dictionary on the inner ``Meta`` |
| class of a ``ModelForm`` works: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory( |
| ... Author, |
| ... fields=["name", "title"], |
| ... widgets={"name": Textarea(attrs={"cols": 80, "rows": 20})}, |
| ... ) |
|
|
| Enabling localization for fields with ``localized_fields`` |
| ---------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Using the ``localized_fields`` parameter, you can enable localization for |
| fields in the form. |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory( |
| ... Author, fields=['name', 'title', 'birth_date'], |
| ... localized_fields=['birth_date']) |
|
|
| If ``localized_fields`` is set to the special value ``'__all__'``, all fields |
| will be localized. |
|
|
| Providing initial values |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| As with regular formsets, it's possible to :ref:`specify initial data |
| <formsets-initial-data>` for forms in the formset by specifying an ``initial`` |
| parameter when instantiating the model formset class returned by |
| :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory`. However, with model |
| formsets, the initial values only apply to extra forms, those that aren't |
| attached to an existing model instance. If the length of ``initial`` exceeds |
| the number of extra forms, the excess initial data is ignored. If the extra |
| forms with initial data aren't changed by the user, they won't be validated or |
| saved. |
|
|
| .. _saving-objects-in-the-formset: |
|
|
| Saving objects in the formset |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| As with a ``ModelForm``, you can save the data as a model object. This is done |
| with the formset's ``save()`` method: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # Create a formset instance with POST data. |
| >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST) |
|
|
| # Assuming all is valid, save the data. |
| >>> instances = formset.save() |
|
|
| The ``save()`` method returns the instances that have been saved to the |
| database. If a given instance's data didn't change in the bound data, the |
| instance won't be saved to the database and won't be included in the return |
| value (``instances``, in the above example). |
|
|
| When fields are missing from the form (for example because they have been |
| excluded), these fields will not be set by the ``save()`` method. You can find |
| more information about this restriction, which also holds for regular |
| ``ModelForms``, in `Selecting the fields to use`_. |
|
|
| Pass ``commit=False`` to return the unsaved model instances: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # don't save to the database |
| >>> instances = formset.save(commit=False) |
| >>> for instance in instances: |
| ... # do something with instance |
| ... instance.save() |
| ... |
|
|
| This gives you the ability to attach data to the instances before saving them |
| to the database. If your formset contains a ``ManyToManyField``, you'll also |
| need to call ``formset.save_m2m()`` to ensure the many-to-many relationships |
| are saved properly. |
|
|
| After calling ``save()``, your model formset will have three new attributes |
| containing the formset's changes: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.changed_objects |
| .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.deleted_objects |
| .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.new_objects |
|
|
| .. _model-formsets-max-num: |
|
|
| Limiting the number of editable objects |
| --------------------------------------- |
|
|
| As with regular formsets, you can use the ``max_num`` and ``extra`` parameters |
| to :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` to limit the number of |
| extra forms displayed. |
|
|
| ``max_num`` does not prevent existing objects from being displayed: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Author.objects.order_by("name") |
| <QuerySet [<Author: Charles Baudelaire>, <Author: Paul Verlaine>, <Author: Walt Whitman>]> |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name"], max_num=1) |
| >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by("name")) |
| >>> [x.name for x in formset.get_queryset()] |
| ['Charles Baudelaire', 'Paul Verlaine', 'Walt Whitman'] |
|
|
| Also, ``extra=0`` doesn't prevent creation of new model instances as you can |
| :ref:`add additional forms with JavaScript <understanding-the-managementform>` |
| or send additional POST data. See :ref:`model-formsets-edit-only` on how to do |
| this. |
|
|
| If the value of ``max_num`` is greater than the number of existing related |
| objects, up to ``extra`` additional blank forms will be added to the formset, |
| so long as the total number of forms does not exceed ``max_num``: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name"], max_num=4, extra=2) |
| >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by("name")) |
| >>> for form in formset: |
| ... print(form) |
| ... |
| <div><label for="id_form-0-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-0-name" type="text" name="form-0-name" value="Charles Baudelaire" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-0-id" value="1" id="id_form-0-id"></div> |
| <div><label for="id_form-1-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-1-name" type="text" name="form-1-name" value="Paul Verlaine" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-1-id" value="3" id="id_form-1-id"></div> |
| <div><label for="id_form-2-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-2-name" type="text" name="form-2-name" value="Walt Whitman" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-2-id" value="2" id="id_form-2-id"></div> |
| <div><label for="id_form-3-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-3-name" type="text" name="form-3-name" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-3-id" id="id_form-3-id"></div> |
|
|
| A ``max_num`` value of ``None`` (the default) puts a high limit on the number |
| of forms displayed (1000). In practice this is equivalent to no limit. |
|
|
| .. _model-formsets-edit-only: |
|
|
| Preventing new objects creation |
| ------------------------------- |
|
|
| Using the ``edit_only`` parameter, you can prevent creation of any new |
| objects: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory( |
| ... Author, |
| ... fields=["name", "title"], |
| ... edit_only=True, |
| ... ) |
|
|
| Here, the formset will only edit existing ``Author`` instances. No other |
| objects will be created or edited. |
|
|
| Using a model formset in a view |
| ------------------------------- |
|
|
| Model formsets are very similar to formsets. Let's say we want to present a |
| formset to edit ``Author`` model instances:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import modelformset_factory |
| from django.shortcuts import render |
| from myapp.models import Author |
|
|
|
|
| def manage_authors(request): |
| AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"]) |
| if request.method == "POST": |
| formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES) |
| if formset.is_valid(): |
| formset.save() |
| # do something. |
| else: |
| formset = AuthorFormSet() |
| return render(request, "manage_authors.html", {"formset": formset}) |
|
|
| As you can see, the view logic of a model formset isn't drastically different |
| than that of a "normal" formset. The only difference is that we call |
| ``formset.save()`` to save the data into the database. (This was described |
| above, in :ref:`saving-objects-in-the-formset`.) |
|
|
| .. _model-formsets-overriding-clean: |
|
|
| Overriding ``clean()`` on a ``ModelFormSet`` |
| -------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Just like with ``ModelForms``, by default the ``clean()`` method of a |
| ``ModelFormSet`` will validate that none of the items in the formset violate |
| the unique constraints on your model (either ``unique``, ``unique_together`` or |
| ``unique_for_date|month|year``). If you want to override the ``clean()`` method |
| on a ``ModelFormSet`` and maintain this validation, you must call the parent |
| class's ``clean`` method:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModelFormSet(BaseModelFormSet): |
| def clean(self): |
| super().clean() |
| # example custom validation across forms in the formset |
| for form in self.forms: |
| # your custom formset validation |
| ... |
|
|
| Also note that by the time you reach this step, individual model instances |
| have already been created for each ``Form``. Modifying a value in |
| ``form.cleaned_data`` is not sufficient to affect the saved value. If you wish |
| to modify a value in ``ModelFormSet.clean()`` you must modify |
| ``form.instance``:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModelFormSet(BaseModelFormSet): |
| def clean(self): |
| super().clean() |
|
|
| for form in self.forms: |
| name = form.cleaned_data["name"].upper() |
| form.cleaned_data["name"] = name |
| # update the instance value. |
| form.instance.name = name |
|
|
| Using a custom queryset |
| ----------------------- |
|
|
| As stated earlier, you can override the default queryset used by the model |
| formset:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import modelformset_factory |
| from django.shortcuts import render |
| from myapp.models import Author |
|
|
|
|
| def manage_authors(request): |
| AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"]) |
| queryset = Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O") |
| if request.method == "POST": |
| formset = AuthorFormSet( |
| request.POST, |
| request.FILES, |
| queryset=queryset, |
| ) |
| if formset.is_valid(): |
| formset.save() |
| # Do something. |
| else: |
| formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=queryset) |
| return render(request, "manage_authors.html", {"formset": formset}) |
|
|
| Note that we pass the ``queryset`` argument in both the ``POST`` and ``GET`` |
| cases in this example. |
|
|
| Using the formset in the template |
| --------------------------------- |
|
|
| There are three ways to render a formset in a Django template. |
|
|
| First, you can let the formset do most of the work: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form method="post"> |
| {{ formset }} |
| </form> |
|
|
| Second, you can manually render the formset, but let the form deal with |
| itself: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form method="post"> |
| {{ formset.management_form }} |
| {% for form in formset %} |
| {{ form }} |
| {% endfor %} |
| </form> |
|
|
| When you manually render the forms yourself, be sure to render the management |
| form as shown above. See the :ref:`management form documentation |
| <understanding-the-managementform>`. |
|
|
| Third, you can manually render each field: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form method="post"> |
| {{ formset.management_form }} |
| {% for form in formset %} |
| {% for field in form %} |
| {{ field.label_tag }} {{ field }} |
| {% endfor %} |
| {% endfor %} |
| </form> |
|
|
| If you opt to use this third method and you don't iterate over the fields with |
| a ``{% for %}`` loop, you'll need to render the primary key field. For example, |
| if you were rendering the ``name`` and ``age`` fields of a model: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form method="post"> |
| {{ formset.management_form }} |
| {% for form in formset %} |
| {{ form.id }} |
| <ul> |
| <li>{{ form.name }}</li> |
| <li>{{ form.age }}</li> |
| </ul> |
| {% endfor %} |
| </form> |
|
|
| Notice how we need to explicitly render ``{{ form.id }}``. This ensures that |
| the model formset, in the ``POST`` case, will work correctly. (This example |
| assumes a primary key named ``id``. If you've explicitly defined your own |
| primary key that isn't called ``id``, make sure it gets rendered.) |
|
|
| .. _inline-formsets: |
|
|
| Inline formsets |
| =============== |
|
|
| .. class:: models.BaseInlineFormSet |
|
|
| Inline formsets is a small abstraction layer on top of model formsets. These |
| simplify the case of working with related objects via a foreign key. Suppose |
| you have these two models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Author(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
|
|
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| author = models.ForeignKey(Author, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
| title = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
|
|
| If you want to create a formset that allows you to edit books belonging to |
| a particular author, you could do this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import inlineformset_factory |
| >>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book, fields=["title"]) |
| >>> author = Author.objects.get(name="Mike Royko") |
| >>> formset = BookFormSet(instance=author) |
|
|
| ``BookFormSet``'s :ref:`prefix <formset-prefix>` is ``'book_set'`` |
| (``<model name>_set`` ). If ``Book``'s ``ForeignKey`` to ``Author`` has a |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey.related_name`, that's used instead. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| :func:`~django.forms.models.inlineformset_factory` uses |
| :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` and marks |
| ``can_delete=True``. |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| :ref:`Manually rendered can_delete and can_order <manually-rendered-can-delete-and-can-order>`. |
|
|
| Overriding methods on an ``InlineFormSet`` |
| ------------------------------------------ |
|
|
| When overriding methods on ``InlineFormSet``, you should subclass |
| :class:`~models.BaseInlineFormSet` rather than |
| :class:`~models.BaseModelFormSet`. |
|
|
| For example, if you want to override ``clean()``:: |
|
|
| from django.forms import BaseInlineFormSet |
|
|
|
|
| class CustomInlineFormSet(BaseInlineFormSet): |
| def clean(self): |
| super().clean() |
| # example custom validation across forms in the formset |
| for form in self.forms: |
| # your custom formset validation |
| ... |
|
|
| See also :ref:`model-formsets-overriding-clean`. |
|
|
| Then when you create your inline formset, pass in the optional argument |
| ``formset``: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.forms import inlineformset_factory |
| >>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory( |
| ... Author, Book, fields=["title"], formset=CustomInlineFormSet |
| ... ) |
| >>> author = Author.objects.get(name="Mike Royko") |
| >>> formset = BookFormSet(instance=author) |
|
|
| More than one foreign key to the same model |
| ------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| If your model contains more than one foreign key to the same model, you'll |
| need to resolve the ambiguity manually using ``fk_name``. For example, consider |
| the following model:: |
|
|
| class Friendship(models.Model): |
| from_friend = models.ForeignKey( |
| Friend, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="from_friends", |
| ) |
| to_friend = models.ForeignKey( |
| Friend, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="friends", |
| ) |
| length_in_months = models.IntegerField() |
|
|
| To resolve this, you can use ``fk_name`` to |
| :func:`~django.forms.models.inlineformset_factory`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> FriendshipFormSet = inlineformset_factory( |
| ... Friend, Friendship, fk_name="from_friend", fields=["to_friend", "length_in_months"] |
| ... ) |
|
|
| Using an inline formset in a view |
| --------------------------------- |
|
|
| You may want to provide a view that allows a user to edit the related objects |
| of a model. Here's how you can do that:: |
|
|
| def manage_books(request, author_id): |
| author = Author.objects.get(pk=author_id) |
| BookInlineFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book, fields=["title"]) |
| if request.method == "POST": |
| formset = BookInlineFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, instance=author) |
| if formset.is_valid(): |
| formset.save() |
| # Do something. Should generally end with a redirect. For example: |
| return HttpResponseRedirect(author.get_absolute_url()) |
| else: |
| formset = BookInlineFormSet(instance=author) |
| return render(request, "manage_books.html", {"formset": formset}) |
|
|
| Notice how we pass ``instance`` in both the ``POST`` and ``GET`` cases. |
|
|
| Specifying widgets to use in the inline form |
| -------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
|
| ``inlineformset_factory`` uses ``modelformset_factory`` and passes most |
| of its arguments to ``modelformset_factory``. This means you can use |
| the ``widgets`` parameter in much the same way as passing it to |
| ``modelformset_factory``. See `Specifying widgets to use in the form with |
| widgets`_ above. |
|
|