| ================== |
| Working with forms |
| ================== |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.forms |
|
|
| .. admonition:: About this document |
|
|
| This document provides an introduction to the basics of web forms and how |
| they are handled in Django. For a more detailed look at specific areas of |
| the forms API, see :doc:`/ref/forms/api`, :doc:`/ref/forms/fields`, and |
| :doc:`/ref/forms/validation`. |
|
|
| Unless you're planning to build websites and applications that do nothing but |
| publish content, and don't accept input from your visitors, you're going to |
| need to understand and use forms. |
|
|
| Django provides a range of tools and libraries to help you build forms to |
| accept input from site visitors, and then process and respond to the input. |
|
|
| HTML forms |
| ========== |
|
|
| In HTML, a form is a collection of elements inside ``<form>...</form>`` that |
| allow a visitor to do things like enter text, select options, manipulate |
| objects or controls, and so on, and then send that information back to the |
| server. |
|
|
| Some of these form interface elements - text input or checkboxes - are built |
| into HTML itself. Others are much more complex; an interface that pops up a |
| date picker or allows you to move a slider or manipulate controls will |
| typically use JavaScript and CSS as well as HTML form ``<input>`` elements to |
| achieve these effects. |
|
|
| As well as its ``<input>`` elements, a form must specify two things: |
|
|
| * *where*: the URL to which the data corresponding to the user's input should |
| be returned |
|
|
| * *how*: the HTTP method the data should be returned by |
|
|
| As an example, the login form for the Django admin contains several |
| ``<input>`` elements: one of ``type="text"`` for the username, one of |
| ``type="password"`` for the password, and one of ``type="submit"`` for the |
| "Log in" button. It also contains some hidden text fields that the user |
| doesn't see, which Django uses to determine what to do next. |
|
|
| It also tells the browser that the form data should be sent to the URL |
| specified in the ``<form>``’s ``action`` attribute - ``/admin/`` - and that it |
| should be sent using the HTTP mechanism specified by the ``method`` attribute - |
| ``post``. |
|
|
| When the ``<input type="submit" value="Log in">`` element is triggered, the |
| data is returned to ``/admin/``. |
|
|
| ``GET`` and ``POST`` |
| -------------------- |
|
|
| ``GET`` and ``POST`` are the only HTTP methods to use when dealing with forms. |
|
|
| Django's login form is returned using the ``POST`` method, in which the browser |
| bundles up the form data, encodes it for transmission, sends it to the server, |
| and then receives back its response. |
|
|
| ``GET``, by contrast, bundles the submitted data into a string, and uses this |
| to compose a URL. The URL contains the address where the data must be sent, as |
| well as the data keys and values. You can see this in action if you do a search |
| in the Django documentation, which will produce a URL of the form |
| ``https://docs.djangoproject.com/search/?q=forms&release=1``. |
|
|
| ``GET`` and ``POST`` are typically used for different purposes. |
|
|
| Any request that could be used to change the state of the system - for example, |
| a request that makes changes in the database - should use ``POST``. ``GET`` |
| should be used only for requests that do not affect the state of the system. |
|
|
| ``GET`` would also be unsuitable for a password form, because the password |
| would appear in the URL, and thus, also in browser history and server logs, |
| all in plain text. Neither would it be suitable for large quantities of data, |
| or for binary data, such as an image. A web application that uses ``GET`` |
| requests for admin forms is a security risk: it can be easy for an attacker to |
| mimic a form's request to gain access to sensitive parts of the system. |
| ``POST``, coupled with other protections like Django's :doc:`CSRF protection |
| </ref/csrf/>` offers more control over access. |
|
|
| On the other hand, ``GET`` is suitable for things like a web search form, |
| because the URLs that represent a ``GET`` request can easily be bookmarked, |
| shared, or resubmitted. |
|
|
| Django's role in forms |
| ====================== |
|
|
| Handling forms is a complex business. Consider Django's admin, where numerous |
| items of data of several different types may need to be prepared for display in |
| a form, rendered as HTML, edited using a convenient interface, returned to the |
| server, validated and cleaned up, and then saved or passed on for further |
| processing. |
|
|
| Django's form functionality can simplify and automate vast portions of this |
| work, and can also do it more securely than most programmers would be able to |
| do in code they wrote themselves. |
|
|
| Django handles three distinct parts of the work involved in forms: |
|
|
| * preparing and restructuring data to make it ready for rendering |
| * creating HTML forms for the data |
| * receiving and processing submitted forms and data from the client |
|
|
| It is *possible* to write code that does all of this manually, but Django can |
| take care of it all for you. |
|
|
| Forms in Django |
| =============== |
|
|
| We've described HTML forms briefly, but an HTML ``<form>`` is just one part of |
| the machinery required. |
|
|
| In the context of a web application, 'form' might refer to that HTML |
| ``<form>``, or to the Django :class:`Form` that produces it, or to the |
| structured data returned when it is submitted, or to the end-to-end working |
| collection of these parts. |
|
|
| The Django :class:`Form` class |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| At the heart of this system of components is Django's :class:`Form` class. In |
| much the same way that a Django model describes the logical structure of an |
| object, its behavior, and the way its parts are represented to us, a |
| :class:`Form` class describes a form and determines how it works and appears. |
|
|
| In a similar way that a model class's fields map to database fields, a form |
| class's fields map to HTML form ``<input>`` elements. (A :class:`ModelForm` |
| maps a model class's fields to HTML form ``<input>`` elements via a |
| :class:`Form`; this is what the Django admin is based upon.) |
|
|
| A form's fields are themselves classes; they manage form data and perform |
| validation when a form is submitted. A :class:`DateField` and a |
| :class:`FileField` handle very different kinds of data and have to do |
| different things with it. |
|
|
| A form field is represented to a user in the browser as an HTML "widget" - a |
| piece of user interface machinery. Each field type has an appropriate default |
| :doc:`Widget class </ref/forms/widgets/>`, but these can be overridden as |
| required. |
|
|
| Instantiating, processing, and rendering forms |
| ---------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| When rendering an object in Django, we generally: |
|
|
| #. get hold of it in the view (fetch it from the database, for example) |
| #. pass it to the template context |
| #. expand it to HTML markup using template variables |
|
|
| Rendering a form in a template involves nearly the same work as rendering any |
| other kind of object, but there are some key differences. |
|
|
| In the case of a model instance that contained no data, it would rarely if ever |
| be useful to do anything with it in a template. On the other hand, it makes |
| perfect sense to render an unpopulated form - that's what we do when we want |
| the user to populate it. |
|
|
| So when we handle a model instance in a view, we typically retrieve it from the |
| database. When we're dealing with a form we typically instantiate it in the |
| view. |
|
|
| When we instantiate a form, we can opt to leave it empty or prepopulate it, for |
| example with: |
|
|
| * data from a saved model instance (as in the case of admin forms for editing) |
| * data that we have collated from other sources |
| * data received from a previous HTML form submission |
|
|
| The last of these cases is the most interesting, because it's what makes it |
| possible for users not just to read a website, but to send information back |
| to it too. |
|
|
| Building a form |
| =============== |
|
|
| The work that needs to be done |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| Suppose you want to create a simple form on your website, in order to obtain |
| the user's name. You'd need something like this in your template: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form action="/your-name/" method="post"> |
| <label for="your_name">Your name: </label> |
| <input id="your_name" type="text" name="your_name" value="{{ current_name }}"> |
| <input type="submit" value="OK"> |
| </form> |
|
|
| This tells the browser to return the form data to the URL ``/your-name/``, using |
| the ``POST`` method. It will display a text field, labeled "Your name:", and a |
| button marked "OK". If the template context contains a ``current_name`` |
| variable, that will be used to pre-fill the ``your_name`` field. |
|
|
| You'll need a view that renders the template containing the HTML form, and |
| that can supply the ``current_name`` field as appropriate. |
|
|
| When the form is submitted, the ``POST`` request which is sent to the server |
| will contain the form data. |
|
|
| Now you'll also need a view corresponding to that ``/your-name/`` URL which will |
| find the appropriate key/value pairs in the request, and then process them. |
|
|
| This is a very simple form. In practice, a form might contain dozens or |
| hundreds of fields, many of which might need to be prepopulated, and we might |
| expect the user to work through the edit-submit cycle several times before |
| concluding the operation. |
|
|
| We might require some validation to occur in the browser, even before the form |
| is submitted; we might want to use much more complex fields, that allow the |
| user to do things like pick dates from a calendar and so on. |
|
|
| At this point it's much easier to get Django to do most of this work for us. |
|
|
| Building a form in Django |
| ------------------------- |
|
|
| The :class:`Form` class |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| We already know what we want our HTML form to look like. Our starting point for |
| it in Django is this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``forms.py`` |
|
|
| from django import forms |
|
|
|
|
| class NameForm(forms.Form): |
| your_name = forms.CharField(label="Your name", max_length=100) |
|
|
| This defines a :class:`Form` class with a single field (``your_name``). We've |
| applied a human-friendly label to the field, which will appear in the |
| ``<label>`` when it's rendered (although in this case, the :attr:`~Field.label` |
| we specified is actually the same one that would be generated automatically if |
| we had omitted it). |
|
|
| The field's maximum allowable length is defined by |
| :attr:`~CharField.max_length`. This does two things. It puts a |
| ``maxlength="100"`` on the HTML ``<input>`` (so the browser should prevent the |
| user from entering more than that number of characters in the first place). It |
| also means that when Django receives the form back from the browser, it will |
| validate the length of the data. |
|
|
| A :class:`Form` instance has an :meth:`~Form.is_valid()` method, which runs |
| validation routines for all its fields. When this method is called, if all |
| fields contain valid data, it will: |
|
|
| * return ``True`` |
| * place the form's data in its :attr:`~Form.cleaned_data` attribute. |
|
|
| The whole form, when rendered for the first time, will look like: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <label for="your_name">Your name: </label> |
| <input id="your_name" type="text" name="your_name" maxlength="100" required> |
|
|
| Note that it **does not** include the ``<form>`` tags, or a submit button. |
| We'll have to provide those ourselves in the template. |
|
|
| .. _using-a-form-in-a-view: |
|
|
| The view |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Form data sent back to a Django website is processed by a view, generally the |
| same view which published the form. This allows us to reuse some of the same |
| logic. |
|
|
| To handle the form we need to instantiate it in the view for the URL where we |
| want it to be published: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``views.py`` |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect |
| from django.shortcuts import render |
|
|
| from .forms import NameForm |
|
|
|
|
| def get_name(request): |
| # if this is a POST request we need to process the form data |
| if request.method == "POST": |
| # create a form instance and populate it with data from the request: |
| form = NameForm(request.POST) |
| # check whether it's valid: |
| if form.is_valid(): |
| # process the data in form.cleaned_data as required |
| # ... |
| # redirect to a new URL: |
| return HttpResponseRedirect("/thanks/") |
|
|
| # if a GET (or any other method) we'll create a blank form |
| else: |
| form = NameForm() |
|
|
| return render(request, "name.html", {"form": form}) |
|
|
| If we arrive at this view with a ``GET`` request, it will create an empty form |
| instance and place it in the template context to be rendered. This is what we |
| can expect to happen the first time we visit the URL. |
|
|
| If the form is submitted using a ``POST`` request, the view will once again |
| create a form instance and populate it with data from the request: ``form = |
| NameForm(request.POST)`` This is called "binding data to the form" (it is now |
| a *bound* form). |
|
|
| We call the form's ``is_valid()`` method; if it's not ``True``, we go back to |
| the template with the form. This time the form is no longer empty (*unbound*) |
| so the HTML form will be populated with the data previously submitted, where it |
| can be edited and corrected as required. |
|
|
| If ``is_valid()`` is ``True``, we'll now be able to find all the validated form |
| data in its ``cleaned_data`` attribute. We can use this data to update the |
| database or do other processing before sending an HTTP redirect to the browser |
| telling it where to go next. |
|
|
| .. _topics-forms-index-basic-form-template: |
|
|
| The template |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| We don't need to do much in our ``name.html`` template: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <form action="/your-name/" method="post"> |
| {% csrf_token %} |
| {{ form }} |
| <input type="submit" value="Submit"> |
| </form> |
|
|
| All the form's fields and their attributes will be unpacked into HTML markup |
| from that ``{{ form }}`` by Django's template language. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Forms and Cross Site Request Forgery protection |
|
|
| Django ships with an easy-to-use :doc:`protection against Cross Site Request |
| Forgeries </ref/csrf>`. When submitting a form via ``POST`` with |
| CSRF protection enabled you must use the :ttag:`csrf_token` template tag |
| as in the preceding example. However, since CSRF protection is not |
| directly tied to forms in templates, this tag is omitted from the |
| following examples in this document. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: HTML5 input types and browser validation |
|
|
| If your form includes a :class:`~django.forms.URLField`, an |
| :class:`~django.forms.EmailField` or any integer field type, Django will |
| use the ``url``, ``email`` and ``number`` HTML5 input types. By default, |
| browsers may apply their own validation on these fields, which may be |
| stricter than Django's validation. If you would like to disable this |
| behavior, set the ``novalidate`` attribute on the ``form`` tag, or specify |
| a different widget on the field, like :class:`TextInput`. |
|
|
| We now have a working web form, described by a Django :class:`Form`, processed |
| by a view, and rendered as an HTML ``<form>``. |
|
|
| That's all you need to get started, but the forms framework puts a lot more at |
| your fingertips. Once you understand the basics of the process described above, |
| you should be prepared to understand other features of the forms system and |
| ready to learn a bit more about the underlying machinery. |
|
|
| More about Django :class:`Form` classes |
| ======================================= |
|
|
| All form classes are created as subclasses of either :class:`django.forms.Form` |
| or :class:`django.forms.ModelForm`. You can think of ``ModelForm`` as a |
| subclass of ``Form``. ``Form`` and ``ModelForm`` actually inherit common |
| functionality from a (private) ``BaseForm`` class, but this implementation |
| detail is rarely important. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Models and Forms |
|
|
| In fact if your form is going to be used to directly add or edit a Django |
| model, a :doc:`ModelForm </topics/forms/modelforms>` can save you a great |
| deal of time, effort, and code, because it will build a form, along with the |
| appropriate fields and their attributes, from a ``Model`` class. |
|
|
| Bound and unbound form instances |
| -------------------------------- |
|
|
| The distinction between :ref:`ref-forms-api-bound-unbound` is important: |
|
|
| * An unbound form has no data associated with it. When rendered to the user, |
| it will be empty or will contain default values. |
|
|
| * A bound form has submitted data, and hence can be used to tell if that data |
| is valid. If an invalid bound form is rendered, it can include inline error |
| messages telling the user what data to correct. |
|
|
| The form's :attr:`~Form.is_bound` attribute will tell you whether a form has |
| data bound to it or not. |
|
|
| More on fields |
| -------------- |
|
|
| Consider a more useful form than our minimal example above, which we could use |
| to implement "contact me" functionality on a personal website: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``forms.py`` |
|
|
| from django import forms |
|
|
|
|
| class ContactForm(forms.Form): |
| subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100) |
| message = forms.CharField(widget=forms.Textarea) |
| sender = forms.EmailField() |
| cc_myself = forms.BooleanField(required=False) |
|
|
| Our earlier form used a single field, ``your_name``, a :class:`CharField`. In |
| this case, our form has four fields: ``subject``, ``message``, ``sender`` and |
| ``cc_myself``. :class:`CharField`, :class:`EmailField` and |
| :class:`BooleanField` are just three of the available field types; a full list |
| can be found in :doc:`/ref/forms/fields`. |
|
|
| Widgets |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Each form field has a corresponding :doc:`Widget class </ref/forms/widgets/>`, |
| which in turn corresponds to an HTML form widget such as ``<input |
| type="text">``. |
|
|
| In most cases, the field will have a sensible default widget. For example, by |
| default, a :class:`CharField` will have a :class:`TextInput` widget, that |
| produces an ``<input type="text">`` in the HTML. If you needed ``<textarea>`` |
| instead, you'd specify the appropriate widget when defining your form field, |
| as we have done for the ``message`` field. |
|
|
| Field data |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Whatever the data submitted with a form, once it has been successfully |
| validated by calling ``is_valid()`` (and ``is_valid()`` has returned ``True``), |
| the validated form data will be in the ``form.cleaned_data`` dictionary. This |
| data will have been nicely converted into Python types for you. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| You can still access the unvalidated data directly from ``request.POST`` at |
| this point, but the validated data is better. |
|
|
| In the contact form example above, ``cc_myself`` will be a boolean value. |
| Likewise, fields such as :class:`IntegerField` and :class:`FloatField` convert |
| values to a Python ``int`` and ``float`` respectively. |
|
|
| Here's how the form data could be processed in the view that handles this form: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``views.py`` |
|
|
| from django.core.mail import send_mail |
|
|
| if form.is_valid(): |
| subject = form.cleaned_data["subject"] |
| message = form.cleaned_data["message"] |
| sender = form.cleaned_data["sender"] |
| cc_myself = form.cleaned_data["cc_myself"] |
|
|
| recipients = ["info@example.com"] |
| if cc_myself: |
| recipients.append(sender) |
|
|
| send_mail(subject, message, sender, recipients) |
| return HttpResponseRedirect("/thanks/") |
|
|
| .. tip:: |
|
|
| For more on sending email from Django, see :doc:`/topics/email`. |
|
|
| Some field types need some extra handling. For example, files that are uploaded |
| using a form need to be handled differently (they can be retrieved from |
| ``request.FILES``, rather than ``request.POST``). For details of how to handle |
| file uploads with your form, see :ref:`binding-uploaded-files`. |
|
|
| Working with form templates |
| =========================== |
|
|
| All you need to do to get your form into a template is to place the form |
| instance into the template context. So if your form is called ``form`` in the |
| context, ``{{ form }}`` will render its ``<label>`` and ``<input>`` elements |
| appropriately. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Additional form template furniture |
|
|
| Don't forget that a form's output does *not* include the surrounding |
| ``<form>`` tags, or the form's ``submit`` control. You will have to provide |
| these yourself. |
|
|
| .. _reusable-form-templates: |
|
|
| Reusable form templates |
| ----------------------- |
|
|
| The HTML output when rendering a form is itself generated via a template. You |
| can control this by creating an appropriate template file and setting a custom |
| :setting:`FORM_RENDERER` to use that |
| :attr:`~django.forms.renderers.BaseRenderer.form_template_name` site-wide. You |
| can also customize per-form by overriding the form's |
| :attr:`~django.forms.Form.template_name` attribute to render the form using the |
| custom template, or by passing the template name directly to |
| :meth:`.Form.render`. |
|
|
| The example below will result in ``{{ form }}`` being rendered as the output of |
| the ``form_snippet.html`` template. |
|
|
| In your templates: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| # In your template: |
| {{ form }} |
|
|
| # In form_snippet.html: |
| {% for field in form %} |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ field.errors }} |
| {{ field.label_tag }} {{ field }} |
| </div> |
| {% endfor %} |
|
|
| Then you can configure the :setting:`FORM_RENDERER` setting: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``settings.py`` |
|
|
| from django.forms.renderers import TemplatesSetting |
|
|
|
|
| class CustomFormRenderer(TemplatesSetting): |
| form_template_name = "form_snippet.html" |
|
|
|
|
| FORM_RENDERER = "project.settings.CustomFormRenderer" |
|
|
| … or for a single form:: |
|
|
| class MyForm(forms.Form): |
| template_name = "form_snippet.html" |
| ... |
|
|
| … or for a single render of a form instance, passing in the template name to |
| the :meth:`.Form.render`. Here's an example of this being used in a view:: |
|
|
| def index(request): |
| form = MyForm() |
| rendered_form = form.render("form_snippet.html") |
| context = {"form": rendered_form} |
| return render(request, "index.html", context) |
|
|
| See :ref:`ref-forms-api-outputting-html` for more details. |
|
|
| .. _reusable-field-group-templates: |
|
|
| Reusable field group templates |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 5.0 |
|
|
| Each field is available as an attribute of the form, using |
| ``{{form.name_of_field }}`` in a template. A field has a |
| :meth:`~django.forms.BoundField.as_field_group` method which renders the |
| related elements of the field as a group, its label, widget, errors, and help |
| text. |
|
|
| This allows generic templates to be written that arrange fields elements in the |
| required layout. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {{ form.non_field_errors }} |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.subject.as_field_group }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.message.as_field_group }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.sender.as_field_group }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.cc_myself.as_field_group }} |
| </div> |
|
|
| By default Django uses the ``"django/forms/field.html"`` template which is |
| designed for use with the default ``"django/forms/div.html"`` form style. |
|
|
| The default template can be customized by by setting |
| :attr:`~django.forms.renderers.BaseRenderer.field_template_name` in your |
| project-level :setting:`FORM_RENDERER`:: |
|
|
| from django.forms.renderers import TemplatesSetting |
|
|
|
|
| class CustomFormRenderer(TemplatesSetting): |
| field_template_name = "field_snippet.html" |
|
|
| … or on a single field:: |
|
|
| class MyForm(forms.Form): |
| subject = forms.CharField(template_name="my_custom_template.html") |
| ... |
|
|
| … or on a per-request basis by calling |
| :meth:`.BoundField.render` and supplying a template name:: |
|
|
| def index(request): |
| form = ContactForm() |
| subject = form["subject"] |
| context = {"subject": subject.render("my_custom_template.html")} |
| return render(request, "index.html", context) |
|
|
| Rendering fields manually |
| ------------------------- |
|
|
| More fine grained control over field rendering is also possible. Likely this |
| will be in a custom field template, to allow the template to be written once |
| and reused for each field. However, it can also be directly accessed from the |
| field attribute on the form. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {{ form.non_field_errors }} |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.subject.errors }} |
| <label for="{{ form.subject.id_for_label }}">Email subject:</label> |
| {{ form.subject }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.message.errors }} |
| <label for="{{ form.message.id_for_label }}">Your message:</label> |
| {{ form.message }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.sender.errors }} |
| <label for="{{ form.sender.id_for_label }}">Your email address:</label> |
| {{ form.sender }} |
| </div> |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.cc_myself.errors }} |
| <label for="{{ form.cc_myself.id_for_label }}">CC yourself?</label> |
| {{ form.cc_myself }} |
| </div> |
|
|
| Complete ``<label>`` elements can also be generated using the |
| :meth:`~django.forms.BoundField.label_tag`. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ form.subject.errors }} |
| {{ form.subject.label_tag }} |
| {{ form.subject }} |
| </div> |
|
|
|
|
| Rendering form error messages |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| The price of this flexibility is a bit more work. Until now we haven't had to |
| worry about how to display form errors, because that's taken care of for us. In |
| this example we have had to make sure we take care of any errors for each field |
| and any errors for the form as a whole. Note ``{{ form.non_field_errors }}`` at |
| the top of the form and the template lookup for errors on each field. |
|
|
| Using ``{{ form.name_of_field.errors }}`` displays a list of form errors, |
| rendered as an unordered list. This might look like: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <ul class="errorlist"> |
| <li>Sender is required.</li> |
| </ul> |
|
|
| The list has a CSS class of ``errorlist`` to allow you to style its appearance. |
| If you wish to further customize the display of errors you can do so by looping |
| over them: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% if form.subject.errors %} |
| <ol> |
| {% for error in form.subject.errors %} |
| <li><strong>{{ error|escape }}</strong></li> |
| {% endfor %} |
| </ol> |
| {% endif %} |
|
|
| Non-field errors (and/or hidden field errors that are rendered at the top of |
| the form when using helpers like ``form.as_p()``) will be rendered with an |
| additional class of ``nonfield`` to help distinguish them from field-specific |
| errors. For example, ``{{ form.non_field_errors }}`` would look like: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <ul class="errorlist nonfield"> |
| <li>Generic validation error</li> |
| </ul> |
|
|
| See :doc:`/ref/forms/api` for more on errors, styling, and working with form |
| attributes in templates. |
|
|
| Looping over the form's fields |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| If you're using the same HTML for each of your form fields, you can reduce |
| duplicate code by looping through each field in turn using a ``{% for %}`` |
| loop: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% for field in form %} |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ field.errors }} |
| {{ field.label_tag }} {{ field }} |
| {% if field.help_text %} |
| <p class="help" id="{{ field.id_for_label }}_helptext"> |
| {{ field.help_text|safe }} |
| </p> |
| {% endif %} |
| </div> |
| {% endfor %} |
|
|
| Useful attributes on ``{{ field }}`` include: |
|
|
| ``{{ field.errors }}`` |
| Outputs a ``<ul class="errorlist">`` containing any validation errors |
| corresponding to this field. You can customize the presentation of |
| the errors with a ``{% for error in field.errors %}`` loop. In this |
| case, each object in the loop is a string containing the error message. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.field }}`` |
| The :class:`~django.forms.Field` instance from the form class that |
| this :class:`~django.forms.BoundField` wraps. You can use it to access |
| :class:`~django.forms.Field` attributes, e.g. |
| ``{{ char_field.field.max_length }}``. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.help_text }}`` |
| Any help text that has been associated with the field. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.html_name }}`` |
| The name of the field that will be used in the input element's name |
| field. This takes the form prefix into account, if it has been set. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.id_for_label }}`` |
| The ID that will be used for this field (``id_email`` in the example |
| above). If you are constructing the label manually, you may want to use |
| this in lieu of ``label_tag``. It's also useful, for example, if you have |
| some inline JavaScript and want to avoid hardcoding the field's ID. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.is_hidden }}`` |
| This attribute is ``True`` if the form field is a hidden field and |
| ``False`` otherwise. It's not particularly useful as a template |
| variable, but could be useful in conditional tests such as: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% if field.is_hidden %} |
| {# Do something special #} |
| {% endif %} |
|
|
| ``{{ field.label }}`` |
| The label of the field, e.g. ``Email address``. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.label_tag }}`` |
| The field's label wrapped in the appropriate HTML ``<label>`` tag. This |
| includes the form's :attr:`~django.forms.Form.label_suffix`. For example, |
| the default ``label_suffix`` is a colon: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <label for="id_email">Email address:</label> |
|
|
| ``{{ field.legend_tag }}`` |
|
|
| Similar to ``field.label_tag`` but uses a ``<legend>`` tag in place of |
| ``<label>``, for widgets with multiple inputs wrapped in a ``<fieldset>``. |
|
|
| ``{{ field.use_fieldset }}`` |
|
|
| This attribute is ``True`` if the form field's widget contains multiple |
| inputs that should be semantically grouped in a ``<fieldset>`` with a |
| ``<legend>`` to improve accessibility. An example use in a template: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% if field.use_fieldset %} |
| <fieldset> |
| {% if field.label %}{{ field.legend_tag }}{% endif %} |
| {% else %} |
| {% if field.label %}{{ field.label_tag }}{% endif %} |
| {% endif %} |
| {{ field }} |
| {% if field.use_fieldset %}</fieldset>{% endif %} |
|
|
| ``{{ field.value }}`` |
| The value of the field. e.g ``someone@example.com``. |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| For a complete list of attributes and methods, see |
| :class:`~django.forms.BoundField`. |
|
|
| Looping over hidden and visible fields |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| If you're manually laying out a form in a template, as opposed to relying on |
| Django's default form layout, you might want to treat ``<input type="hidden">`` |
| fields differently from non-hidden fields. For example, because hidden fields |
| don't display anything, putting error messages "next to" the field could cause |
| confusion for your users -- so errors for those fields should be handled |
| differently. |
|
|
| Django provides two methods on a form that allow you to loop over the hidden |
| and visible fields independently: ``hidden_fields()`` and |
| ``visible_fields()``. Here's a modification of an earlier example that uses |
| these two methods: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {# Include the hidden fields #} |
| {% for hidden in form.hidden_fields %} |
| {{ hidden }} |
| {% endfor %} |
| {# Include the visible fields #} |
| {% for field in form.visible_fields %} |
| <div class="fieldWrapper"> |
| {{ field.errors }} |
| {{ field.label_tag }} {{ field }} |
| </div> |
| {% endfor %} |
|
|
| This example does not handle any errors in the hidden fields. Usually, an |
| error in a hidden field is a sign of form tampering, since normal form |
| interaction won't alter them. However, you could easily insert some error |
| displays for those form errors, as well. |
|
|
| Further topics |
| ============== |
|
|
| This covers the basics, but forms can do a whole lot more: |
|
|
| .. toctree:: |
| :maxdepth: 2 |
|
|
| formsets |
| modelforms |
| media |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| :doc:`The Forms Reference </ref/forms/index>` |
| Covers the full API reference, including form fields, form widgets, |
| and form and field validation. |
|
|