api.txt 37 KB

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  1. =============
  2. The Forms API
  3. =============
  4. .. module:: django.forms
  5. .. admonition:: About this document
  6. This document covers the gritty details of Django's forms API. You should
  7. read the :doc:`introduction to working with forms </topics/forms/index>`
  8. first.
  9. .. _ref-forms-api-bound-unbound:
  10. Bound and unbound forms
  11. -----------------------
  12. A :class:`Form` instance is either **bound** to a set of data, or **unbound**.
  13. * If it's **bound** to a set of data, it's capable of validating that data
  14. and rendering the form as HTML with the data displayed in the HTML.
  15. * If it's **unbound**, it cannot do validation (because there's no data to
  16. validate!), but it can still render the blank form as HTML.
  17. .. class:: Form
  18. To create an unbound :class:`Form` instance, simply instantiate the class::
  19. >>> f = ContactForm()
  20. To bind data to a form, pass the data as a dictionary as the first parameter to
  21. your :class:`Form` class constructor::
  22. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  23. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  24. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  25. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  26. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  27. In this dictionary, the keys are the field names, which correspond to the
  28. attributes in your :class:`Form` class. The values are the data you're trying to
  29. validate. These will usually be strings, but there's no requirement that they be
  30. strings; the type of data you pass depends on the :class:`Field`, as we'll see
  31. in a moment.
  32. .. attribute:: Form.is_bound
  33. If you need to distinguish between bound and unbound form instances at runtime,
  34. check the value of the form's :attr:`~Form.is_bound` attribute::
  35. >>> f = ContactForm()
  36. >>> f.is_bound
  37. False
  38. >>> f = ContactForm({'subject': 'hello'})
  39. >>> f.is_bound
  40. True
  41. Note that passing an empty dictionary creates a *bound* form with empty data::
  42. >>> f = ContactForm({})
  43. >>> f.is_bound
  44. True
  45. If you have a bound :class:`Form` instance and want to change the data somehow,
  46. or if you want to bind an unbound :class:`Form` instance to some data, create
  47. another :class:`Form` instance. There is no way to change data in a
  48. :class:`Form` instance. Once a :class:`Form` instance has been created, you
  49. should consider its data immutable, whether it has data or not.
  50. Using forms to validate data
  51. ----------------------------
  52. .. method:: Form.is_valid()
  53. The primary task of a :class:`Form` object is to validate data. With a bound
  54. :class:`Form` instance, call the :meth:`~Form.is_valid` method to run validation
  55. and return a boolean designating whether the data was valid::
  56. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  57. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  58. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  59. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  60. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  61. >>> f.is_valid()
  62. True
  63. Let's try with some invalid data. In this case, ``subject`` is blank (an error,
  64. because all fields are required by default) and ``sender`` is not a valid
  65. email address::
  66. >>> data = {'subject': '',
  67. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  68. ... 'sender': 'invalid email address',
  69. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  70. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  71. >>> f.is_valid()
  72. False
  73. .. attribute:: Form.errors
  74. Access the :attr:`~Form.errors` attribute to get a dictionary of error
  75. messages::
  76. >>> f.errors
  77. {'sender': [u'Enter a valid email address.'], 'subject': [u'This field is required.']}
  78. In this dictionary, the keys are the field names, and the values are lists of
  79. Unicode strings representing the error messages. The error messages are stored
  80. in lists because a field can have multiple error messages.
  81. You can access :attr:`~Form.errors` without having to call
  82. :meth:`~Form.is_valid` first. The form's data will be validated the first time
  83. either you call :meth:`~Form.is_valid` or access :attr:`~Form.errors`.
  84. The validation routines will only get called once, regardless of how many times
  85. you access :attr:`~Form.errors` or call :meth:`~Form.is_valid`. This means that
  86. if validation has side effects, those side effects will only be triggered once.
  87. Behavior of unbound forms
  88. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  89. It's meaningless to validate a form with no data, but, for the record, here's
  90. what happens with unbound forms::
  91. >>> f = ContactForm()
  92. >>> f.is_valid()
  93. False
  94. >>> f.errors
  95. {}
  96. Dynamic initial values
  97. ----------------------
  98. .. attribute:: Form.initial
  99. Use :attr:`~Form.initial` to declare the initial value of form fields at
  100. runtime. For example, you might want to fill in a ``username`` field with the
  101. username of the current session.
  102. To accomplish this, use the :attr:`~Form.initial` argument to a :class:`Form`.
  103. This argument, if given, should be a dictionary mapping field names to initial
  104. values. Only include the fields for which you're specifying an initial value;
  105. it's not necessary to include every field in your form. For example::
  106. >>> f = ContactForm(initial={'subject': 'Hi there!'})
  107. These values are only displayed for unbound forms, and they're not used as
  108. fallback values if a particular value isn't provided.
  109. Note that if a :class:`~django.forms.Field` defines :attr:`~Form.initial` *and*
  110. you include ``initial`` when instantiating the ``Form``, then the latter
  111. ``initial`` will have precedence. In this example, ``initial`` is provided both
  112. at the field level and at the form instance level, and the latter gets
  113. precedence::
  114. >>> from django import forms
  115. >>> class CommentForm(forms.Form):
  116. ... name = forms.CharField(initial='class')
  117. ... url = forms.URLField()
  118. ... comment = forms.CharField()
  119. >>> f = CommentForm(initial={'name': 'instance'}, auto_id=False)
  120. >>> print(f)
  121. <tr><th>Name:</th><td><input type="text" name="name" value="instance" /></td></tr>
  122. <tr><th>Url:</th><td><input type="url" name="url" /></td></tr>
  123. <tr><th>Comment:</th><td><input type="text" name="comment" /></td></tr>
  124. Accessing "clean" data
  125. ----------------------
  126. .. attribute:: Form.cleaned_data
  127. Each field in a :class:`Form` class is responsible not only for validating
  128. data, but also for "cleaning" it -- normalizing it to a consistent format. This
  129. is a nice feature, because it allows data for a particular field to be input in
  130. a variety of ways, always resulting in consistent output.
  131. For example, :class:`~django.forms.DateField` normalizes input into a
  132. Python ``datetime.date`` object. Regardless of whether you pass it a string in
  133. the format ``'1994-07-15'``, a ``datetime.date`` object, or a number of other
  134. formats, ``DateField`` will always normalize it to a ``datetime.date`` object
  135. as long as it's valid.
  136. Once you've created a :class:`~Form` instance with a set of data and validated
  137. it, you can access the clean data via its ``cleaned_data`` attribute::
  138. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  139. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  140. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  141. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  142. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  143. >>> f.is_valid()
  144. True
  145. >>> f.cleaned_data
  146. {'cc_myself': True, 'message': u'Hi there', 'sender': u'foo@example.com', 'subject': u'hello'}
  147. Note that any text-based field -- such as ``CharField`` or ``EmailField`` --
  148. always cleans the input into a Unicode string. We'll cover the encoding
  149. implications later in this document.
  150. If your data does *not* validate, the ``cleaned_data`` dictionary contains
  151. only the valid fields::
  152. >>> data = {'subject': '',
  153. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  154. ... 'sender': 'invalid email address',
  155. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  156. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  157. >>> f.is_valid()
  158. False
  159. >>> f.cleaned_data
  160. {'cc_myself': True, 'message': u'Hi there'}
  161. .. versionchanged:: 1.5
  162. Until Django 1.5, the ``cleaned_data`` attribute wasn't defined at all when
  163. the ``Form`` didn't validate.
  164. ``cleaned_data`` will always *only* contain a key for fields defined in the
  165. ``Form``, even if you pass extra data when you define the ``Form``. In this
  166. example, we pass a bunch of extra fields to the ``ContactForm`` constructor,
  167. but ``cleaned_data`` contains only the form's fields::
  168. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  169. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  170. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  171. ... 'cc_myself': True,
  172. ... 'extra_field_1': 'foo',
  173. ... 'extra_field_2': 'bar',
  174. ... 'extra_field_3': 'baz'}
  175. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  176. >>> f.is_valid()
  177. True
  178. >>> f.cleaned_data # Doesn't contain extra_field_1, etc.
  179. {'cc_myself': True, 'message': u'Hi there', 'sender': u'foo@example.com', 'subject': u'hello'}
  180. When the ``Form`` is valid, ``cleaned_data`` will include a key and value for
  181. *all* its fields, even if the data didn't include a value for some optional
  182. fields. In this example, the data dictionary doesn't include a value for the
  183. ``nick_name`` field, but ``cleaned_data`` includes it, with an empty value::
  184. >>> from django.forms import Form
  185. >>> class OptionalPersonForm(Form):
  186. ... first_name = CharField()
  187. ... last_name = CharField()
  188. ... nick_name = CharField(required=False)
  189. >>> data = {'first_name': u'John', 'last_name': u'Lennon'}
  190. >>> f = OptionalPersonForm(data)
  191. >>> f.is_valid()
  192. True
  193. >>> f.cleaned_data
  194. {'nick_name': u'', 'first_name': u'John', 'last_name': u'Lennon'}
  195. In this above example, the ``cleaned_data`` value for ``nick_name`` is set to an
  196. empty string, because ``nick_name`` is ``CharField``, and ``CharField``\s treat
  197. empty values as an empty string. Each field type knows what its "blank" value
  198. is -- e.g., for ``DateField``, it's ``None`` instead of the empty string. For
  199. full details on each field's behavior in this case, see the "Empty value" note
  200. for each field in the "Built-in ``Field`` classes" section below.
  201. You can write code to perform validation for particular form fields (based on
  202. their name) or for the form as a whole (considering combinations of various
  203. fields). More information about this is in :doc:`/ref/forms/validation`.
  204. Outputting forms as HTML
  205. ------------------------
  206. The second task of a ``Form`` object is to render itself as HTML. To do so,
  207. simply ``print`` it::
  208. >>> f = ContactForm()
  209. >>> print(f)
  210. <tr><th><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  211. <tr><th><label for="id_message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></td></tr>
  212. <tr><th><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></td></tr>
  213. <tr><th><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  214. If the form is bound to data, the HTML output will include that data
  215. appropriately. For example, if a field is represented by an
  216. ``<input type="text">``, the data will be in the ``value`` attribute. If a
  217. field is represented by an ``<input type="checkbox">``, then that HTML will
  218. include ``checked="checked"`` if appropriate::
  219. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  220. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  221. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  222. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  223. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  224. >>> print(f)
  225. <tr><th><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" value="hello" /></td></tr>
  226. <tr><th><label for="id_message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" value="Hi there" /></td></tr>
  227. <tr><th><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" value="foo@example.com" /></td></tr>
  228. <tr><th><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" checked="checked" /></td></tr>
  229. This default output is a two-column HTML table, with a ``<tr>`` for each field.
  230. Notice the following:
  231. * For flexibility, the output does *not* include the ``<table>`` and
  232. ``</table>`` tags, nor does it include the ``<form>`` and ``</form>``
  233. tags or an ``<input type="submit">`` tag. It's your job to do that.
  234. * Each field type has a default HTML representation. ``CharField`` is
  235. represented by an ``<input type="text">`` and ``EmailField`` by an
  236. ``<input type="email">``.
  237. ``BooleanField`` is represented by an ``<input type="checkbox">``. Note
  238. these are merely sensible defaults; you can specify which HTML to use for
  239. a given field by using widgets, which we'll explain shortly.
  240. * The HTML ``name`` for each tag is taken directly from its attribute name
  241. in the ``ContactForm`` class.
  242. * The text label for each field -- e.g. ``'Subject:'``, ``'Message:'`` and
  243. ``'Cc myself:'`` is generated from the field name by converting all
  244. underscores to spaces and upper-casing the first letter. Again, note
  245. these are merely sensible defaults; you can also specify labels manually.
  246. * Each text label is surrounded in an HTML ``<label>`` tag, which points
  247. to the appropriate form field via its ``id``. Its ``id``, in turn, is
  248. generated by prepending ``'id_'`` to the field name. The ``id``
  249. attributes and ``<label>`` tags are included in the output by default, to
  250. follow best practices, but you can change that behavior.
  251. Although ``<table>`` output is the default output style when you ``print`` a
  252. form, other output styles are available. Each style is available as a method on
  253. a form object, and each rendering method returns a Unicode object.
  254. ``as_p()``
  255. ~~~~~~~~~~
  256. .. method:: Form.as_p
  257. ``as_p()`` renders the form as a series of ``<p>`` tags, with each ``<p>``
  258. containing one field::
  259. >>> f = ContactForm()
  260. >>> f.as_p()
  261. u'<p><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>\n<p><label for="id_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></p>\n<p><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="text" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></p>\n<p><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></p>'
  262. >>> print(f.as_p())
  263. <p><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  264. <p><label for="id_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></p>
  265. <p><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></p>
  266. <p><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></p>
  267. ``as_ul()``
  268. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  269. .. method:: Form.as_ul
  270. ``as_ul()`` renders the form as a series of ``<li>`` tags, with each
  271. ``<li>`` containing one field. It does *not* include the ``<ul>`` or
  272. ``</ul>``, so that you can specify any HTML attributes on the ``<ul>`` for
  273. flexibility::
  274. >>> f = ContactForm()
  275. >>> f.as_ul()
  276. u'<li><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>\n<li><label for="id_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></li>\n<li><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></li>\n<li><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></li>'
  277. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  278. <li><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  279. <li><label for="id_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></li>
  280. <li><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></li>
  281. <li><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></li>
  282. ``as_table()``
  283. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  284. .. method:: Form.as_table
  285. Finally, ``as_table()`` outputs the form as an HTML ``<table>``. This is
  286. exactly the same as ``print``. In fact, when you ``print`` a form object,
  287. it calls its ``as_table()`` method behind the scenes::
  288. >>> f = ContactForm()
  289. >>> f.as_table()
  290. u'<tr><th><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>\n<tr><th><label for="id_message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></td></tr>\n<tr><th><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></td></tr>\n<tr><th><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></td></tr>'
  291. >>> print(f.as_table())
  292. <tr><th><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  293. <tr><th><label for="id_message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></td></tr>
  294. <tr><th><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></td></tr>
  295. <tr><th><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  296. Styling required or erroneous form rows
  297. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  298. .. attribute:: Form.error_css_class
  299. .. attribute:: Form.required_css_class
  300. It's pretty common to style form rows and fields that are required or have
  301. errors. For example, you might want to present required form rows in bold and
  302. highlight errors in red.
  303. The :class:`Form` class has a couple of hooks you can use to add ``class``
  304. attributes to required rows or to rows with errors: simply set the
  305. :attr:`Form.error_css_class` and/or :attr:`Form.required_css_class`
  306. attributes::
  307. from django.forms import Form
  308. class ContactForm(Form):
  309. error_css_class = 'error'
  310. required_css_class = 'required'
  311. # ... and the rest of your fields here
  312. Once you've done that, rows will be given ``"error"`` and/or ``"required"``
  313. classes, as needed. The HTML will look something like::
  314. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  315. >>> print(f.as_table())
  316. <tr class="required"><th><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label> ...
  317. <tr class="required"><th><label for="id_message">Message:</label> ...
  318. <tr class="required error"><th><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label> ...
  319. <tr><th><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:<label> ...
  320. .. _ref-forms-api-configuring-label:
  321. Configuring HTML ``<label>`` tags
  322. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  323. An HTML ``<label>`` tag designates which label text is associated with which
  324. form element. This small enhancement makes forms more usable and more accessible
  325. to assistive devices. It's always a good idea to use ``<label>`` tags.
  326. By default, the form rendering methods include HTML ``id`` attributes on the
  327. form elements and corresponding ``<label>`` tags around the labels. The ``id``
  328. attribute values are generated by prepending ``id_`` to the form field names.
  329. This behavior is configurable, though, if you want to change the ``id``
  330. convention or remove HTML ``id`` attributes and ``<label>`` tags entirely.
  331. Use the ``auto_id`` argument to the ``Form`` constructor to control the label
  332. and ``id`` behavior. This argument must be ``True``, ``False`` or a string.
  333. If ``auto_id`` is ``False``, then the form output will not include ``<label>``
  334. tags nor ``id`` attributes::
  335. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id=False)
  336. >>> print(f.as_table())
  337. <tr><th>Subject:</th><td><input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  338. <tr><th>Message:</th><td><input type="text" name="message" /></td></tr>
  339. <tr><th>Sender:</th><td><input type="email" name="sender" /></td></tr>
  340. <tr><th>Cc myself:</th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  341. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  342. <li>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  343. <li>Message: <input type="text" name="message" /></li>
  344. <li>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" /></li>
  345. <li>Cc myself: <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></li>
  346. >>> print(f.as_p())
  347. <p>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  348. <p>Message: <input type="text" name="message" /></p>
  349. <p>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" /></p>
  350. <p>Cc myself: <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></p>
  351. If ``auto_id`` is set to ``True``, then the form output *will* include
  352. ``<label>`` tags and will simply use the field name as its ``id`` for each form
  353. field::
  354. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id=True)
  355. >>> print(f.as_table())
  356. <tr><th><label for="subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  357. <tr><th><label for="message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="message" /></td></tr>
  358. <tr><th><label for="sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="sender" /></td></tr>
  359. <tr><th><label for="cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  360. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  361. <li><label for="subject">Subject:</label> <input id="subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  362. <li><label for="message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="message" /></li>
  363. <li><label for="sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="sender" /></li>
  364. <li><label for="cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="cc_myself" /></li>
  365. >>> print(f.as_p())
  366. <p><label for="subject">Subject:</label> <input id="subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  367. <p><label for="message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="message" /></p>
  368. <p><label for="sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="sender" /></p>
  369. <p><label for="cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="cc_myself" /></p>
  370. If ``auto_id`` is set to a string containing the format character ``'%s'``,
  371. then the form output will include ``<label>`` tags, and will generate ``id``
  372. attributes based on the format string. For example, for a format string
  373. ``'field_%s'``, a field named ``subject`` will get the ``id`` value
  374. ``'field_subject'``. Continuing our example::
  375. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id='id_for_%s')
  376. >>> print(f.as_table())
  377. <tr><th><label for="id_for_subject">Subject:</label></th><td><input id="id_for_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  378. <tr><th><label for="id_for_message">Message:</label></th><td><input type="text" name="message" id="id_for_message" /></td></tr>
  379. <tr><th><label for="id_for_sender">Sender:</label></th><td><input type="email" name="sender" id="id_for_sender" /></td></tr>
  380. <tr><th><label for="id_for_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label></th><td><input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_for_cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  381. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  382. <li><label for="id_for_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_for_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  383. <li><label for="id_for_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_for_message" /></li>
  384. <li><label for="id_for_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_for_sender" /></li>
  385. <li><label for="id_for_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_for_cc_myself" /></li>
  386. >>> print(f.as_p())
  387. <p><label for="id_for_subject">Subject:</label> <input id="id_for_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  388. <p><label for="id_for_message">Message:</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_for_message" /></p>
  389. <p><label for="id_for_sender">Sender:</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_for_sender" /></p>
  390. <p><label for="id_for_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_for_cc_myself" /></p>
  391. If ``auto_id`` is set to any other true value -- such as a string that doesn't
  392. include ``%s`` -- then the library will act as if ``auto_id`` is ``True``.
  393. By default, ``auto_id`` is set to the string ``'id_%s'``.
  394. Normally, a colon (``:``) will be appended after any label name when a form is
  395. rendered. It's possible to change the colon to another character, or omit it
  396. entirely, using the ``label_suffix`` parameter::
  397. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id='id_for_%s', label_suffix='')
  398. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  399. <li><label for="id_for_subject">Subject</label> <input id="id_for_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  400. <li><label for="id_for_message">Message</label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_for_message" /></li>
  401. <li><label for="id_for_sender">Sender</label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_for_sender" /></li>
  402. <li><label for="id_for_cc_myself">Cc myself</label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_for_cc_myself" /></li>
  403. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id='id_for_%s', label_suffix=' ->')
  404. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  405. <li><label for="id_for_subject">Subject -></label> <input id="id_for_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  406. <li><label for="id_for_message">Message -></label> <input type="text" name="message" id="id_for_message" /></li>
  407. <li><label for="id_for_sender">Sender -></label> <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_for_sender" /></li>
  408. <li><label for="id_for_cc_myself">Cc myself -></label> <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_for_cc_myself" /></li>
  409. Note that the label suffix is added only if the last character of the
  410. label isn't a punctuation character (``.``, ``!``, ``?`` or ``:``)
  411. Notes on field ordering
  412. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  413. In the ``as_p()``, ``as_ul()`` and ``as_table()`` shortcuts, the fields are
  414. displayed in the order in which you define them in your form class. For
  415. example, in the ``ContactForm`` example, the fields are defined in the order
  416. ``subject``, ``message``, ``sender``, ``cc_myself``. To reorder the HTML
  417. output, just change the order in which those fields are listed in the class.
  418. How errors are displayed
  419. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  420. If you render a bound ``Form`` object, the act of rendering will automatically
  421. run the form's validation if it hasn't already happened, and the HTML output
  422. will include the validation errors as a ``<ul class="errorlist">`` near the
  423. field. The particular positioning of the error messages depends on the output
  424. method you're using::
  425. >>> data = {'subject': '',
  426. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  427. ... 'sender': 'invalid email address',
  428. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  429. >>> f = ContactForm(data, auto_id=False)
  430. >>> print(f.as_table())
  431. <tr><th>Subject:</th><td><ul class="errorlist"><li>This field is required.</li></ul><input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></td></tr>
  432. <tr><th>Message:</th><td><input type="text" name="message" value="Hi there" /></td></tr>
  433. <tr><th>Sender:</th><td><ul class="errorlist"><li>Enter a valid email address.</li></ul><input type="email" name="sender" value="invalid email address" /></td></tr>
  434. <tr><th>Cc myself:</th><td><input checked="checked" type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></td></tr>
  435. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  436. <li><ul class="errorlist"><li>This field is required.</li></ul>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  437. <li>Message: <input type="text" name="message" value="Hi there" /></li>
  438. <li><ul class="errorlist"><li>Enter a valid email address.</li></ul>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" value="invalid email address" /></li>
  439. <li>Cc myself: <input checked="checked" type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></li>
  440. >>> print(f.as_p())
  441. <p><ul class="errorlist"><li>This field is required.</li></ul></p>
  442. <p>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  443. <p>Message: <input type="text" name="message" value="Hi there" /></p>
  444. <p><ul class="errorlist"><li>Enter a valid email address.</li></ul></p>
  445. <p>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" value="invalid email address" /></p>
  446. <p>Cc myself: <input checked="checked" type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></p>
  447. Customizing the error list format
  448. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  449. By default, forms use ``django.forms.util.ErrorList`` to format validation
  450. errors. If you'd like to use an alternate class for displaying errors, you can
  451. pass that in at construction time::
  452. >>> from django.forms.util import ErrorList
  453. >>> class DivErrorList(ErrorList):
  454. ... def __unicode__(self):
  455. ... return self.as_divs()
  456. ... def as_divs(self):
  457. ... if not self: return u''
  458. ... return u'<div class="errorlist">%s</div>' % ''.join([u'<div class="error">%s</div>' % e for e in self])
  459. >>> f = ContactForm(data, auto_id=False, error_class=DivErrorList)
  460. >>> f.as_p()
  461. <div class="errorlist"><div class="error">This field is required.</div></div>
  462. <p>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
  463. <p>Message: <input type="text" name="message" value="Hi there" /></p>
  464. <div class="errorlist"><div class="error">Enter a valid email address.</div></div>
  465. <p>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" value="invalid email address" /></p>
  466. <p>Cc myself: <input checked="checked" type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></p>
  467. More granular output
  468. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  469. The ``as_p()``, ``as_ul()`` and ``as_table()`` methods are simply shortcuts for
  470. lazy developers -- they're not the only way a form object can be displayed.
  471. .. class:: BoundField
  472. Used to display HTML or access attributes for a single field of a
  473. :class:`Form` instance.
  474. The ``__unicode__()`` and ``__str__()`` methods of this object displays
  475. the HTML for this field.
  476. To retrieve a single ``BoundField``, use dictionary lookup syntax on your form
  477. using the field's name as the key::
  478. >>> form = ContactForm()
  479. >>> print(form['subject'])
  480. <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" />
  481. To retrieve all ``BoundField`` objects, iterate the form::
  482. >>> form = ContactForm()
  483. >>> for boundfield in form: print(boundfield)
  484. <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" />
  485. <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" />
  486. <input type="email" name="sender" id="id_sender" />
  487. <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" />
  488. The field-specific output honors the form object's ``auto_id`` setting::
  489. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id=False)
  490. >>> print(f['message'])
  491. <input type="text" name="message" />
  492. >>> f = ContactForm(auto_id='id_%s')
  493. >>> print(f['message'])
  494. <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" />
  495. For a field's list of errors, access the field's ``errors`` attribute.
  496. .. attribute:: BoundField.errors
  497. A list-like object that is displayed as an HTML ``<ul class="errorlist">``
  498. when printed::
  499. >>> data = {'subject': 'hi', 'message': '', 'sender': '', 'cc_myself': ''}
  500. >>> f = ContactForm(data, auto_id=False)
  501. >>> print(f['message'])
  502. <input type="text" name="message" />
  503. >>> f['message'].errors
  504. [u'This field is required.']
  505. >>> print(f['message'].errors)
  506. <ul class="errorlist"><li>This field is required.</li></ul>
  507. >>> f['subject'].errors
  508. []
  509. >>> print(f['subject'].errors)
  510. >>> str(f['subject'].errors)
  511. ''
  512. .. method:: BoundField.label_tag(contents=None, attrs=None)
  513. To separately render the label tag of a form field, you can call its
  514. ``label_tag`` method::
  515. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  516. >>> print(f['message'].label_tag())
  517. <label for="id_message">Message</label>
  518. Optionally, you can provide the ``contents`` parameter which will replace the
  519. auto-generated label tag. An optional ``attrs`` dictionary may contain
  520. additional attributes for the ``<label>`` tag.
  521. .. method:: BoundField.css_classes()
  522. When you use Django's rendering shortcuts, CSS classes are used to
  523. indicate required form fields or fields that contain errors. If you're
  524. manually rendering a form, you can access these CSS classes using the
  525. ``css_classes`` method::
  526. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  527. >>> f['message'].css_classes()
  528. 'required'
  529. If you want to provide some additional classes in addition to the
  530. error and required classes that may be required, you can provide
  531. those classes as an argument::
  532. >>> f = ContactForm(data)
  533. >>> f['message'].css_classes('foo bar')
  534. 'foo bar required'
  535. .. method:: BoundField.value()
  536. Use this method to render the raw value of this field as it would be rendered
  537. by a ``Widget``::
  538. >>> initial = {'subject': 'welcome'}
  539. >>> unbound_form = ContactForm(initial=initial)
  540. >>> bound_form = ContactForm(data, initial=initial)
  541. >>> print(unbound_form['subject'].value())
  542. welcome
  543. >>> print(bound_form['subject'].value())
  544. hi
  545. .. _binding-uploaded-files:
  546. Binding uploaded files to a form
  547. --------------------------------
  548. Dealing with forms that have ``FileField`` and ``ImageField`` fields
  549. is a little more complicated than a normal form.
  550. Firstly, in order to upload files, you'll need to make sure that your
  551. ``<form>`` element correctly defines the ``enctype`` as
  552. ``"multipart/form-data"``::
  553. <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/foo/">
  554. Secondly, when you use the form, you need to bind the file data. File
  555. data is handled separately to normal form data, so when your form
  556. contains a ``FileField`` and ``ImageField``, you will need to specify
  557. a second argument when you bind your form. So if we extend our
  558. ContactForm to include an ``ImageField`` called ``mugshot``, we
  559. need to bind the file data containing the mugshot image::
  560. # Bound form with an image field
  561. >>> from django.core.files.uploadedfile import SimpleUploadedFile
  562. >>> data = {'subject': 'hello',
  563. ... 'message': 'Hi there',
  564. ... 'sender': 'foo@example.com',
  565. ... 'cc_myself': True}
  566. >>> file_data = {'mugshot': SimpleUploadedFile('face.jpg', <file data>)}
  567. >>> f = ContactFormWithMugshot(data, file_data)
  568. In practice, you will usually specify ``request.FILES`` as the source
  569. of file data (just like you use ``request.POST`` as the source of
  570. form data)::
  571. # Bound form with an image field, data from the request
  572. >>> f = ContactFormWithMugshot(request.POST, request.FILES)
  573. Constructing an unbound form is the same as always -- just omit both
  574. form data *and* file data::
  575. # Unbound form with a image field
  576. >>> f = ContactFormWithMugshot()
  577. Testing for multipart forms
  578. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  579. .. method:: Form.is_multipart
  580. If you're writing reusable views or templates, you may not know ahead of time
  581. whether your form is a multipart form or not. The ``is_multipart()`` method
  582. tells you whether the form requires multipart encoding for submission::
  583. >>> f = ContactFormWithMugshot()
  584. >>> f.is_multipart()
  585. True
  586. Here's an example of how you might use this in a template::
  587. {% if form.is_multipart %}
  588. <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/foo/">
  589. {% else %}
  590. <form method="post" action="/foo/">
  591. {% endif %}
  592. {{ form }}
  593. </form>
  594. Subclassing forms
  595. -----------------
  596. If you have multiple ``Form`` classes that share fields, you can use
  597. subclassing to remove redundancy.
  598. When you subclass a custom ``Form`` class, the resulting subclass will
  599. include all fields of the parent class(es), followed by the fields you define
  600. in the subclass.
  601. In this example, ``ContactFormWithPriority`` contains all the fields from
  602. ``ContactForm``, plus an additional field, ``priority``. The ``ContactForm``
  603. fields are ordered first::
  604. >>> class ContactFormWithPriority(ContactForm):
  605. ... priority = forms.CharField()
  606. >>> f = ContactFormWithPriority(auto_id=False)
  607. >>> print(f.as_ul())
  608. <li>Subject: <input type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></li>
  609. <li>Message: <input type="text" name="message" /></li>
  610. <li>Sender: <input type="email" name="sender" /></li>
  611. <li>Cc myself: <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" /></li>
  612. <li>Priority: <input type="text" name="priority" /></li>
  613. It's possible to subclass multiple forms, treating forms as "mix-ins." In this
  614. example, ``BeatleForm`` subclasses both ``PersonForm`` and ``InstrumentForm``
  615. (in that order), and its field list includes the fields from the parent
  616. classes::
  617. >>> from django.forms import Form
  618. >>> class PersonForm(Form):
  619. ... first_name = CharField()
  620. ... last_name = CharField()
  621. >>> class InstrumentForm(Form):
  622. ... instrument = CharField()
  623. >>> class BeatleForm(PersonForm, InstrumentForm):
  624. ... haircut_type = CharField()
  625. >>> b = BeatleForm(auto_id=False)
  626. >>> print(b.as_ul())
  627. <li>First name: <input type="text" name="first_name" /></li>
  628. <li>Last name: <input type="text" name="last_name" /></li>
  629. <li>Instrument: <input type="text" name="instrument" /></li>
  630. <li>Haircut type: <input type="text" name="haircut_type" /></li>
  631. .. _form-prefix:
  632. Prefixes for forms
  633. ------------------
  634. .. attribute:: Form.prefix
  635. You can put several Django forms inside one ``<form>`` tag. To give each
  636. ``Form`` its own namespace, use the ``prefix`` keyword argument::
  637. >>> mother = PersonForm(prefix="mother")
  638. >>> father = PersonForm(prefix="father")
  639. >>> print(mother.as_ul())
  640. <li><label for="id_mother-first_name">First name:</label> <input type="text" name="mother-first_name" id="id_mother-first_name" /></li>
  641. <li><label for="id_mother-last_name">Last name:</label> <input type="text" name="mother-last_name" id="id_mother-last_name" /></li>
  642. >>> print(father.as_ul())
  643. <li><label for="id_father-first_name">First name:</label> <input type="text" name="father-first_name" id="id_father-first_name" /></li>
  644. <li><label for="id_father-last_name">Last name:</label> <input type="text" name="father-last_name" id="id_father-last_name" /></li>