validation.txt 16 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404
  1. .. currentmodule:: django.forms
  2. .. _form-and-field-validation:
  3. Form and field validation
  4. =========================
  5. Form validation happens when the data is cleaned. If you want to customize
  6. this process, there are various places to make changes, each one serving a
  7. different purpose. Three types of cleaning methods are run during form
  8. processing. These are normally executed when you call the ``is_valid()``
  9. method on a form. There are other things that can also trigger cleaning and
  10. validation (accessing the ``errors`` attribute or calling ``full_clean()``
  11. directly), but normally they won't be needed.
  12. In general, any cleaning method can raise ``ValidationError`` if there is a
  13. problem with the data it is processing, passing the relevant information to
  14. the ``ValidationError`` constructor. :ref:`See below <raising-validation-error>`
  15. for the best practice in raising ``ValidationError``. If no ``ValidationError``
  16. is raised, the method should return the cleaned (normalized) data as a Python
  17. object.
  18. Most validation can be done using `validators`_ - simple helpers that can be
  19. reused easily. Validators are simple functions (or callables) that take a single
  20. argument and raise ``ValidationError`` on invalid input. Validators are run
  21. after the field's ``to_python`` and ``validate`` methods have been called.
  22. Validation of a form is split into several steps, which can be customized or
  23. overridden:
  24. * The ``to_python()`` method on a ``Field`` is the first step in every
  25. validation. It coerces the value to a correct datatype and raises
  26. ``ValidationError`` if that is not possible. This method accepts the raw
  27. value from the widget and returns the converted value. For example, a
  28. ``FloatField`` will turn the data into a Python ``float`` or raise a
  29. ``ValidationError``.
  30. * The ``validate()`` method on a ``Field`` handles field-specific validation
  31. that is not suitable for a validator. It takes a value that has been
  32. coerced to a correct datatype and raises ``ValidationError`` on any error.
  33. This method does not return anything and shouldn't alter the value. You
  34. should override it to handle validation logic that you can't or don't
  35. want to put in a validator.
  36. * The ``run_validators()`` method on a ``Field`` runs all of the field's
  37. validators and aggregates all the errors into a single
  38. ``ValidationError``. You shouldn't need to override this method.
  39. * The ``clean()`` method on a ``Field`` subclass is responsible for running
  40. ``to_python()``, ``validate()``, and ``run_validators()`` in the correct
  41. order and propagating their errors. If, at any time, any of the methods
  42. raise ``ValidationError``, the validation stops and that error is raised.
  43. This method returns the clean data, which is then inserted into the
  44. ``cleaned_data`` dictionary of the form.
  45. * The ``clean_<fieldname>()`` method is called on a form subclass -- where
  46. ``<fieldname>`` is replaced with the name of the form field attribute.
  47. This method does any cleaning that is specific to that particular
  48. attribute, unrelated to the type of field that it is. This method is not
  49. passed any parameters. You will need to look up the value of the field
  50. in ``self.cleaned_data`` and remember that it will be a Python object
  51. at this point, not the original string submitted in the form (it will be
  52. in ``cleaned_data`` because the general field ``clean()`` method, above,
  53. has already cleaned the data once).
  54. For example, if you wanted to validate that the contents of a
  55. ``CharField`` called ``serialnumber`` was unique,
  56. ``clean_serialnumber()`` would be the right place to do this. You don't
  57. need a specific field (it's just a ``CharField``), but you want a
  58. formfield-specific piece of validation and, possibly,
  59. cleaning/normalizing the data.
  60. This method should return the cleaned value obtained from ``cleaned_data``,
  61. regardless of whether it changed anything or not.
  62. * The form subclass's ``clean()`` method can perform validation that requires
  63. access to multiple form fields. This is where you might put in checks such as
  64. "if field ``A``is supplied, field ``B`` must contain a valid email address".
  65. This method can return a completely different dictionary if it wishes, which
  66. will be used as the ``cleaned_data``.
  67. Since the field validation methods have been run by the time ``clean()`` is
  68. called, you also have access to the form's ``errors`` attribute which
  69. contains all the errors raised by cleaning of individual fields.
  70. Note that any errors raised by your :meth:`Form.clean()` override will not
  71. be associated with any field in particular. They go into a special
  72. "field" (called ``__all__``), which you can access via the
  73. :meth:`~django.forms.Form.non_field_errors` method if you need to. If you
  74. want to attach errors to a specific field in the form, you need to call
  75. :meth:`~django.forms.Form.add_error()`.
  76. Also note that there are special considerations when overriding
  77. the ``clean()`` method of a ``ModelForm`` subclass. (see the
  78. :ref:`ModelForm documentation
  79. <overriding-modelform-clean-method>` for more information)
  80. These methods are run in the order given above, one field at a time. That is,
  81. for each field in the form (in the order they are declared in the form
  82. definition), the ``Field.clean()`` method (or its override) is run, then
  83. ``clean_<fieldname>()``. Finally, once those two methods are run for every
  84. field, the :meth:`Form.clean()` method, or its override, is executed whether
  85. or not the previous methods have raised errors.
  86. Examples of each of these methods are provided below.
  87. As mentioned, any of these methods can raise a ``ValidationError``. For any
  88. field, if the ``Field.clean()`` method raises a ``ValidationError``, any
  89. field-specific cleaning method is not called. However, the cleaning methods
  90. for all remaining fields are still executed.
  91. .. _raising-validation-error:
  92. Raising ``ValidationError``
  93. ---------------------------
  94. In order to make error messages flexible and easy to override, consider the
  95. following guidelines:
  96. * Provide a descriptive error ``code`` to the constructor::
  97. # Good
  98. ValidationError(_('Invalid value'), code='invalid')
  99. # Bad
  100. ValidationError(_('Invalid value'))
  101. * Don't coerce variables into the message; use placeholders and the ``params``
  102. argument of the constructor::
  103. # Good
  104. ValidationError(
  105. _('Invalid value: %(value)s'),
  106. params={'value': '42'},
  107. )
  108. # Bad
  109. ValidationError(_('Invalid value: %s') % value)
  110. * Use mapping keys instead of positional formatting. This enables putting
  111. the variables in any order or omitting them altogether when rewriting the
  112. message::
  113. # Good
  114. ValidationError(
  115. _('Invalid value: %(value)s'),
  116. params={'value': '42'},
  117. )
  118. # Bad
  119. ValidationError(
  120. _('Invalid value: %s'),
  121. params=('42',),
  122. )
  123. * Wrap the message with ``gettext`` to enable translation::
  124. # Good
  125. ValidationError(_('Invalid value'))
  126. # Bad
  127. ValidationError('Invalid value')
  128. Putting it all together::
  129. raise ValidationError(
  130. _('Invalid value: %(value)s'),
  131. code='invalid',
  132. params={'value': '42'},
  133. )
  134. Following these guidelines is particularly necessary if you write reusable
  135. forms, form fields, and model fields.
  136. While not recommended, if you are at the end of the validation chain
  137. (i.e. your form ``clean()`` method) and you know you will *never* need
  138. to override your error message you can still opt for the less verbose::
  139. ValidationError(_('Invalid value: %s') % value)
  140. The :meth:`Form.errors.as_data() <django.forms.Form.errors.as_data()>` and
  141. :meth:`Form.errors.as_json() <django.forms.Form.errors.as_json()>` methods
  142. greatly benefit from fully featured ``ValidationError``\s (with a ``code`` name
  143. and a ``params`` dictionary).
  144. Raising multiple errors
  145. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  146. If you detect multiple errors during a cleaning method and wish to signal all
  147. of them to the form submitter, it is possible to pass a list of errors to the
  148. ``ValidationError`` constructor.
  149. As above, it is recommended to pass a list of ``ValidationError`` instances
  150. with ``code``\s and ``params`` but a list of strings will also work::
  151. # Good
  152. raise ValidationError([
  153. ValidationError(_('Error 1'), code='error1'),
  154. ValidationError(_('Error 2'), code='error2'),
  155. ])
  156. # Bad
  157. raise ValidationError([
  158. _('Error 1'),
  159. _('Error 2'),
  160. ])
  161. Using validation in practice
  162. ----------------------------
  163. The previous sections explained how validation works in general for forms.
  164. Since it can sometimes be easier to put things into place by seeing each
  165. feature in use, here are a series of small examples that use each of the
  166. previous features.
  167. .. _validators:
  168. Using validators
  169. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  170. Django's form (and model) fields support use of simple utility functions and
  171. classes known as validators. A validator is merely a callable object or
  172. function that takes a value and simply returns nothing if the value is valid or
  173. raises a :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` if not. These can be
  174. passed to a field's constructor, via the field's ``validators`` argument, or
  175. defined on the :class:`~django.forms.Field` class itself with the
  176. ``default_validators`` attribute.
  177. Simple validators can be used to validate values inside the field, let's have
  178. a look at Django's ``SlugField``::
  179. from django.forms import CharField
  180. from django.core import validators
  181. class SlugField(CharField):
  182. default_validators = [validators.validate_slug]
  183. As you can see, ``SlugField`` is just a ``CharField`` with a customized
  184. validator that validates that submitted text obeys to some character rules.
  185. This can also be done on field definition so::
  186. slug = forms.SlugField()
  187. is equivalent to::
  188. slug = forms.CharField(validators=[validators.validate_slug])
  189. Common cases such as validating against an email or a regular expression can be
  190. handled using existing validator classes available in Django. For example,
  191. ``validators.validate_slug`` is an instance of
  192. a :class:`~django.core.validators.RegexValidator` constructed with the first
  193. argument being the pattern: ``^[-a-zA-Z0-9_]+$``. See the section on
  194. :doc:`writing validators </ref/validators>` to see a list of what is already
  195. available and for an example of how to write a validator.
  196. Form field default cleaning
  197. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  198. Let's first create a custom form field that validates its input is a string
  199. containing comma-separated email addresses. The full class looks like this::
  200. from django import forms
  201. from django.core.validators import validate_email
  202. class MultiEmailField(forms.Field):
  203. def to_python(self, value):
  204. "Normalize data to a list of strings."
  205. # Return an empty list if no input was given.
  206. if not value:
  207. return []
  208. return value.split(',')
  209. def validate(self, value):
  210. "Check if value consists only of valid emails."
  211. # Use the parent's handling of required fields, etc.
  212. super(MultiEmailField, self).validate(value)
  213. for email in value:
  214. validate_email(email)
  215. Every form that uses this field will have these methods run before anything
  216. else can be done with the field's data. This is cleaning that is specific to
  217. this type of field, regardless of how it is subsequently used.
  218. Let's create a simple ``ContactForm`` to demonstrate how you'd use this
  219. field::
  220. class ContactForm(forms.Form):
  221. subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
  222. message = forms.CharField()
  223. sender = forms.EmailField()
  224. recipients = MultiEmailField()
  225. cc_myself = forms.BooleanField(required=False)
  226. Simply use ``MultiEmailField`` like any other form field. When the
  227. ``is_valid()`` method is called on the form, the ``MultiEmailField.clean()``
  228. method will be run as part of the cleaning process and it will, in turn, call
  229. the custom ``to_python()`` and ``validate()`` methods.
  230. Cleaning a specific field attribute
  231. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  232. Continuing on from the previous example, suppose that in our ``ContactForm``,
  233. we want to make sure that the ``recipients`` field always contains the address
  234. ``"fred@example.com"``. This is validation that is specific to our form, so we
  235. don't want to put it into the general ``MultiEmailField`` class. Instead, we
  236. write a cleaning method that operates on the ``recipients`` field, like so::
  237. from django import forms
  238. class ContactForm(forms.Form):
  239. # Everything as before.
  240. ...
  241. def clean_recipients(self):
  242. data = self.cleaned_data['recipients']
  243. if "fred@example.com" not in data:
  244. raise forms.ValidationError("You have forgotten about Fred!")
  245. # Always return the cleaned data, whether you have changed it or
  246. # not.
  247. return data
  248. .. _validating-fields-with-clean:
  249. Cleaning and validating fields that depend on each other
  250. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  251. Suppose we add another requirement to our contact form: if the ``cc_myself``
  252. field is ``True``, the ``subject`` must contain the word ``"help"``. We are
  253. performing validation on more than one field at a time, so the form's
  254. :meth:`~Form.clean()` method is a good spot to do this. Notice that we are
  255. talking about the ``clean()`` method on the form here, whereas earlier we were
  256. writing a ``clean()`` method on a field. It's important to keep the field and
  257. form difference clear when working out where to validate things. Fields are
  258. single data points, forms are a collection of fields.
  259. By the time the form's ``clean()`` method is called, all the individual field
  260. clean methods will have been run (the previous two sections), so
  261. ``self.cleaned_data`` will be populated with any data that has survived so
  262. far. So you also need to remember to allow for the fact that the fields you
  263. are wanting to validate might not have survived the initial individual field
  264. checks.
  265. There are two ways to report any errors from this step. Probably the most
  266. common method is to display the error at the top of the form. To create such
  267. an error, you can raise a ``ValidationError`` from the ``clean()`` method. For
  268. example::
  269. from django import forms
  270. class ContactForm(forms.Form):
  271. # Everything as before.
  272. ...
  273. def clean(self):
  274. cleaned_data = super(ContactForm, self).clean()
  275. cc_myself = cleaned_data.get("cc_myself")
  276. subject = cleaned_data.get("subject")
  277. if cc_myself and subject:
  278. # Only do something if both fields are valid so far.
  279. if "help" not in subject:
  280. raise forms.ValidationError(
  281. "Did not send for 'help' in the subject despite "
  282. "CC'ing yourself."
  283. )
  284. In this code, if the validation error is raised, the form will display an
  285. error message at the top of the form (normally) describing the problem.
  286. Note that the call to ``super(ContactForm, self).clean()`` in the example code
  287. ensures that any validation logic in parent classes is maintained.
  288. The second approach might involve assigning the error message to one of the
  289. fields. In this case, let's assign an error message to both the "subject" and
  290. "cc_myself" rows in the form display. Be careful when doing this in practice,
  291. since it can lead to confusing form output. We're showing what is possible
  292. here and leaving it up to you and your designers to work out what works
  293. effectively in your particular situation. Our new code (replacing the previous
  294. sample) looks like this::
  295. from django import forms
  296. class ContactForm(forms.Form):
  297. # Everything as before.
  298. ...
  299. def clean(self):
  300. cleaned_data = super(ContactForm, self).clean()
  301. cc_myself = cleaned_data.get("cc_myself")
  302. subject = cleaned_data.get("subject")
  303. if cc_myself and subject and "help" not in subject:
  304. msg = "Must put 'help' in subject when cc'ing yourself."
  305. self.add_error('cc_myself', msg)
  306. self.add_error('subject', msg)
  307. The second argument of ``add_error()`` can be a simple string, or preferably
  308. an instance of ``ValidationError``. See :ref:`raising-validation-error` for
  309. more details. Note that ``add_error()`` automatically removes the field
  310. from ``cleaned_data``.