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  1. ==========================
  2. Creating forms from models
  3. ==========================
  4. .. currentmodule:: django.forms
  5. ``ModelForm``
  6. =============
  7. .. class:: ModelForm
  8. If you're building a database-driven app, chances are you'll have forms that
  9. map closely to Django models. For instance, you might have a ``BlogComment``
  10. model, and you want to create a form that lets people submit comments. In this
  11. case, it would be redundant to define the field types in your form, because
  12. you've already defined the fields in your model.
  13. For this reason, Django provides a helper class that lets you create a ``Form``
  14. class from a Django model.
  15. For example:
  16. .. code-block:: pycon
  17. >>> from django.forms import ModelForm
  18. >>> from myapp.models import Article
  19. # Create the form class.
  20. >>> class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  21. ... class Meta:
  22. ... model = Article
  23. ... fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter"]
  24. ...
  25. # Creating a form to add an article.
  26. >>> form = ArticleForm()
  27. # Creating a form to change an existing article.
  28. >>> article = Article.objects.get(pk=1)
  29. >>> form = ArticleForm(instance=article)
  30. Field types
  31. -----------
  32. The generated ``Form`` class will have a form field for every model field
  33. specified, in the order specified in the ``fields`` attribute.
  34. Each model field has a corresponding default form field. For example, a
  35. ``CharField`` on a model is represented as a ``CharField`` on a form. A model
  36. ``ManyToManyField`` is represented as a ``MultipleChoiceField``. Here is the
  37. full list of conversions:
  38. .. currentmodule:: django.db.models
  39. =================================== ==================================================
  40. Model field Form field
  41. =================================== ==================================================
  42. :class:`AutoField` Not represented in the form
  43. :class:`BigAutoField` Not represented in the form
  44. :class:`BigIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField` with
  45. ``min_value`` set to -9223372036854775808
  46. and ``max_value`` set to 9223372036854775807.
  47. :class:`BinaryField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField`, if
  48. :attr:`~.Field.editable` is set to
  49. ``True`` on the model field, otherwise not
  50. represented in the form.
  51. :class:`BooleanField` :class:`~django.forms.BooleanField`, or
  52. :class:`~django.forms.NullBooleanField` if
  53. ``null=True``.
  54. :class:`CharField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField` with
  55. ``max_length`` set to the model field's
  56. ``max_length`` and
  57. :attr:`~django.forms.CharField.empty_value`
  58. set to ``None`` if ``null=True``.
  59. :class:`DateField` :class:`~django.forms.DateField`
  60. :class:`DateTimeField` :class:`~django.forms.DateTimeField`
  61. :class:`DecimalField` :class:`~django.forms.DecimalField`
  62. :class:`DurationField` :class:`~django.forms.DurationField`
  63. :class:`EmailField` :class:`~django.forms.EmailField`
  64. :class:`FileField` :class:`~django.forms.FileField`
  65. :class:`FilePathField` :class:`~django.forms.FilePathField`
  66. :class:`FloatField` :class:`~django.forms.FloatField`
  67. :class:`ForeignKey` :class:`~django.forms.ModelChoiceField`
  68. (see below)
  69. :class:`ImageField` :class:`~django.forms.ImageField`
  70. :class:`IntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField`
  71. ``IPAddressField`` ``IPAddressField``
  72. :class:`GenericIPAddressField` :class:`~django.forms.GenericIPAddressField`
  73. :class:`JSONField` :class:`~django.forms.JSONField`
  74. :class:`ManyToManyField` :class:`~django.forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField`
  75. (see below)
  76. :class:`PositiveBigIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField`
  77. :class:`PositiveIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField`
  78. :class:`PositiveSmallIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField`
  79. :class:`SlugField` :class:`~django.forms.SlugField`
  80. :class:`SmallAutoField` Not represented in the form
  81. :class:`SmallIntegerField` :class:`~django.forms.IntegerField`
  82. :class:`TextField` :class:`~django.forms.CharField` with
  83. ``widget=forms.Textarea``
  84. :class:`TimeField` :class:`~django.forms.TimeField`
  85. :class:`URLField` :class:`~django.forms.URLField`
  86. :class:`UUIDField` :class:`~django.forms.UUIDField`
  87. =================================== ==================================================
  88. .. currentmodule:: django.forms
  89. As you might expect, the ``ForeignKey`` and ``ManyToManyField`` model field
  90. types are special cases:
  91. * ``ForeignKey`` is represented by ``django.forms.ModelChoiceField``,
  92. which is a ``ChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``.
  93. * ``ManyToManyField`` is represented by
  94. ``django.forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField``, which is a
  95. ``MultipleChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``.
  96. In addition, each generated form field has attributes set as follows:
  97. * If the model field has ``blank=True``, then ``required`` is set to
  98. ``False`` on the form field. Otherwise, ``required=True``.
  99. * The form field's ``label`` is set to the ``verbose_name`` of the model
  100. field, with the first character capitalized.
  101. * The form field's ``help_text`` is set to the ``help_text`` of the model
  102. field.
  103. * If the model field has ``choices`` set, then the form field's ``widget``
  104. will be set to ``Select``, with choices coming from the model field's
  105. ``choices``. The choices will normally include the blank choice which is
  106. selected by default. If the field is required, this forces the user to
  107. make a selection. The blank choice will not be included if the model
  108. field has ``blank=False`` and an explicit ``default`` value (the
  109. ``default`` value will be initially selected instead).
  110. Finally, note that you can override the form field used for a given model
  111. field. See `Overriding the default fields`_ below.
  112. A full example
  113. --------------
  114. Consider this set of models::
  115. from django.db import models
  116. from django.forms import ModelForm
  117. TITLE_CHOICES = {
  118. "MR": "Mr.",
  119. "MRS": "Mrs.",
  120. "MS": "Ms.",
  121. }
  122. class Author(models.Model):
  123. name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  124. title = models.CharField(max_length=3, choices=TITLE_CHOICES)
  125. birth_date = models.DateField(blank=True, null=True)
  126. def __str__(self):
  127. return self.name
  128. class Book(models.Model):
  129. name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  130. authors = models.ManyToManyField(Author)
  131. class AuthorForm(ModelForm):
  132. class Meta:
  133. model = Author
  134. fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"]
  135. class BookForm(ModelForm):
  136. class Meta:
  137. model = Book
  138. fields = ["name", "authors"]
  139. With these models, the ``ModelForm`` subclasses above would be roughly
  140. equivalent to this (the only difference being the ``save()`` method, which
  141. we'll discuss in a moment.)::
  142. from django import forms
  143. class AuthorForm(forms.Form):
  144. name = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
  145. title = forms.CharField(
  146. max_length=3,
  147. widget=forms.Select(choices=TITLE_CHOICES),
  148. )
  149. birth_date = forms.DateField(required=False)
  150. class BookForm(forms.Form):
  151. name = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
  152. authors = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(queryset=Author.objects.all())
  153. .. _validation-on-modelform:
  154. Validation on a ``ModelForm``
  155. -----------------------------
  156. There are two main steps involved in validating a ``ModelForm``:
  157. 1. :doc:`Validating the form </ref/forms/validation>`
  158. 2. :ref:`Validating the model instance <validating-objects>`
  159. Just like normal form validation, model form validation is triggered implicitly
  160. when calling :meth:`~django.forms.Form.is_valid()` or accessing the
  161. :attr:`~django.forms.Form.errors` attribute and explicitly when calling
  162. ``full_clean()``, although you will typically not use the latter method in
  163. practice.
  164. ``Model`` validation (:meth:`Model.full_clean()
  165. <django.db.models.Model.full_clean()>`) is triggered from within the form
  166. validation step, right after the form's ``clean()`` method is called.
  167. .. warning::
  168. The cleaning process modifies the model instance passed to the
  169. ``ModelForm`` constructor in various ways. For instance, any date fields on
  170. the model are converted into actual date objects. Failed validation may
  171. leave the underlying model instance in an inconsistent state and therefore
  172. it's not recommended to reuse it.
  173. .. _overriding-modelform-clean-method:
  174. Overriding the ``clean()`` method
  175. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  176. You can override the ``clean()`` method on a model form to provide additional
  177. validation in the same way you can on a normal form.
  178. A model form instance attached to a model object will contain an ``instance``
  179. attribute that gives its methods access to that specific model instance.
  180. .. warning::
  181. The ``ModelForm.clean()`` method sets a flag that makes the :ref:`model
  182. validation <validating-objects>` step validate the uniqueness of model
  183. fields that are marked as ``unique``, ``unique_together`` or
  184. ``unique_for_date|month|year``.
  185. If you would like to override the ``clean()`` method and maintain this
  186. validation, you must call the parent class's ``clean()`` method.
  187. Interaction with model validation
  188. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  189. As part of the validation process, ``ModelForm`` will call the ``clean()``
  190. method of each field on your model that has a corresponding field on your form.
  191. If you have excluded any model fields, validation will not be run on those
  192. fields. See the :doc:`form validation </ref/forms/validation>` documentation
  193. for more on how field cleaning and validation work.
  194. The model's ``clean()`` method will be called before any uniqueness checks are
  195. made. See :ref:`Validating objects <validating-objects>` for more information
  196. on the model's ``clean()`` hook.
  197. .. _considerations-regarding-model-errormessages:
  198. Considerations regarding model's ``error_messages``
  199. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  200. Error messages defined at the
  201. :attr:`form field <django.forms.Field.error_messages>` level or at the
  202. :ref:`form Meta <modelforms-overriding-default-fields>` level always take
  203. precedence over the error messages defined at the
  204. :attr:`model field <django.db.models.Field.error_messages>` level.
  205. Error messages defined on :attr:`model fields
  206. <django.db.models.Field.error_messages>` are only used when the
  207. ``ValidationError`` is raised during the :ref:`model validation
  208. <validating-objects>` step and no corresponding error messages are defined at
  209. the form level.
  210. You can override the error messages from ``NON_FIELD_ERRORS`` raised by model
  211. validation by adding the :data:`~django.core.exceptions.NON_FIELD_ERRORS` key
  212. to the ``error_messages`` dictionary of the ``ModelForm``’s inner ``Meta`` class::
  213. from django.core.exceptions import NON_FIELD_ERRORS
  214. from django.forms import ModelForm
  215. class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  216. class Meta:
  217. error_messages = {
  218. NON_FIELD_ERRORS: {
  219. "unique_together": "%(model_name)s's %(field_labels)s are not unique.",
  220. }
  221. }
  222. .. _topics-modelform-save:
  223. The ``save()`` method
  224. ---------------------
  225. Every ``ModelForm`` also has a ``save()`` method. This method creates and saves
  226. a database object from the data bound to the form. A subclass of ``ModelForm``
  227. can accept an existing model instance as the keyword argument ``instance``; if
  228. this is supplied, ``save()`` will update that instance. If it's not supplied,
  229. ``save()`` will create a new instance of the specified model:
  230. .. code-block:: pycon
  231. >>> from myapp.models import Article
  232. >>> from myapp.forms import ArticleForm
  233. # Create a form instance from POST data.
  234. >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST)
  235. # Save a new Article object from the form's data.
  236. >>> new_article = f.save()
  237. # Create a form to edit an existing Article, but use
  238. # POST data to populate the form.
  239. >>> a = Article.objects.get(pk=1)
  240. >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST, instance=a)
  241. >>> f.save()
  242. Note that if the form :ref:`hasn't been validated
  243. <validation-on-modelform>`, calling ``save()`` will do so by checking
  244. ``form.errors``. A ``ValueError`` will be raised if the data in the form
  245. doesn't validate -- i.e., if ``form.errors`` evaluates to ``True``.
  246. If an optional field doesn't appear in the form's data, the resulting model
  247. instance uses the model field :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.default`, if
  248. there is one, for that field. This behavior doesn't apply to fields that use
  249. :class:`~django.forms.CheckboxInput`,
  250. :class:`~django.forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple`, or
  251. :class:`~django.forms.SelectMultiple` (or any custom widget whose
  252. :meth:`~django.forms.Widget.value_omitted_from_data` method always returns
  253. ``False``) since an unchecked checkbox and unselected ``<select multiple>``
  254. don't appear in the data of an HTML form submission. Use a custom form field or
  255. widget if you're designing an API and want the default fallback behavior for a
  256. field that uses one of these widgets.
  257. This ``save()`` method accepts an optional ``commit`` keyword argument, which
  258. accepts either ``True`` or ``False``. If you call ``save()`` with
  259. ``commit=False``, then it will return an object that hasn't yet been saved to
  260. the database. In this case, it's up to you to call ``save()`` on the resulting
  261. model instance. This is useful if you want to do custom processing on the
  262. object before saving it, or if you want to use one of the specialized
  263. :ref:`model saving options <ref-models-force-insert>`. ``commit`` is ``True``
  264. by default.
  265. Another side effect of using ``commit=False`` is seen when your model has
  266. a many-to-many relation with another model. If your model has a many-to-many
  267. relation and you specify ``commit=False`` when you save a form, Django cannot
  268. immediately save the form data for the many-to-many relation. This is because
  269. it isn't possible to save many-to-many data for an instance until the instance
  270. exists in the database.
  271. To work around this problem, every time you save a form using ``commit=False``,
  272. Django adds a ``save_m2m()`` method to your ``ModelForm`` subclass. After
  273. you've manually saved the instance produced by the form, you can invoke
  274. ``save_m2m()`` to save the many-to-many form data. For example:
  275. .. code-block:: pycon
  276. # Create a form instance with POST data.
  277. >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST)
  278. # Create, but don't save the new author instance.
  279. >>> new_author = f.save(commit=False)
  280. # Modify the author in some way.
  281. >>> new_author.some_field = "some_value"
  282. # Save the new instance.
  283. >>> new_author.save()
  284. # Now, save the many-to-many data for the form.
  285. >>> f.save_m2m()
  286. Calling ``save_m2m()`` is only required if you use ``save(commit=False)``.
  287. When you use a ``save()`` on a form, all data -- including many-to-many data --
  288. is saved without the need for any additional method calls. For example:
  289. .. code-block:: pycon
  290. # Create a form instance with POST data.
  291. >>> a = Author()
  292. >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST, instance=a)
  293. # Create and save the new author instance. There's no need to do anything else.
  294. >>> new_author = f.save()
  295. Other than the ``save()`` and ``save_m2m()`` methods, a ``ModelForm`` works
  296. exactly the same way as any other ``forms`` form. For example, the
  297. ``is_valid()`` method is used to check for validity, the ``is_multipart()``
  298. method is used to determine whether a form requires multipart file upload (and
  299. hence whether ``request.FILES`` must be passed to the form), etc. See
  300. :ref:`binding-uploaded-files` for more information.
  301. .. _modelforms-selecting-fields:
  302. Selecting the fields to use
  303. ---------------------------
  304. It is strongly recommended that you explicitly set all fields that should be
  305. edited in the form using the ``fields`` attribute. Failure to do so can easily
  306. lead to security problems when a form unexpectedly allows a user to set certain
  307. fields, especially when new fields are added to a model. Depending on how the
  308. form is rendered, the problem may not even be visible on the web page.
  309. The alternative approach would be to include all fields automatically, or
  310. remove only some. This fundamental approach is known to be much less secure
  311. and has led to serious exploits on major websites (e.g. `GitHub
  312. <https://github.blog/2012-03-04-public-key-security-vulnerability-and-mitigation/>`_).
  313. There are, however, two shortcuts available for cases where you can guarantee
  314. these security concerns do not apply to you:
  315. 1. Set the ``fields`` attribute to the special value ``'__all__'`` to indicate
  316. that all fields in the model should be used. For example::
  317. from django.forms import ModelForm
  318. class AuthorForm(ModelForm):
  319. class Meta:
  320. model = Author
  321. fields = "__all__"
  322. 2. Set the ``exclude`` attribute of the ``ModelForm``’s inner ``Meta`` class to
  323. a list of fields to be excluded from the form.
  324. For example::
  325. class PartialAuthorForm(ModelForm):
  326. class Meta:
  327. model = Author
  328. exclude = ["title"]
  329. Since the ``Author`` model has the 3 fields ``name``, ``title`` and
  330. ``birth_date``, this will result in the fields ``name`` and ``birth_date``
  331. being present on the form.
  332. If either of these are used, the order the fields appear in the form will be the
  333. order the fields are defined in the model, with ``ManyToManyField`` instances
  334. appearing last.
  335. In addition, Django applies the following rule: if you set ``editable=False`` on
  336. the model field, *any* form created from the model via ``ModelForm`` will not
  337. include that field.
  338. .. note::
  339. Any fields not included in a form by the above logic
  340. will not be set by the form's ``save()`` method. Also, if you
  341. manually add the excluded fields back to the form, they will not
  342. be initialized from the model instance.
  343. Django will prevent any attempt to save an incomplete model, so if
  344. the model does not allow the missing fields to be empty, and does
  345. not provide a default value for the missing fields, any attempt to
  346. ``save()`` a ``ModelForm`` with missing fields will fail. To
  347. avoid this failure, you must instantiate your model with initial
  348. values for the missing, but required fields::
  349. author = Author(title="Mr")
  350. form = PartialAuthorForm(request.POST, instance=author)
  351. form.save()
  352. Alternatively, you can use ``save(commit=False)`` and manually set
  353. any extra required fields::
  354. form = PartialAuthorForm(request.POST)
  355. author = form.save(commit=False)
  356. author.title = "Mr"
  357. author.save()
  358. See the `section on saving forms`_ for more details on using
  359. ``save(commit=False)``.
  360. .. _section on saving forms: `The save() method`_
  361. .. _modelforms-overriding-default-fields:
  362. Overriding the default fields
  363. -----------------------------
  364. The default field types, as described in the `Field types`_ table above, are
  365. sensible defaults. If you have a ``DateField`` in your model, chances are you'd
  366. want that to be represented as a ``DateField`` in your form. But ``ModelForm``
  367. gives you the flexibility of changing the form field for a given model.
  368. To specify a custom widget for a field, use the ``widgets`` attribute of the
  369. inner ``Meta`` class. This should be a dictionary mapping field names to widget
  370. classes or instances.
  371. For example, if you want the ``CharField`` for the ``name`` attribute of
  372. ``Author`` to be represented by a ``<textarea>`` instead of its default
  373. ``<input type="text">``, you can override the field's widget::
  374. from django.forms import ModelForm, Textarea
  375. from myapp.models import Author
  376. class AuthorForm(ModelForm):
  377. class Meta:
  378. model = Author
  379. fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"]
  380. widgets = {
  381. "name": Textarea(attrs={"cols": 80, "rows": 20}),
  382. }
  383. The ``widgets`` dictionary accepts either widget instances (e.g.,
  384. ``Textarea(...)``) or classes (e.g., ``Textarea``). Note that the ``widgets``
  385. dictionary is ignored for a model field with a non-empty ``choices`` attribute.
  386. In this case, you must override the form field to use a different widget.
  387. Similarly, you can specify the ``labels``, ``help_texts`` and ``error_messages``
  388. attributes of the inner ``Meta`` class if you want to further customize a field.
  389. For example if you wanted to customize the wording of all user facing strings for
  390. the ``name`` field::
  391. from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
  392. class AuthorForm(ModelForm):
  393. class Meta:
  394. model = Author
  395. fields = ["name", "title", "birth_date"]
  396. labels = {
  397. "name": _("Writer"),
  398. }
  399. help_texts = {
  400. "name": _("Some useful help text."),
  401. }
  402. error_messages = {
  403. "name": {
  404. "max_length": _("This writer's name is too long."),
  405. },
  406. }
  407. You can also specify ``field_classes`` or ``formfield_callback`` to customize
  408. the type of fields instantiated by the form.
  409. For example, if you wanted to use ``MySlugFormField`` for the ``slug``
  410. field, you could do the following::
  411. from django.forms import ModelForm
  412. from myapp.models import Article
  413. class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  414. class Meta:
  415. model = Article
  416. fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"]
  417. field_classes = {
  418. "slug": MySlugFormField,
  419. }
  420. or::
  421. from django.forms import ModelForm
  422. from myapp.models import Article
  423. def formfield_for_dbfield(db_field, **kwargs):
  424. if db_field.name == "slug":
  425. return MySlugFormField()
  426. return db_field.formfield(**kwargs)
  427. class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  428. class Meta:
  429. model = Article
  430. fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"]
  431. formfield_callback = formfield_for_dbfield
  432. Finally, if you want complete control over of a field -- including its type,
  433. validators, required, etc. -- you can do this by declaratively specifying
  434. fields like you would in a regular ``Form``.
  435. If you want to specify a field's validators, you can do so by defining
  436. the field declaratively and setting its ``validators`` parameter::
  437. from django.forms import CharField, ModelForm
  438. from myapp.models import Article
  439. class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  440. slug = CharField(validators=[validate_slug])
  441. class Meta:
  442. model = Article
  443. fields = ["pub_date", "headline", "content", "reporter", "slug"]
  444. .. note::
  445. When you explicitly instantiate a form field like this, it is important to
  446. understand how ``ModelForm`` and regular ``Form`` are related.
  447. ``ModelForm`` is a regular ``Form`` which can automatically generate
  448. certain fields. The fields that are automatically generated depend on
  449. the content of the ``Meta`` class and on which fields have already been
  450. defined declaratively. Basically, ``ModelForm`` will **only** generate fields
  451. that are **missing** from the form, or in other words, fields that weren't
  452. defined declaratively.
  453. Fields defined declaratively are left as-is, therefore any customizations
  454. made to ``Meta`` attributes such as ``widgets``, ``labels``, ``help_texts``,
  455. or ``error_messages`` are ignored; these only apply to fields that are
  456. generated automatically.
  457. Similarly, fields defined declaratively do not draw their attributes like
  458. ``max_length`` or ``required`` from the corresponding model. If you want to
  459. maintain the behavior specified in the model, you must set the relevant
  460. arguments explicitly when declaring the form field.
  461. For example, if the ``Article`` model looks like this::
  462. class Article(models.Model):
  463. headline = models.CharField(
  464. max_length=200,
  465. null=True,
  466. blank=True,
  467. help_text="Use puns liberally",
  468. )
  469. content = models.TextField()
  470. and you want to do some custom validation for ``headline``, while keeping
  471. the ``blank`` and ``help_text`` values as specified, you might define
  472. ``ArticleForm`` like this::
  473. class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
  474. headline = MyFormField(
  475. max_length=200,
  476. required=False,
  477. help_text="Use puns liberally",
  478. )
  479. class Meta:
  480. model = Article
  481. fields = ["headline", "content"]
  482. You must ensure that the type of the form field can be used to set the
  483. contents of the corresponding model field. When they are not compatible,
  484. you will get a ``ValueError`` as no implicit conversion takes place.
  485. See the :doc:`form field documentation </ref/forms/fields>` for more information
  486. on fields and their arguments.
  487. Enabling localization of fields
  488. -------------------------------
  489. By default, the fields in a ``ModelForm`` will not localize their data. To
  490. enable localization for fields, you can use the ``localized_fields``
  491. attribute on the ``Meta`` class.
  492. >>> from django.forms import ModelForm
  493. >>> from myapp.models import Author
  494. >>> class AuthorForm(ModelForm):
  495. ... class Meta:
  496. ... model = Author
  497. ... localized_fields = ['birth_date']
  498. If ``localized_fields`` is set to the special value ``'__all__'``, all fields
  499. will be localized.
  500. Form inheritance
  501. ----------------
  502. As with basic forms, you can extend and reuse ``ModelForms`` by inheriting
  503. them. This is useful if you need to declare extra fields or extra methods on a
  504. parent class for use in a number of forms derived from models. For example,
  505. using the previous ``ArticleForm`` class:
  506. .. code-block:: pycon
  507. >>> class EnhancedArticleForm(ArticleForm):
  508. ... def clean_pub_date(self): ...
  509. ...
  510. This creates a form that behaves identically to ``ArticleForm``, except there's
  511. some extra validation and cleaning for the ``pub_date`` field.
  512. You can also subclass the parent's ``Meta`` inner class if you want to change
  513. the ``Meta.fields`` or ``Meta.exclude`` lists:
  514. .. code-block:: pycon
  515. >>> class RestrictedArticleForm(EnhancedArticleForm):
  516. ... class Meta(ArticleForm.Meta):
  517. ... exclude = ["body"]
  518. ...
  519. This adds the extra method from the ``EnhancedArticleForm`` and modifies
  520. the original ``ArticleForm.Meta`` to remove one field.
  521. There are a couple of things to note, however.
  522. * Normal Python name resolution rules apply. If you have multiple base
  523. classes that declare a ``Meta`` inner class, only the first one will be
  524. used. This means the child's ``Meta``, if it exists, otherwise the
  525. ``Meta`` of the first parent, etc.
  526. * It's possible to inherit from both ``Form`` and ``ModelForm`` simultaneously,
  527. however, you must ensure that ``ModelForm`` appears first in the MRO. This is
  528. because these classes rely on different metaclasses and a class can only have
  529. one metaclass.
  530. * It's possible to declaratively remove a ``Field`` inherited from a parent class by
  531. setting the name to be ``None`` on the subclass.
  532. You can only use this technique to opt out from a field defined declaratively
  533. by a parent class; it won't prevent the ``ModelForm`` metaclass from generating
  534. a default field. To opt-out from default fields, see
  535. :ref:`modelforms-selecting-fields`.
  536. Providing initial values
  537. ------------------------
  538. As with regular forms, it's possible to specify initial data for forms by
  539. specifying an ``initial`` parameter when instantiating the form. Initial
  540. values provided this way will override both initial values from the form field
  541. and values from an attached model instance. For example:
  542. .. code-block:: pycon
  543. >>> article = Article.objects.get(pk=1)
  544. >>> article.headline
  545. 'My headline'
  546. >>> form = ArticleForm(initial={"headline": "Initial headline"}, instance=article)
  547. >>> form["headline"].value()
  548. 'Initial headline'
  549. .. _modelforms-factory:
  550. ModelForm factory function
  551. --------------------------
  552. You can create forms from a given model using the standalone function
  553. :func:`~django.forms.models.modelform_factory`, instead of using a class
  554. definition. This may be more convenient if you do not have many customizations
  555. to make:
  556. .. code-block:: pycon
  557. >>> from django.forms import modelform_factory
  558. >>> from myapp.models import Book
  559. >>> BookForm = modelform_factory(Book, fields=["author", "title"])
  560. This can also be used to make modifications to existing forms, for example by
  561. specifying the widgets to be used for a given field:
  562. .. code-block:: pycon
  563. >>> from django.forms import Textarea
  564. >>> Form = modelform_factory(Book, form=BookForm, widgets={"title": Textarea()})
  565. The fields to include can be specified using the ``fields`` and ``exclude``
  566. keyword arguments, or the corresponding attributes on the ``ModelForm`` inner
  567. ``Meta`` class. Please see the ``ModelForm`` :ref:`modelforms-selecting-fields`
  568. documentation.
  569. ... or enable localization for specific fields:
  570. .. code-block:: pycon
  571. >>> Form = modelform_factory(Author, form=AuthorForm, localized_fields=["birth_date"])
  572. .. _model-formsets:
  573. Model formsets
  574. ==============
  575. .. class:: models.BaseModelFormSet
  576. Like :doc:`regular formsets </topics/forms/formsets>`, Django provides a couple
  577. of enhanced formset classes to make working with Django models more
  578. convenient. Let's reuse the ``Author`` model from above:
  579. .. code-block:: pycon
  580. >>> from django.forms import modelformset_factory
  581. >>> from myapp.models import Author
  582. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"])
  583. Using ``fields`` restricts the formset to use only the given fields.
  584. Alternatively, you can take an "opt-out" approach, specifying which fields to
  585. exclude:
  586. .. code-block:: pycon
  587. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, exclude=["birth_date"])
  588. This will create a formset that is capable of working with the data associated
  589. with the ``Author`` model. It works just like a regular formset:
  590. .. code-block:: pycon
  591. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet()
  592. >>> print(formset)
  593. <input type="hidden" name="form-TOTAL_FORMS" value="1" id="id_form-TOTAL_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-INITIAL_FORMS" value="0" id="id_form-INITIAL_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-MIN_NUM_FORMS" value="0" id="id_form-MIN_NUM_FORMS"><input type="hidden" name="form-MAX_NUM_FORMS" value="1000" id="id_form-MAX_NUM_FORMS">
  594. <div><label for="id_form-0-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-0-name" type="text" name="form-0-name" maxlength="100"></div>
  595. <div><label for="id_form-0-title">Title:</label><select name="form-0-title" id="id_form-0-title">
  596. <option value="" selected>---------</option>
  597. <option value="MR">Mr.</option>
  598. <option value="MRS">Mrs.</option>
  599. <option value="MS">Ms.</option>
  600. </select><input type="hidden" name="form-0-id" id="id_form-0-id"></div>
  601. .. note::
  602. :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` uses
  603. :func:`~django.forms.formsets.formset_factory` to generate formsets. This
  604. means that a model formset is an extension of a basic formset that knows
  605. how to interact with a particular model.
  606. .. note::
  607. When using :ref:`multi-table inheritance <multi-table-inheritance>`, forms
  608. generated by a formset factory will contain a parent link field (by default
  609. ``<parent_model_name>_ptr``) instead of an ``id`` field.
  610. Changing the queryset
  611. ---------------------
  612. By default, when you create a formset from a model, the formset will use a
  613. queryset that includes all objects in the model (e.g.,
  614. ``Author.objects.all()``). You can override this behavior by using the
  615. ``queryset`` argument:
  616. .. code-block:: pycon
  617. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O"))
  618. Alternatively, you can create a subclass that sets ``self.queryset`` in
  619. ``__init__``::
  620. from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet
  621. from myapp.models import Author
  622. class BaseAuthorFormSet(BaseModelFormSet):
  623. def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
  624. super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
  625. self.queryset = Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O")
  626. Then, pass your ``BaseAuthorFormSet`` class to the factory function:
  627. .. code-block:: pycon
  628. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(
  629. ... Author, fields=["name", "title"], formset=BaseAuthorFormSet
  630. ... )
  631. If you want to return a formset that doesn't include *any* preexisting
  632. instances of the model, you can specify an empty QuerySet:
  633. .. code-block:: pycon
  634. >>> AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.none())
  635. Changing the form
  636. -----------------
  637. By default, when you use ``modelformset_factory``, a model form will
  638. be created using :func:`~django.forms.models.modelform_factory`.
  639. Often, it can be useful to specify a custom model form. For example,
  640. you can create a custom model form that has custom validation::
  641. class AuthorForm(forms.ModelForm):
  642. class Meta:
  643. model = Author
  644. fields = ["name", "title"]
  645. def clean_name(self):
  646. # custom validation for the name field
  647. ...
  648. Then, pass your model form to the factory function::
  649. AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, form=AuthorForm)
  650. It is not always necessary to define a custom model form. The
  651. ``modelformset_factory`` function has several arguments which are
  652. passed through to ``modelform_factory``, which are described below.
  653. Specifying widgets to use in the form with ``widgets``
  654. ------------------------------------------------------
  655. Using the ``widgets`` parameter, you can specify a dictionary of values to
  656. customize the ``ModelForm``’s widget class for a particular field. This
  657. works the same way as the ``widgets`` dictionary on the inner ``Meta``
  658. class of a ``ModelForm`` works:
  659. .. code-block:: pycon
  660. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(
  661. ... Author,
  662. ... fields=["name", "title"],
  663. ... widgets={"name": Textarea(attrs={"cols": 80, "rows": 20})},
  664. ... )
  665. Enabling localization for fields with ``localized_fields``
  666. ----------------------------------------------------------
  667. Using the ``localized_fields`` parameter, you can enable localization for
  668. fields in the form.
  669. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(
  670. ... Author, fields=['name', 'title', 'birth_date'],
  671. ... localized_fields=['birth_date'])
  672. If ``localized_fields`` is set to the special value ``'__all__'``, all fields
  673. will be localized.
  674. Providing initial values
  675. ------------------------
  676. As with regular formsets, it's possible to :ref:`specify initial data
  677. <formsets-initial-data>` for forms in the formset by specifying an ``initial``
  678. parameter when instantiating the model formset class returned by
  679. :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory`. However, with model
  680. formsets, the initial values only apply to extra forms, those that aren't
  681. attached to an existing model instance. If the length of ``initial`` exceeds
  682. the number of extra forms, the excess initial data is ignored. If the extra
  683. forms with initial data aren't changed by the user, they won't be validated or
  684. saved.
  685. .. _saving-objects-in-the-formset:
  686. Saving objects in the formset
  687. -----------------------------
  688. As with a ``ModelForm``, you can save the data as a model object. This is done
  689. with the formset's ``save()`` method:
  690. .. code-block:: pycon
  691. # Create a formset instance with POST data.
  692. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST)
  693. # Assuming all is valid, save the data.
  694. >>> instances = formset.save()
  695. The ``save()`` method returns the instances that have been saved to the
  696. database. If a given instance's data didn't change in the bound data, the
  697. instance won't be saved to the database and won't be included in the return
  698. value (``instances``, in the above example).
  699. When fields are missing from the form (for example because they have been
  700. excluded), these fields will not be set by the ``save()`` method. You can find
  701. more information about this restriction, which also holds for regular
  702. ``ModelForms``, in `Selecting the fields to use`_.
  703. Pass ``commit=False`` to return the unsaved model instances:
  704. .. code-block:: pycon
  705. # don't save to the database
  706. >>> instances = formset.save(commit=False)
  707. >>> for instance in instances:
  708. ... # do something with instance
  709. ... instance.save()
  710. ...
  711. This gives you the ability to attach data to the instances before saving them
  712. to the database. If your formset contains a ``ManyToManyField``, you'll also
  713. need to call ``formset.save_m2m()`` to ensure the many-to-many relationships
  714. are saved properly.
  715. After calling ``save()``, your model formset will have three new attributes
  716. containing the formset's changes:
  717. .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.changed_objects
  718. .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.deleted_objects
  719. .. attribute:: models.BaseModelFormSet.new_objects
  720. .. _model-formsets-max-num:
  721. Limiting the number of editable objects
  722. ---------------------------------------
  723. As with regular formsets, you can use the ``max_num`` and ``extra`` parameters
  724. to :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` to limit the number of
  725. extra forms displayed.
  726. ``max_num`` does not prevent existing objects from being displayed:
  727. .. code-block:: pycon
  728. >>> Author.objects.order_by("name")
  729. <QuerySet [<Author: Charles Baudelaire>, <Author: Paul Verlaine>, <Author: Walt Whitman>]>
  730. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name"], max_num=1)
  731. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by("name"))
  732. >>> [x.name for x in formset.get_queryset()]
  733. ['Charles Baudelaire', 'Paul Verlaine', 'Walt Whitman']
  734. Also, ``extra=0`` doesn't prevent creation of new model instances as you can
  735. :ref:`add additional forms with JavaScript <understanding-the-managementform>`
  736. or send additional POST data. See :ref:`model-formsets-edit-only` on how to do
  737. this.
  738. If the value of ``max_num`` is greater than the number of existing related
  739. objects, up to ``extra`` additional blank forms will be added to the formset,
  740. so long as the total number of forms does not exceed ``max_num``:
  741. .. code-block:: pycon
  742. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name"], max_num=4, extra=2)
  743. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by("name"))
  744. >>> for form in formset:
  745. ... print(form)
  746. ...
  747. <div><label for="id_form-0-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-0-name" type="text" name="form-0-name" value="Charles Baudelaire" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-0-id" value="1" id="id_form-0-id"></div>
  748. <div><label for="id_form-1-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-1-name" type="text" name="form-1-name" value="Paul Verlaine" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-1-id" value="3" id="id_form-1-id"></div>
  749. <div><label for="id_form-2-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-2-name" type="text" name="form-2-name" value="Walt Whitman" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-2-id" value="2" id="id_form-2-id"></div>
  750. <div><label for="id_form-3-name">Name:</label><input id="id_form-3-name" type="text" name="form-3-name" maxlength="100"><input type="hidden" name="form-3-id" id="id_form-3-id"></div>
  751. A ``max_num`` value of ``None`` (the default) puts a high limit on the number
  752. of forms displayed (1000). In practice this is equivalent to no limit.
  753. .. _model-formsets-edit-only:
  754. Preventing new objects creation
  755. -------------------------------
  756. Using the ``edit_only`` parameter, you can prevent creation of any new
  757. objects:
  758. .. code-block:: pycon
  759. >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(
  760. ... Author,
  761. ... fields=["name", "title"],
  762. ... edit_only=True,
  763. ... )
  764. Here, the formset will only edit existing ``Author`` instances. No other
  765. objects will be created or edited.
  766. Using a model formset in a view
  767. -------------------------------
  768. Model formsets are very similar to formsets. Let's say we want to present a
  769. formset to edit ``Author`` model instances::
  770. from django.forms import modelformset_factory
  771. from django.shortcuts import render
  772. from myapp.models import Author
  773. def manage_authors(request):
  774. AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"])
  775. if request.method == "POST":
  776. formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES)
  777. if formset.is_valid():
  778. formset.save()
  779. # do something.
  780. else:
  781. formset = AuthorFormSet()
  782. return render(request, "manage_authors.html", {"formset": formset})
  783. As you can see, the view logic of a model formset isn't drastically different
  784. than that of a "normal" formset. The only difference is that we call
  785. ``formset.save()`` to save the data into the database. (This was described
  786. above, in :ref:`saving-objects-in-the-formset`.)
  787. .. _model-formsets-overriding-clean:
  788. Overriding ``clean()`` on a ``ModelFormSet``
  789. --------------------------------------------
  790. Just like with ``ModelForms``, by default the ``clean()`` method of a
  791. ``ModelFormSet`` will validate that none of the items in the formset violate
  792. the unique constraints on your model (either ``unique``, ``unique_together`` or
  793. ``unique_for_date|month|year``). If you want to override the ``clean()`` method
  794. on a ``ModelFormSet`` and maintain this validation, you must call the parent
  795. class's ``clean`` method::
  796. from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet
  797. class MyModelFormSet(BaseModelFormSet):
  798. def clean(self):
  799. super().clean()
  800. # example custom validation across forms in the formset
  801. for form in self.forms:
  802. # your custom formset validation
  803. ...
  804. Also note that by the time you reach this step, individual model instances
  805. have already been created for each ``Form``. Modifying a value in
  806. ``form.cleaned_data`` is not sufficient to affect the saved value. If you wish
  807. to modify a value in ``ModelFormSet.clean()`` you must modify
  808. ``form.instance``::
  809. from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet
  810. class MyModelFormSet(BaseModelFormSet):
  811. def clean(self):
  812. super().clean()
  813. for form in self.forms:
  814. name = form.cleaned_data["name"].upper()
  815. form.cleaned_data["name"] = name
  816. # update the instance value.
  817. form.instance.name = name
  818. Using a custom queryset
  819. -----------------------
  820. As stated earlier, you can override the default queryset used by the model
  821. formset::
  822. from django.forms import modelformset_factory
  823. from django.shortcuts import render
  824. from myapp.models import Author
  825. def manage_authors(request):
  826. AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=["name", "title"])
  827. queryset = Author.objects.filter(name__startswith="O")
  828. if request.method == "POST":
  829. formset = AuthorFormSet(
  830. request.POST,
  831. request.FILES,
  832. queryset=queryset,
  833. )
  834. if formset.is_valid():
  835. formset.save()
  836. # Do something.
  837. else:
  838. formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=queryset)
  839. return render(request, "manage_authors.html", {"formset": formset})
  840. Note that we pass the ``queryset`` argument in both the ``POST`` and ``GET``
  841. cases in this example.
  842. Using the formset in the template
  843. ---------------------------------
  844. There are three ways to render a formset in a Django template.
  845. First, you can let the formset do most of the work:
  846. .. code-block:: html+django
  847. <form method="post">
  848. {{ formset }}
  849. </form>
  850. Second, you can manually render the formset, but let the form deal with
  851. itself:
  852. .. code-block:: html+django
  853. <form method="post">
  854. {{ formset.management_form }}
  855. {% for form in formset %}
  856. {{ form }}
  857. {% endfor %}
  858. </form>
  859. When you manually render the forms yourself, be sure to render the management
  860. form as shown above. See the :ref:`management form documentation
  861. <understanding-the-managementform>`.
  862. Third, you can manually render each field:
  863. .. code-block:: html+django
  864. <form method="post">
  865. {{ formset.management_form }}
  866. {% for form in formset %}
  867. {% for field in form %}
  868. {{ field.label_tag }} {{ field }}
  869. {% endfor %}
  870. {% endfor %}
  871. </form>
  872. If you opt to use this third method and you don't iterate over the fields with
  873. a ``{% for %}`` loop, you'll need to render the primary key field. For example,
  874. if you were rendering the ``name`` and ``age`` fields of a model:
  875. .. code-block:: html+django
  876. <form method="post">
  877. {{ formset.management_form }}
  878. {% for form in formset %}
  879. {{ form.id }}
  880. <ul>
  881. <li>{{ form.name }}</li>
  882. <li>{{ form.age }}</li>
  883. </ul>
  884. {% endfor %}
  885. </form>
  886. Notice how we need to explicitly render ``{{ form.id }}``. This ensures that
  887. the model formset, in the ``POST`` case, will work correctly. (This example
  888. assumes a primary key named ``id``. If you've explicitly defined your own
  889. primary key that isn't called ``id``, make sure it gets rendered.)
  890. .. _inline-formsets:
  891. Inline formsets
  892. ===============
  893. .. class:: models.BaseInlineFormSet
  894. Inline formsets is a small abstraction layer on top of model formsets. These
  895. simplify the case of working with related objects via a foreign key. Suppose
  896. you have these two models::
  897. from django.db import models
  898. class Author(models.Model):
  899. name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  900. class Book(models.Model):
  901. author = models.ForeignKey(Author, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
  902. title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  903. If you want to create a formset that allows you to edit books belonging to
  904. a particular author, you could do this:
  905. .. code-block:: pycon
  906. >>> from django.forms import inlineformset_factory
  907. >>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book, fields=["title"])
  908. >>> author = Author.objects.get(name="Mike Royko")
  909. >>> formset = BookFormSet(instance=author)
  910. ``BookFormSet``'s :ref:`prefix <formset-prefix>` is ``'book_set'``
  911. (``<model name>_set`` ). If ``Book``'s ``ForeignKey`` to ``Author`` has a
  912. :attr:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey.related_name`, that's used instead.
  913. .. note::
  914. :func:`~django.forms.models.inlineformset_factory` uses
  915. :func:`~django.forms.models.modelformset_factory` and marks
  916. ``can_delete=True``.
  917. .. seealso::
  918. :ref:`Manually rendered can_delete and can_order <manually-rendered-can-delete-and-can-order>`.
  919. Overriding methods on an ``InlineFormSet``
  920. ------------------------------------------
  921. When overriding methods on ``InlineFormSet``, you should subclass
  922. :class:`~models.BaseInlineFormSet` rather than
  923. :class:`~models.BaseModelFormSet`.
  924. For example, if you want to override ``clean()``::
  925. from django.forms import BaseInlineFormSet
  926. class CustomInlineFormSet(BaseInlineFormSet):
  927. def clean(self):
  928. super().clean()
  929. # example custom validation across forms in the formset
  930. for form in self.forms:
  931. # your custom formset validation
  932. ...
  933. See also :ref:`model-formsets-overriding-clean`.
  934. Then when you create your inline formset, pass in the optional argument
  935. ``formset``:
  936. .. code-block:: pycon
  937. >>> from django.forms import inlineformset_factory
  938. >>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(
  939. ... Author, Book, fields=["title"], formset=CustomInlineFormSet
  940. ... )
  941. >>> author = Author.objects.get(name="Mike Royko")
  942. >>> formset = BookFormSet(instance=author)
  943. More than one foreign key to the same model
  944. -------------------------------------------
  945. If your model contains more than one foreign key to the same model, you'll
  946. need to resolve the ambiguity manually using ``fk_name``. For example, consider
  947. the following model::
  948. class Friendship(models.Model):
  949. from_friend = models.ForeignKey(
  950. Friend,
  951. on_delete=models.CASCADE,
  952. related_name="from_friends",
  953. )
  954. to_friend = models.ForeignKey(
  955. Friend,
  956. on_delete=models.CASCADE,
  957. related_name="friends",
  958. )
  959. length_in_months = models.IntegerField()
  960. To resolve this, you can use ``fk_name`` to
  961. :func:`~django.forms.models.inlineformset_factory`:
  962. .. code-block:: pycon
  963. >>> FriendshipFormSet = inlineformset_factory(
  964. ... Friend, Friendship, fk_name="from_friend", fields=["to_friend", "length_in_months"]
  965. ... )
  966. Using an inline formset in a view
  967. ---------------------------------
  968. You may want to provide a view that allows a user to edit the related objects
  969. of a model. Here's how you can do that::
  970. def manage_books(request, author_id):
  971. author = Author.objects.get(pk=author_id)
  972. BookInlineFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book, fields=["title"])
  973. if request.method == "POST":
  974. formset = BookInlineFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, instance=author)
  975. if formset.is_valid():
  976. formset.save()
  977. # Do something. Should generally end with a redirect. For example:
  978. return HttpResponseRedirect(author.get_absolute_url())
  979. else:
  980. formset = BookInlineFormSet(instance=author)
  981. return render(request, "manage_books.html", {"formset": formset})
  982. Notice how we pass ``instance`` in both the ``POST`` and ``GET`` cases.
  983. Specifying widgets to use in the inline form
  984. --------------------------------------------
  985. ``inlineformset_factory`` uses ``modelformset_factory`` and passes most
  986. of its arguments to ``modelformset_factory``. This means you can use
  987. the ``widgets`` parameter in much the same way as passing it to
  988. ``modelformset_factory``. See `Specifying widgets to use in the form with
  989. widgets`_ above.