.. _topics-forms-formsets: .. _formsets: Formsets ======== A formset is a layer of abstraction to working with multiple forms on the same page. It can be best compared to a data grid. Let's say you have the following form:: >>> from django import forms >>> class ArticleForm(forms.Form): ... title = forms.CharField() ... pub_date = forms.DateField() You might want to allow the user to create several articles at once. To create a formset out of an ``ArticleForm`` you would do:: >>> from django.forms.formsets import formset_factory >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm) You now have created a formset named ``ArticleFormSet``. The formset gives you the ability to iterate over the forms in the formset and display them as you would with a regular form:: >>> formset = ArticleFormSet() >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() As you can see it only displayed one form. This is because by default the ``formset_factory`` defines one extra form. This can be controlled with the ``extra`` parameter:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, extra=2) Using initial data with a formset --------------------------------- Initial data is what drives the main usability of a formset. As shown above you can define the number of extra forms. What this means is that you are telling the formset how many additional forms to show in addition to the number of forms it generates from the initial data. Lets take a look at an example:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, extra=2) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(initial=[ ... {'title': u'Django is now open source', ... 'pub_date': datetime.date.today()}, ... ]) >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() There are now a total of three forms showing above. One for the initial data that was passed in and two extra forms. Also note that we are passing in a list of dictionaries as the initial data. Limiting the maximum number of forms ------------------------------------ The ``max_num`` parameter to ``formset_factory`` gives you the ability to force the maximum number of forms the formset will display:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, extra=2, max_num=1) >>> formset = ArticleFormset() >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() A ``max_num`` value of ``0`` (the default) puts no limit on the number forms displayed. Formset validation ------------------ Validation with a formset is about identical to a regular ``Form``. There is an ``is_valid`` method on the formset to provide a convenient way to validate each form in the formset:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet({}) >>> formset.is_valid() True We passed in no data to the formset which is resulting in a valid form. The formset is smart enough to ignore extra forms that were not changed. If we attempt to provide an article, but fail to do so:: >>> data = { ... 'form-TOTAL_FORMS': u'1', ... 'form-INITIAL_FORMS': u'1', ... 'form-0-title': u'Test', ... 'form-0-pub_date': u'', ... } >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(data) >>> formset.is_valid() False >>> formset.errors [{'pub_date': [u'This field is required.']}] As we can see the formset properly performed validation and gave us the expected errors. Understanding the ManagementForm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You may have noticed the additional data that was required in the formset's data above. This data is coming from the ``ManagementForm``. This form is dealt with internally to the formset. If you don't use it, it will result in an exception:: >>> data = { ... 'form-0-title': u'Test', ... 'form-0-pub_date': u'', ... } >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(data) Traceback (most recent call last): ... django.forms.util.ValidationError: [u'ManagementForm data is missing or has been tampered with'] It is used to keep track of how many form instances are being displayed. If you are adding new forms via JavaScript, you should increment the count fields in this form as well. Custom formset validation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A formset has a ``clean`` method similar to the one on a ``Form`` class. This is where you define your own validation that deals at the formset level:: >>> from django.forms.formsets import BaseFormSet >>> class BaseArticleFormSet(BaseFormSet): ... def clean(self): ... raise forms.ValidationError, u'An error occured.' >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, formset=BaseArticleFormSet) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet({}) >>> formset.is_valid() False >>> formset.non_form_errors() [u'An error occured.'] The formset ``clean`` method is called after all the ``Form.clean`` methods have been called. The errors will be found using the ``non_form_errors()`` method on the formset. Dealing with ordering and deletion of forms ------------------------------------------- Common use cases with a formset is dealing with ordering and deletion of the form instances. This has been dealt with for you. The ``formset_factory`` provides two optional parameters ``can_order`` and ``can_delete`` that will do the extra work of adding the extra fields and providing simpler ways of getting to that data. ``can_order`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Default: ``False`` Lets create a formset with the ability to order:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, can_order=True) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(initial=[ ... {'title': u'Article #1', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10)}, ... {'title': u'Article #2', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 11)}, ... ]) >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() This adds an additional field to each form. This new field is named ``ORDER`` and is an ``forms.IntegerField``. For the forms that came from the initial data it automatically assigned them a numeric value. Lets look at what will happen when the user changes these values:: >>> data = { ... 'form-TOTAL_FORMS': u'3', ... 'form-INITIAL_FORMS': u'2', ... 'form-0-title': u'Article #1', ... 'form-0-pub_date': u'2008-05-10', ... 'form-0-ORDER': u'2', ... 'form-1-title': u'Article #2', ... 'form-1-pub_date': u'2008-05-11', ... 'form-1-ORDER': u'1', ... 'form-2-title': u'Article #3', ... 'form-2-pub_date': u'2008-05-01', ... 'form-2-ORDER': u'0', ... } >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(data, initial=[ ... {'title': u'Article #1', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10)}, ... {'title': u'Article #2', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 11)}, ... ]) >>> formset.is_valid() True >>> for form in formset.ordered_forms: ... print form.cleaned_data {'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 1), 'ORDER': 0, 'title': u'Article #3'} {'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 11), 'ORDER': 1, 'title': u'Article #2'} {'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10), 'ORDER': 2, 'title': u'Article #1'} ``can_delete`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Default: ``False`` Lets create a formset with the ability to delete:: >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, can_delete=True) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(initial=[ ... {'title': u'Article #1', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10)}, ... {'title': u'Article #2', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 11)}, ... ]) >>> for form in formset.forms: .... print form.as_table() Similar to ``can_order`` this adds a new field to each form named ``DELETE`` and is a ``forms.BooleanField``. When data comes through marking any of the delete fields you can access them with ``deleted_forms``:: >>> data = { ... 'form-TOTAL_FORMS': u'3', ... 'form-INITIAL_FORMS': u'2', ... 'form-0-title': u'Article #1', ... 'form-0-pub_date': u'2008-05-10', ... 'form-0-DELETE': u'on', ... 'form-1-title': u'Article #2', ... 'form-1-pub_date': u'2008-05-11', ... 'form-1-DELETE': u'', ... 'form-2-title': u'', ... 'form-2-pub_date': u'', ... 'form-2-DELETE': u'', ... } >>> formset = ArticleFormSet(data, initial=[ ... {'title': u'Article #1', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10)}, ... {'title': u'Article #2', 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 11)}, ... ]) >>> [form.cleaned_data for form in formset.deleted_forms] [{'DELETE': True, 'pub_date': datetime.date(2008, 5, 10), 'title': u'Article #1'}] Adding additional fields to a formset ------------------------------------- If you need to add additional fields to the formset this can be easily accomplished. The formset base class provides an ``add_fields`` method. You can simply override this method to add your own fields or even redefine the default fields/attributes of the order and deletion fields:: >>> class BaseArticleFormSet(BaseFormSet): ... def add_fields(self, form, index): ... super(BaseArticleFormSet, self).add_fields(form, index) ... form.fields["my_field"] = forms.CharField() >>> ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm, formset=BaseArticleFormSet) >>> formset = ArticleFormSet() >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() Using a formset in views and templates -------------------------------------- Using a formset inside a view is as easy as using a regular ``Form`` class. The only thing you will want to be aware of is making sure to use the management form inside the template. Lets look at a sample view:: def manage_articles(request): ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm) if request.method == 'POST': formset = ArticleFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES) if formset.is_valid(): # do something with the formset.cleaned_data else: formset = ArticleFormSet() return render_to_response('manage_articles.html', {'formset': formset}) The ``manage_articles.html`` template might look like this: .. code-block:: html+django
{{ formset.management_form }} {% for form in formset.forms %} {{ form }} {% endfor %}
However the above can be slightly shortcutted and let the formset itself deal with the management form: .. code-block:: html+django
{{ formset }}
The above ends up calling the ``as_table`` method on the formset class. Using more than one formset in a view ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You are able to use more than one formset in a view if you like. Formsets borrow much of its behavior from forms. With that said you are able to use ``prefix`` to prefix formset form field names with a given value to allow more than one formset to be sent to a view without name clashing. Lets take a look at how this might be accomplished:: def manage_articles(request): ArticleFormSet = formset_factory(ArticleForm) BookFormSet = formset_factory(BookForm) if request.method == 'POST': article_formset = ArticleFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, prefix='articles') book_formset = BookFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, prefix='books') if article_formset.is_valid() and book_formset.is_valid(): # do something with the cleaned_data on the formsets. else: article_formset = ArticleFormSet(prefix='articles') book_formset = BookFormSet(prefix='books') return render_to_response('manage_articles.html', { 'article_formset': article_formset, 'book_formset': book_formset, }) You would then render the formsets as normal. It is important to point out that you need to pass ``prefix`` on both the POST and non-POST cases so that it is rendered and processed correctly.