Fixed #21654 -- Documented a use-case for Form.errors.as_data().

Thanks selwin for the suggestion.
This commit is contained in:
Loic Bistuer 2014-02-14 01:19:13 +07:00 committed by Tim Graham
parent 007c5cd367
commit 2e4200b5c7
2 changed files with 21 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -128,6 +128,20 @@ instances.
{'sender': [ValidationError(['Enter a valid email address.'])],
'subject': [ValidationError(['This field is required.'])]}
Use this method anytime you need to identify an error by its ``code``. This
enables things like rewriting the error's message or writing custom logic in a
view when a given error is present. It can also be used to serialize the errors
in a custom format (e.g. XML); for instance, :meth:`~Form.errors.as_json()`
relies on ``as_data()``.
The need for the ``as_data()`` method is due to backwards compatibility.
Previously ``ValidationError`` instances were lost as soon as their
**rendered** error messages were added to the ``Form.errors`` dictionary.
Ideally ``Form.errors`` would have stored ``ValidationError`` instances
and methods with an ``as_`` prefix could render them, but it had to be done
the other way around in order not to break code that expects rendered error
messages in ``Form.errors``.
.. method:: Form.errors.as_json()
.. versionadded:: 1.7

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@ -179,6 +179,13 @@ to override your error message you can still opt for the less verbose::
ValidationError(_('Invalid value: %s') % value)
.. versionadded:: 1.7
The :meth:`Form.errors.as_data() <django.forms.Form.errors.as_data()>` and
:meth:`Form.errors.as_json() <django.forms.Form.errors.as_json()>` methods
greatly benefit from fully featured ``ValidationError``\s (with a ``code`` name
and a ``params`` dictionary).
Raising multiple errors
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~