Fixed #3263 -- newforms form_for_model() and form_for_instance() now handle foreign-key and many-to-many data properly. Thanks for the patch, Jeff Hilyard

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@4439 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Adrian Holovaty 2007-01-28 04:56:54 +00:00
parent 546f16d323
commit 83768bf067
2 changed files with 49 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -15,10 +15,7 @@ def model_save(self, commit=True):
"""
if self.errors:
raise ValueError("The %s could not be created because the data didn't validate." % self._model._meta.object_name)
obj = self._model(**self.clean_data)
if commit:
obj.save()
return obj
return save_instance(self, self._model(), commit)
def save_instance(form, instance, commit=True):
"""
@ -33,12 +30,18 @@ def save_instance(form, instance, commit=True):
if form.errors:
raise ValueError("The %s could not be changed because the data didn't validate." % opts.object_name)
clean_data = form.clean_data
for f in opts.fields + opts.many_to_many:
for f in opts.fields:
if isinstance(f, models.AutoField):
continue
setattr(instance, f.attname, clean_data[f.name])
if commit:
instance.save()
for f in opts.many_to_many:
setattr(instance, f.attname, getattr(instance, f.attname).model.objects.filter(pk__in = clean_data[f.name]))
# GOTCHA: If many-to-many data is given and commit=False, the many-to-many
# data will be lost. This happens because a many-to-many options cannot be
# set on an object until after it's saved. Maybe we should raise an
# exception in that case.
return instance
def make_instance_save(instance):

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@ -224,6 +224,47 @@ Add some categories and test the many-to-many form output.
<option value="3">Third test</option>
</select></li>
>>> f = TestArticleForm({'headline': u'New headline', 'pub_date': u'1988-01-04',
... 'writer': u'1', 'article': u'Hello.', 'categories': [u'1', u'2']})
>>> new_art = f.save()
>>> new_art.id
1
>>> new_art = Article.objects.get(id=1)
>>> new_art.categories.all()
[<Category: Entertainment>, <Category: It's a test>]
Now, submit form data with no categories. This deletes the existing categories.
>>> f = TestArticleForm({'headline': u'New headline', 'pub_date': u'1988-01-04',
... 'writer': u'1', 'article': u'Hello.'})
>>> new_art = f.save()
>>> new_art.id
1
>>> new_art = Article.objects.get(id=1)
>>> new_art.categories.all()
[]
Create a new article, with categories, via the form.
>>> ArticleForm = form_for_model(Article)
>>> f = ArticleForm({'headline': u'The walrus was Paul', 'pub_date': u'1967-11-01',
... 'writer': u'1', 'article': u'Test.', 'categories': [u'1', u'2']})
>>> new_art = f.save()
>>> new_art.id
2
>>> new_art = Article.objects.get(id=2)
>>> new_art.categories.all()
[<Category: Entertainment>, <Category: It's a test>]
Create a new article, with no categories, via the form.
>>> ArticleForm = form_for_model(Article)
>>> f = ArticleForm({'headline': u'The walrus was Paul', 'pub_date': u'1967-11-01',
... 'writer': u'1', 'article': u'Test.'})
>>> new_art = f.save()
>>> new_art.id
3
>>> new_art = Article.objects.get(id=3)
>>> new_art.categories.all()
[]
Here, we define a custom Form. Because it happens to have the same fields as
the Category model, we can use save_instance() to apply its changes to an
existing Category instance.