Improved documentation for QueryDict.

This commit is contained in:
Duncan Parkes 2014-06-11 21:41:25 +01:00 committed by Tim Graham
parent 48241ec9c4
commit 7f4e2ef1e9
2 changed files with 38 additions and 18 deletions

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@ -299,12 +299,19 @@ class HttpRequest(object):
class QueryDict(MultiValueDict):
"""
A specialized MultiValueDict that takes a query string when initialized.
This is immutable unless you create a copy of it.
A specialized MultiValueDict which represents a query string.
Values retrieved from this class are converted from the given encoding
A QueryDict can be used to represent GET or POST data. It subclasses
MultiValueDict since keys in such data can be repeated, for instance
in the data from a form with a <select multiple> field.
By default QueryDicts are immutable, though the copy() method
will always return a mutable copy.
Both keys and values set on this class are converted from the given encoding
(DEFAULT_CHARSET by default) to unicode.
"""
# These are both reset in __init__, but is specified here at the class
# level so that unpickling will have valid values
_mutable = True

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@ -339,22 +339,37 @@ QueryDict objects
.. class:: QueryDict
In an :class:`HttpRequest` object, the ``GET`` and ``POST`` attributes are instances
of ``django.http.QueryDict``. :class:`QueryDict` is a dictionary-like
class customized to deal with multiple values for the same key. This is
necessary because some HTML form elements, notably
``<select multiple="multiple">``, pass multiple values for the same key.
In an :class:`HttpRequest` object, the ``GET`` and ``POST`` attributes are
instances of ``django.http.QueryDict``, a dictionary-like class customized to
deal with multiple values for the same key. This is necessary because some HTML
form elements, notably ``<select multiple>``, pass multiple values for the same
key.
``QueryDict`` instances are immutable, unless you create a ``copy()`` of them.
That means you can't change attributes of ``request.POST`` and ``request.GET``
directly.
The ``QueryDict``\ s at ``request.POST`` and ``request.GET`` will be immutable
when accessed in a normal request/response cycle. To get a mutable version you
need to use ``.copy()``.
Methods
-------
:class:`QueryDict` implements all the standard dictionary methods, because it's
:class:`QueryDict` implements all the standard dictionary methods because it's
a subclass of dictionary. Exceptions are outlined here:
.. method:: QueryDict.__init__(query_string, mutable=False, encoding=None)
Instantiates a ``QueryDict`` object based on ``query_string``.
>>> QueryDict('a=1&a=2&c=3')
<QueryDict: {u'a': [u'1', u'2'], u'b': [u'1']}>
Most ``QueryDict``\ s you encounter, and in particular those at
``request.POST`` and ``request.GET``, will be immutable. If you are
instantiating one yourself, you can make it mutable by passing
``mutable=True`` to its ``__init__()``.
Strings for setting both keys and values will be converted from ``encoding``
to unicode. If encoding is not set, it defaults to :setting:`DEFAULT_CHARSET`.
.. method:: QueryDict.__getitem__(key)
Returns the value for the given key. If the key has more than one value,
@ -367,8 +382,8 @@ a subclass of dictionary. Exceptions are outlined here:
Sets the given key to ``[value]`` (a Python list whose single element is
``value``). Note that this, as other dictionary functions that have side
effects, can only be called on a mutable ``QueryDict`` (one that was created
via ``copy()``).
effects, can only be called on a mutable ``QueryDict`` (such as one that
was created via ``copy()``).
.. method:: QueryDict.__contains__(key)
@ -391,8 +406,7 @@ a subclass of dictionary. Exceptions are outlined here:
dictionary ``update()`` method, except it *appends* to the current
dictionary items rather than replacing them. For example::
>>> q = QueryDict('a=1')
>>> q = q.copy() # to make it mutable
>>> q = QueryDict('a=1', mutable=True)
>>> q.update({'a': '2'})
>>> q.getlist('a')
['1', '2']
@ -437,8 +451,7 @@ In addition, ``QueryDict`` has the following methods:
.. method:: QueryDict.copy()
Returns a copy of the object, using ``copy.deepcopy()`` from the Python
standard library. The copy will be mutable -- that is, you can change its
values.
standard library. This copy will be mutable even if the original was not.
.. method:: QueryDict.getlist(key, default)