Removed a mention of `Form._errors` from the documentation.

Also removed a sentence that was incorrect: raising a
`ValidationError` inside `Form.clean` doesn't clear the
`cleaned_data` attribute.

Thanks to loic84 and timograham for the review.
This commit is contained in:
Baptiste Mispelon 2013-11-12 20:27:21 +01:00
parent 8ed96464e9
commit 9aa6d4bdb6
1 changed files with 6 additions and 10 deletions

View File

@ -78,6 +78,10 @@ overridden:
like. This method can return a completely different dictionary if it wishes,
which will be used as the ``cleaned_data``.
Since the field validation method have been run by the time ``clean()`` is
called, you also have access to the form's ``errors`` attribute which
contains all the errors raised by previous steps.
Note that any errors raised by your ``Form.clean()`` override will not
be associated with any field in particular. They go into a special
"field" (called ``__all__``), which you can access via the
@ -95,7 +99,8 @@ These methods are run in the order given above, one field at a time. That is,
for each field in the form (in the order they are declared in the form
definition), the ``Field.clean()`` method (or its override) is run, then
``clean_<fieldname>()``. Finally, once those two methods are run for every
field, the ``Form.clean()`` method, or its override, is executed.
field, the ``Form.clean()`` method, or its override, is executed, no matter if
the previous methods have raised errors or not.
Examples of each of these methods are provided below.
@ -104,15 +109,6 @@ field, if the ``Field.clean()`` method raises a ``ValidationError``, any
field-specific cleaning method is not called. However, the cleaning methods
for all remaining fields are still executed.
The ``clean()`` method for the ``Form`` class or subclass is always run. If
that method raises a ``ValidationError``, ``cleaned_data`` will be an empty
dictionary.
The previous paragraph means that if you are overriding ``Form.clean()``, you
should iterate through ``self.cleaned_data.items()``, possibly considering the
``_errors`` dictionary attribute on the form as well. In this way, you will
already know which fields have passed their individual validation requirements.
.. _raising-validation-error:
Raising ``ValidationError``