[1.5.x] Fixed #21120 -- Added more explicit text on using validators and link to writing validators.

Thanks nicolas at niconomicon.net for the suggestion.

Backport of 98e0453f00 from master
This commit is contained in:
Ben Huckvale 2013-09-23 14:46:19 +01:00 committed by Tim Graham
parent 938d98c8d1
commit a722dfda93
1 changed files with 13 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -176,9 +176,12 @@ Using validators
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Django's form (and model) fields support use of simple utility functions and
classes known as validators. These can be passed to a field's constructor, via
the field's ``validators`` argument, or defined on the Field class itself with
the ``default_validators`` attribute.
classes known as validators. A validator is merely a callable object or
function that takes a value and simply returns nothing if the value is valid or
raises a :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` if not. These can be
passed to a field's constructor, via the field's ``validators`` argument, or
defined on the :class:`~django.forms.Field` class itself with the
``default_validators`` attribute.
Simple validators can be used to validate values inside the field, let's have
a look at Django's ``EmailField``::
@ -200,6 +203,13 @@ is equivalent to::
email = forms.CharField(validators=[validators.validate_email],
error_messages={'invalid': _('Enter a valid email address.')})
Common cases such as validating against an email or a regular expression can be
handled using existing validator classes available in Django. For example,
``validators.validate_slug`` is an instance of
a :class:`~django.core.validators.RegexValidator` constructed with the first
argument being the pattern: ``^[-a-zA-Z0-9_]+$``. See the section on
:doc:`writing validators </ref/validators>` to see a list of what is already
available and for an example of how to write a validator.
Form field default cleaning
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~