.. _topics-forms-modelforms: ========================== Creating forms from models ========================== ``ModelForm`` ============= If you're building a database-driven app, chances are you'll have forms that map closely to Django models. For instance, you might have a ``BlogComment`` model, and you want to create a form that lets people submit comments. In this case, it would be redundant to define the field types in your form, because you've already defined the fields in your model. For this reason, Django provides a helper class that let you create a ``Form`` class from a Django model. For example:: >>> from django.forms import ModelForm # Create the form class. >>> class ArticleForm(ModelForm): ... class Meta: ... model = Article # Creating a form to add an article. >>> form = ArticleForm() # Creating a form to change an existing article. >>> article = Article.objects.get(pk=1) >>> form = ArticleForm(instance=article) Field types ----------- The generated ``Form`` class will have a form field for every model field. Each model field has a corresponding default form field. For example, a ``CharField`` on a model is represented as a ``CharField`` on a form. A model ``ManyToManyField`` is represented as a ``MultipleChoiceField``. Here is the full list of conversions: =============================== ======================================== Model field Form field =============================== ======================================== ``AutoField`` Not represented in the form ``BooleanField`` ``BooleanField`` ``CharField`` ``CharField`` with ``max_length`` set to the model field's ``max_length`` ``CommaSeparatedIntegerField`` ``CharField`` ``DateField`` ``DateField`` ``DateTimeField`` ``DateTimeField`` ``DecimalField`` ``DecimalField`` ``EmailField`` ``EmailField`` ``FileField`` ``FileField`` ``FilePathField`` ``CharField`` ``FloatField`` ``FloatField`` ``ForeignKey`` ``ModelChoiceField`` (see below) ``ImageField`` ``ImageField`` ``IntegerField`` ``IntegerField`` ``IPAddressField`` ``IPAddressField`` ``ManyToManyField`` ``ModelMultipleChoiceField`` (see below) ``NullBooleanField`` ``CharField`` ``PhoneNumberField`` ``USPhoneNumberField`` (from ``django.contrib.localflavor.us``) ``PositiveIntegerField`` ``IntegerField`` ``PositiveSmallIntegerField`` ``IntegerField`` ``SlugField`` ``SlugField`` ``SmallIntegerField`` ``IntegerField`` ``TextField`` ``CharField`` with ``widget=Textarea`` ``TimeField`` ``TimeField`` ``URLField`` ``URLField`` with ``verify_exists`` set to the model field's ``verify_exists`` ``XMLField`` ``CharField`` with ``widget=Textarea`` =============================== ======================================== .. versionadded:: 1.0 The ``FloatField`` form field and ``DecimalField`` model and form fields are new in Django 1.0. As you might expect, the ``ForeignKey`` and ``ManyToManyField`` model field types are special cases: * ``ForeignKey`` is represented by ``django.forms.ModelChoiceField``, which is a ``ChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``. * ``ManyToManyField`` is represented by ``django.forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField``, which is a ``MultipleChoiceField`` whose choices are a model ``QuerySet``. In addition, each generated form field has attributes set as follows: * If the model field has ``blank=True``, then ``required`` is set to ``False`` on the form field. Otherwise, ``required=True``. * The form field's ``label`` is set to the ``verbose_name`` of the model field, with the first character capitalized. * The form field's ``help_text`` is set to the ``help_text`` of the model field. * If the model field has ``choices`` set, then the form field's ``widget`` will be set to ``Select``, with choices coming from the model field's ``choices``. The choices will normally include the blank choice which is selected by default. If the field is required, this forces the user to make a selection. The blank choice will not be included if the model field has ``blank=False`` and an explicit ``default`` value (the ``default`` value will be initially selected instead). Finally, note that you can override the form field used for a given model field. See `Overriding the default field types`_ below. A full example -------------- Consider this set of models:: from django.db import models from django.forms import ModelForm TITLE_CHOICES = ( ('MR', 'Mr.'), ('MRS', 'Mrs.'), ('MS', 'Ms.'), ) class Author(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=100) title = models.CharField(max_length=3, choices=TITLE_CHOICES) birth_date = models.DateField(blank=True, null=True) def __unicode__(self): return self.name class Book(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=100) authors = models.ManyToManyField(Author) class AuthorForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Author class BookForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Book With these models, the ``ModelForm`` subclasses above would be roughly equivalent to this (the only difference being the ``save()`` method, which we'll discuss in a moment.):: class AuthorForm(forms.Form): name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) title = forms.CharField(max_length=3, widget=forms.Select(choices=TITLE_CHOICES)) birth_date = forms.DateField(required=False) class BookForm(forms.Form): name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) authors = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(queryset=Author.objects.all()) The ``save()`` method --------------------- Every form produced by ``ModelForm`` also has a ``save()`` method. This method creates and saves a database object from the data bound to the form. A subclass of ``ModelForm`` can accept an existing model instance as the keyword argument ``instance``; if this is supplied, ``save()`` will update that instance. If it's not supplied, ``save()`` will create a new instance of the specified model:: # Create a form instance from POST data. >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST) # Save a new Article object from the form's data. >>> new_article = f.save() # Create a form to edit an existing Article. >>> a = Article.objects.get(pk=1) >>> f = ArticleForm(instance=a) >>> f.save() # Create a form to edit an existing Article, but use # POST data to populate the form. >>> a = Article.objects.get(pk=1) >>> f = ArticleForm(request.POST, instance=a) >>> f.save() Note that ``save()`` will raise a ``ValueError`` if the data in the form doesn't validate -- i.e., ``if form.errors``. This ``save()`` method accepts an optional ``commit`` keyword argument, which accepts either ``True`` or ``False``. If you call ``save()`` with ``commit=False``, then it will return an object that hasn't yet been saved to the database. In this case, it's up to you to call ``save()`` on the resulting model instance. This is useful if you want to do custom processing on the object before saving it, or if you want to use on of the specialised :ref:`model saving options `. ``commit`` is ``True`` by default. Another side effect of using ``commit=False`` is seen when your model has a many-to-many relation with another model. If your model has a many-to-many relation and you specify ``commit=False`` when you save a form, Django cannot immediately save the form data for the many-to-many relation. This is because it isn't possible to save many-to-many data for an instance until the instance exists in the database. To work around this problem, every time you save a form using ``commit=False``, Django adds a ``save_m2m()`` method to your ``ModelForm`` subclass. After you've manually saved the instance produced by the form, you can invoke ``save_m2m()`` to save the many-to-many form data. For example:: # Create a form instance with POST data. >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST) # Create, but don't save the new author instance. >>> new_author = f.save(commit=False) # Modify the author in some way. >>> new_author.some_field = 'some_value' # Save the new instance. >>> new_author.save() # Now, save the many-to-many data for the form. >>> f.save_m2m() Calling ``save_m2m()`` is only required if you use ``save(commit=False)``. When you use a simple ``save()`` on a form, all data -- including many-to-many data -- is saved without the need for any additional method calls. For example:: # Create a form instance with POST data. >>> a = Author() >>> f = AuthorForm(request.POST, instance=a) # Create and save the new author instance. There's no need to do anything else. >>> new_author = f.save() Other than the ``save()`` and ``save_m2m()`` methods, a ``ModelForm`` works exactly the same way as any other ``forms`` form. For example, the ``is_valid()`` method is used to check for validity, the ``is_multipart()`` method is used to determine whether a form requires multipart file upload (and hence whether ``request.FILES`` must be passed to the form), etc. See :ref:`topics-forms-index` for more information. Using a subset of fields on the form ------------------------------------ In some cases, you may not want all the model fields to appear on the generated form. There are three ways of telling ``ModelForm`` to use only a subset of the model fields: 1. Set ``editable=False`` on the model field. As a result, *any* form created from the model via ``ModelForm`` will not include that field. 2. Use the ``fields`` attribute of the ``ModelForm``'s inner ``Meta`` class. This attribute, if given, should be a list of field names to include in the form. 3. Use the ``exclude`` attribute of the ``ModelForm``'s inner ``Meta`` class. This attribute, if given, should be a list of field names to exclude from the form. For example, if you want a form for the ``Author`` model (defined above) that includes only the ``name`` and ``title`` fields, you would specify ``fields`` or ``exclude`` like this:: class PartialAuthorForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Author fields = ('name', 'title') class PartialAuthorForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Author exclude = ('birth_date',) Since the Author model has only 3 fields, 'name', 'title', and 'birth_date', the forms above will contain exactly the same fields. .. note:: If you specify ``fields`` or ``exclude`` when creating a form with ``ModelForm``, then the fields that are not in the resulting form will not be set by the form's ``save()`` method. Django will prevent any attempt to save an incomplete model, so if the model does not allow the missing fields to be empty, and does not provide a default value for the missing fields, any attempt to ``save()`` a ``ModelForm`` with missing fields will fail. To avoid this failure, you must instantiate your model with initial values for the missing, but required fields, or use ``save(commit=False)`` and manually set any extra required fields:: instance = Instance(required_field='value') form = InstanceForm(request.POST, instance=instance) new_instance = form.save() instance = form.save(commit=False) instance.required_field = 'new value' new_instance = instance.save() See the `section on saving forms`_ for more details on using ``save(commit=False)``. .. _section on saving forms: `The save() method`_ Overriding the default field types ---------------------------------- The default field types, as described in the `Field types`_ table above, are sensible defaults. If you have a ``DateField`` in your model, chances are you'd want that to be represented as a ``DateField`` in your form. But ``ModelForm`` gives you the flexibility of changing the form field type for a given model field. You do this by declaratively specifying fields like you would in a regular ``Form``. Declared fields will override the default ones generated by using the ``model`` attribute. For example, if you wanted to use ``MyDateFormField`` for the ``pub_date`` field, you could do the following:: >>> class ArticleForm(ModelForm): ... pub_date = MyDateFormField() ... ... class Meta: ... model = Article If you want to override a field's default widget, then specify the ``widget`` parameter when declaring the form field:: >>> class ArticleForm(ModelForm): ... pub_date = DateField(widget=MyDateWidget()) ... ... class Meta: ... model = Article Overriding the clean() method ----------------------------- You can override the ``clean()`` method on a model form to provide additional validation in the same way you can on a normal form. However, by default the ``clean()`` method validates the uniqueness of fields that are marked as unique or unique_together on the model. Therefore, if you would like to override the ``clean()`` method and maintain the default validation, you must call the parent class's ``clean()`` method. Form inheritance ---------------- As with basic forms, you can extend and reuse ``ModelForms`` by inheriting them. This is useful if you need to declare extra fields or extra methods on a parent class for use in a number of forms derived from models. For example, using the previous ``ArticleForm`` class:: >>> class EnhancedArticleForm(ArticleForm): ... def clean_pub_date(self): ... ... This creates a form that behaves identically to ``ArticleForm``, except there's some extra validation and cleaning for the ``pub_date`` field. You can also subclass the parent's ``Meta`` inner class if you want to change the ``Meta.fields`` or ``Meta.excludes`` lists:: >>> class RestrictedArticleForm(EnhancedArticleForm): ... class Meta(ArticleForm.Meta): ... exclude = ['body'] This adds the extra method from the ``EnhancedArticleForm`` and modifies the original ``ArticleForm.Meta`` to remove one field. There are a couple of things to note, however. * Normal Python name resolution rules apply. If you have multiple base classes that declare a ``Meta`` inner class, only the first one will be used. This means the child's ``Meta``, if it exists, otherwise the ``Meta`` of the first parent, etc. * For technical reasons, a subclass cannot inherit from both a ``ModelForm`` and a ``Form`` simultaneously. Chances are these notes won't affect you unless you're trying to do something tricky with subclassing. .. _model-formsets: Model Formsets ============== Similar to :ref:`regular formsets ` there are a couple enhanced formset classes that provide all the right things to work with your models. Lets reuse the ``Author`` model from above:: >>> from django.forms.models import modelformset_factory >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author) This will create a formset that is capable of working with the data associated to the ``Author`` model. It works just like a regular formset just that we are working with ``ModelForm`` instances instead of ``Form`` instances:: >>> formset = AuthorFormSet() >>> print formset .. note:: ``modelformset_factory`` uses ``formset_factory`` to generate formsets. This means that a model formset is just an extension of a basic formset that knows how to interact with a particular model. Changing the queryset --------------------- By default when you create a formset from a model the queryset will be all objects in the model. This is best shown as ``Author.objects.all()``. This is configurable:: >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.filter(name__startswith='O')) Alternatively, you can use a subclassing based approach:: from django.forms.models import BaseModelFormSet class BaseAuthorFormSet(BaseModelFormSet): def get_queryset(self): return super(BaseAuthorFormSet, self).get_queryset().filter(name__startswith='O') Then your ``BaseAuthorFormSet`` would be passed into the factory function to be used as a base:: >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, formset=BaseAuthorFormSet) Controlling which fields are used with ``fields`` and ``exclude`` ----------------------------------------------------------------- By default a model formset will use all fields in the model that are not marked with ``editable=False``. However, this can be overidden at the formset level:: >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, fields=('name', 'title')) Using ``fields`` will restrict the formset to use just the given fields. Or if you need to go the other way:: >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, exclude=('birth_date',)) Using ``exclude`` will prevent the given fields from being used in the formset. .. _saving-objects-in-the-formset: Saving objects in the formset ----------------------------- Similar to a ``ModelForm`` you can save the data into the model. This is done with the ``save()`` method on the formset:: # create a formset instance with POST data. >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST) # assuming all is valid, save the data >>> instances = formset.save() The ``save()`` method will return the instances that have been saved to the database. If an instance did not change in the bound data it will not be saved to the database and not found in ``instances`` in the above example. You can optionally pass in ``commit=False`` to ``save()`` to only return the model instances without any database interaction:: # don't save to the database >>> instances = formset.save(commit=False) >>> for instance in instances: ... # do something with instance ... instance.save() This gives you the ability to attach data to the instances before saving them to the database. If your formset contains a ``ManyToManyField`` you will also need to make a call to ``formset.save_m2m()`` to ensure the many-to-many relationships are saved properly. .. _model-formsets-max-num: Limiting the number of objects editable --------------------------------------- Similar to regular formsets you can use the ``max_num`` parameter to ``modelformset_factory`` to limit the number of forms displayed. With model formsets this will properly limit the query to only select the maximum number of objects needed:: >>> Author.objects.order_by('name') [, , ] >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, max_num=2, extra=1) >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by('name')) >>> formset.initial [{'id': 1, 'name': u'Charles Baudelaire'}, {'id': 3, 'name': u'Paul Verlaine'}] If the value of ``max_num`` is less than the total objects returned it will fill the rest with extra forms:: >>> AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author, max_num=4, extra=1) >>> formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.order_by('name')) >>> for form in formset.forms: ... print form.as_table() Using a model formset in a view ------------------------------- Model formsets are very similar to formsets. Lets say we want to present a formset to a user to edit ``Author`` model instances:: def manage_authors(request): AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author) if request.method == 'POST': formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES) if formset.is_valid(): formset.save() # do something. else: formset = AuthorFormSet() return render_to_response("manage_authors.html", { "formset": formset, }) As you can see the view is not drastically different than how to use a formset in a view. The only difference is that we call ``formset.save()`` to save the data into the database. This is described above in :ref:`saving-objects-in-the-formset`. Using a custom queryset ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ As stated earlier you can override the default queryset the model formset uses:: def manage_authors(request): AuthorFormSet = modelformset_factory(Author) if request.method == "POST": formset = AuthorFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, queryset=Author.objects.filter(name__startswith='O')) if formset.is_valid(): formset.save() # do something. else: formset = AuthorFormSet(queryset=Author.objects.filter(name__startswith='O')) return render_to_response("manage_authors.html", { "formset": formset, }) What is critical to point out here is that you must pass the queryset in both the ``POST`` and ``GET`` cases shown above. Using the formset in the template ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There are three ways you might want to render the formset in your template. You can let the formset do most of the work::
{{ formset }}
You can manually render the formset, but let the form deal with it self::
{{ formset.management_form }} {% for form in formset.forms %} {{ form }} {% endfor %}
When you manually render the forms yourself, be sure to render the management form as shown above. Also see the :ref:`management form documentation `. Or you can just do it all yourself::
{{ formset.management_form }} {% for form in formset.formset %} {% for fields in form %} {{ field }} {% endfor %} {% endfor %}
It is critical to note that if you opt to do most of the work yourself and you don't go with a field ``{% for %}`` loop of the form, as shown in the last example, you need to render to the primary key field. For example if you were to render just the ``name`` and ``age`` fields of a model::
{{ formset.management_form }} {% for form in formset.formset %} {{ form.id }}
  • {{ form.name }}
  • {{ form.age }}
{% endfor %}
Notice how we need to explicitly render ``{{ form.id }}``. This will ensure the model formset, in the ``POST`` case, will work correctly. The above example is assuming a primary key named ``id`` which is the name of the implicit primary key Django creates for you when one isn't given. If you have explicitly defined your own primary key field just make sure it gets rendered (it is likely to be a visible field anyway). Inline Formsets =============== Inline formsets is a small abstraction layer on top of model formsets. It simplifies the case of working with related objects via a foreign key. Suppose you have these two models:: class Author(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=100) class Book(models.Model): author = models.ForeignKey(Author) title = models.CharField(max_length=100) If you want to create a formset that allows you to edit books belonging to some author you might do:: >>> from django.forms.models import inlineformset_factory >>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book) >>> author = Author.objects.get(name=u'Orson Scott Card') >>> formset = BookFormSet(instance=author) .. note:: ``inlineformset_factory`` uses ``modelformset_factory`` and marks ``can_delete=True``. More than one foreign key to the same model ------------------------------------------- If your model contains more than one foreign key to the same model you will need to resolve the ambiguity manually using ``fk_name``. Given the following model:: class Friendship(models.Model): from_friend = models.ForeignKey(Friend) to_friend = models.ForeignKey(Friend) length_in_months = models.IntegerField() To resolve this you can simply use ``fk_name`` to ``inlineformset_factory``:: >>> FrienshipFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Friend, Friendship, fk_name="from_friend") Using an inline formset in a view --------------------------------- You may want to provide a view that allows a user to edit the related objects of some model. Here is how you might construct this view:: def manage_books(request, author_id): author = Author.objects.get(pk=author_id) BookInlineFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book) if request.method == "POST": formset = BookInlineFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, instance=author) if formset.is_valid(): formset.save() # do something else: formset = BookInlineFormSet(instance=author) return render_to_response("manage_books.html", { "formset": formset, }) Notice how we pass the instance in both the ``POST`` and ``GET`` cases. This is required similiar to model formsets since the ``instance`` is simply used to create the queryset for the model formset that lives underneath.