=========== Form wizard =========== **New in Django development version.** Django comes with an optional "form wizard" application that splits forms_ across multiple Web pages. It maintains state in hashed HTML ```` fields, and the data isn't processed server-side until the final form is submitted. You might want to use this if you have a lengthy form that would be too unwieldy for display on a single page. The first page might ask the user for core information, the second page might ask for less important information, etc. The term "wizard," in this context, is `explained on Wikipedia`_. .. _explained on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wizard_%28software%29 .. _forms: ../newforms/ How it works ============ Here's the basic workflow for how a user would use a wizard: 1. The user visits the first page of the wizard, fills in the form and submits it. 2. The server validates the data. If it's invalid, the form is displayed again, with error messages. If it's valid, the server calculates a secure hash of the data and presents the user with the next form, saving the validated data and hash in ```` fields. 3. Step 1 and 2 repeat, for every subsequent form in the wizard. 4. Once the user has submitted all the forms and all the data has been validated, the wizard processes the data -- saving it to the database, sending an e-mail, or whatever the application needs to do. Usage ===== This application handles as much machinery for you as possible. Generally, you just have to do these things: 1. Define a number of ``django.newforms`` ``Form`` classes -- one per wizard page. 2. Create a ``FormWizard`` class that specifies what to do once all of your forms have been submitted and validated. This also lets you override some of the wizard's behavior. 3. Create some templates that render the forms. You can define a single, generic template to handle every one of the forms, or you can define a specific template for each form. 4. Point your URLconf at your ``FormWizard`` class. Defining ``Form`` classes ========================= The first step in creating a form wizard is to create the ``Form`` classes. These should be standard ``django.newforms`` ``Form`` classes, covered in the `newforms documentation`_. These classes can live anywhere in your codebase, but convention is to put them in a file called ``forms.py`` in your application. For example, let's write a "contact form" wizard, where the first page's form collects the sender's e-mail address and subject, and the second page collects the message itself. Here's what the ``forms.py`` might look like:: from django import newforms as forms class ContactForm1(forms.Form): subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100) sender = forms.EmailField() class ContactForm2(forms.Form): message = forms.CharField(widget=forms.Textarea) **Important limitation:** Because the wizard uses HTML hidden fields to store data between pages, you may not include a ``FileField`` in any form except the last one. .. _newforms documentation: ../newforms/ Creating a ``FormWizard`` class =============================== The next step is to create a ``FormWizard`` class, which should be a subclass of ``django.contrib.formtools.wizard.FormWizard``. As your ``Form`` classes, this ``FormWizard`` class can live anywhere in your codebase, but convention is to put it in ``forms.py``. The only requirement on this subclass is that it implement a ``done()`` method, which specifies what should happen when the data for *every* form is submitted and validated. This method is passed two arguments: * ``request`` -- an HttpRequest_ object * ``form_list`` -- a list of ``django.newforms`` ``Form`` classes In this simplistic example, rather than perform any database operation, the method simply renders a template of the validated data:: from django.shortcuts import render_to_response from django.contrib.formtools.wizard import FormWizard class ContactWizard(FormWizard): def done(self, request, form_list): return render_to_response('done.html', { 'form_data': [form.cleaned_data for form in form_list], }) Note that this method will be called via ``POST``, so it really ought to be a good Web citizen and redirect after processing the data. Here's another example:: from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect from django.contrib.formtools.wizard import FormWizard class ContactWizard(FormWizard): def done(self, request, form_list): do_something_with_the_form_data(form_list) return HttpResponseRedirect('/page-to-redirect-to-when-done/') See the section "Advanced ``FormWizard`` methods" below to learn about more ``FormWizard`` hooks. .. _HttpRequest: request_response/#httprequest-objects Creating templates for the forms ================================ Next, you'll need to create a template that renders the wizard's forms. By default, every form uses a template called ``forms/wizard.html``. (You can change this template name by overriding ``FormWizard.get_template()``, which is documented below. This hook also allows you to use a different template for each form.) This template expects the following context: * ``step_field`` -- The name of the hidden field containing the step. * ``step0`` -- The current step (zero-based). * ``step`` -- The current step (one-based). * ``step_count`` -- The total number of steps. * ``form`` -- The ``Form`` instance for the current step (either empty or with errors). * ``previous_fields`` -- A string representing every previous data field, plus hashes for completed forms, all in the form of hidden fields. Note that you'll need to run this through the ``safe`` template filter, to prevent auto-escaping, because it's raw HTML. It will also be passed any objects in ``extra_context``, which is a dictionary you can specify that contains extra values to add to the context. You can specify it in two ways: * Set the ``extra_context`` attribute on your ``FormWizard`` subclass to a dictionary. * Pass ``extra_context`` as extra parameters in the URLconf. Here's a full example template:: {% extends "base.html" %} {% block content %}
Step {{ step }} of {{ step_count }}
{% endblock %} Note that ``previous_fields``, ``step_field`` and ``step0`` are all required for the wizard to work properly. Hooking the wizard into a URLconf ================================= Finally, give your new ``FormWizard`` object a URL in ``urls.py``. The wizard takes a list of your form objects as arguments:: from django.conf.urls.defaults import * from mysite.testapp.forms import ContactForm1, ContactForm2, ContactWizard urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^contact/$', ContactWizard([ContactForm1, ContactForm2])), ) Advanced ``FormWizard`` methods =============================== Aside from the ``done()`` method, ``FormWizard`` offers a few advanced method hooks that let you customize how your wizard works. Some of these methods take an argument ``step``, which is a zero-based counter representing the current step of the wizard. (E.g., the first form is ``0`` and the second form is ``1``.) ``prefix_for_step`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Given the step, returns a ``Form`` prefix to use. By default, this simply uses the step itself. For more, see the `form prefix documentation`_. Default implementation:: def prefix_for_step(self, step): return str(step) .. _form prefix documentation: ../newforms/#prefixes-for-forms ``render_hash_failure`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Renders a template if the hash check fails. It's rare that you'd need to override this. Default implementation:: def render_hash_failure(self, request, step): return self.render(self.get_form(step), request, step, context={'wizard_error': 'We apologize, but your form has expired. Please continue filling out the form from this page.'}) ``security_hash`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Calculates the security hash for the given request object and ``Form`` instance. By default, this uses an MD5 hash of the form data and your `SECRET_KEY setting`_. It's rare that somebody would need to override this. Example:: def security_hash(self, request, form): return my_hash_function(request, form) .. _SECRET_KEY setting: ../settings/#secret-key ``parse_params`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A hook for saving state from the request object and ``args`` / ``kwargs`` that were captured from the URL by your URLconf. By default, this does nothing. Example:: def parse_params(self, request, *args, **kwargs): self.my_state = args[0] ``get_template`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Returns the name of the template that should be used for the given step. By default, this returns ``'forms/wizard.html'``, regardless of step. Example:: def get_template(self, step): return 'myapp/wizard_%s.html' % step If ``get_template`` returns a list of strings, then the wizard will use the template system's ``select_template()`` function, `explained in the template docs`_. This means the system will use the first template that exists on the filesystem. For example:: def get_template(self, step): return ['myapp/wizard_%s.html' % step, 'myapp/wizard.html'] .. _explained in the template docs: ../templates_python/#the-python-api ``render_template`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Renders the template for the given step, returning an ``HttpResponse`` object. Override this method if you want to add a custom context, return a different MIME type, etc. If you only need to override the template name, use ``get_template()`` instead. The template will be rendered with the context documented in the "Creating templates for the forms" section above. ``process_step`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hook for modifying the wizard's internal state, given a fully validated ``Form`` object. The Form is guaranteed to have clean, valid data. This method should *not* modify any of that data. Rather, it might want to set ``self.extra_context`` or dynamically alter ``self.form_list``, based on previously submitted forms. Note that this method is called every time a page is rendered for *all* submitted steps. The function signature:: def process_step(self, request, form, step): # ...