django/docs/ref/contrib/formtools/form-preview.txt

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.. _ref-contrib-formtools-form-preview:
============
Form preview
============
.. module:: django.contrib.formtools
:synopsis: Displays an HTML form, forces a preview, then does something
with the submission.
Django comes with an optional "form preview" application that helps automate
the following workflow:
"Display an HTML form, force a preview, then do something with the submission."
To force a preview of a form submission, all you have to do is write a short
Python class.
Overview
=========
Given a :class:`django.forms.Form` subclass that you define, this
application takes care of the following workflow:
1. Displays the form as HTML on a Web page.
2. Validates the form data when it's submitted via POST.
a. If it's valid, displays a preview page.
b. If it's not valid, redisplays the form with error messages.
3. When the "confirmation" form is submitted from the preview page, calls
a hook that you define -- a
:meth:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview.done()` method that gets
passed the valid data.
The framework enforces the required preview by passing a shared-secret hash to
the preview page via hidden form fields. If somebody tweaks the form parameters
on the preview page, the form submission will fail the hash-comparison test.
How to use ``FormPreview``
==========================
1. Point Django at the default FormPreview templates. There are two ways to
do this:
* Add ``'django.contrib.formtools'`` to your
:setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` setting. This will work if your
:setting:`TEMPLATE_LOADERS` setting includes the
``app_directories`` template loader (which is the case by
default). See the :ref:`template loader docs <template-loaders>`
for more.
* Otherwise, determine the full filesystem path to the
:file:`django/contrib/formtools/templates` directory, and add that
directory to your :setting:`TEMPLATE_DIRS` setting.
2. Create a :class:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview` subclass that
overrides the :meth:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview.done()`
method::
from django.contrib.formtools.preview import FormPreview
from myapp.models import SomeModel
class SomeModelFormPreview(FormPreview):
def done(self, request, cleaned_data):
# Do something with the cleaned_data, then redirect
# to a "success" page.
return HttpResponseRedirect('/form/success')
This method takes an :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` object and a
dictionary of the form data after it has been validated and cleaned.
It should return an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponseRedirect` that
is the end result of the form being submitted.
3. Change your URLconf to point to an instance of your
:class:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview` subclass::
from myapp.preview import SomeModelFormPreview
from myapp.models import SomeModel
from django import forms
...and add the following line to the appropriate model in your URLconf::
(r'^post/$', SomeModelFormPreview(SomeModelForm)),
where ``SomeModelForm`` is a Form or ModelForm class for the model.
4. Run the Django server and visit :file:`/post/` in your browser.
``FormPreview`` classes
=======================
.. class:: FormPreview
A :class:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview` class is a simple Python class
that represents the preview workflow.
:class:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview` classes must subclass
``django.contrib.formtools.preview.FormPreview`` and override the
:meth:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview.done()` method. They can live
anywhere in your codebase.
``FormPreview`` templates
=========================
By default, the form is rendered via the template :file:`formtools/form.html`,
and the preview page is rendered via the template :file:`formtools.preview.html`.
These values can be overridden for a particular form preview by setting
:attr:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview.preview_template` and
:attr:`~django.contrib.formtools.FormPreview.form_template` attributes on the
FormPreview subclass. See :file:`django/contrib/formtools/templates` for the
default templates.