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[1.11.x] Fixed #28415 -- Clarified what characters ASCII/UnicodeUsernameValidator accept.

Backport of 14172cf4426de6c867028f1c194011c0a26e662d from master
This commit is contained in:
Tim Graham 2017-07-27 08:42:01 -04:00
parent 6e6aa77b3b
commit 020c1c4cc8
2 changed files with 14 additions and 14 deletions

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@ -34,12 +34,12 @@ Fields
.. admonition:: Usernames and Unicode
Django originally accepted only ASCII letters in usernames.
Although it wasn't a deliberate choice, Unicode characters have
always been accepted when using Python 3. Django 1.10 officially
added Unicode support in usernames, keeping the ASCII-only behavior
on Python 2, with the option to customize the behavior using
:attr:`.User.username_validator`.
Django originally accepted only ASCII letters and numbers in
usernames. Although it wasn't a deliberate choice, Unicode
characters have always been accepted when using Python 3. Django
1.10 officially added Unicode support in usernames, keeping the
ASCII-only behavior on Python 2, with the option to customize the
behavior using :attr:`.User.username_validator`.
.. versionchanged:: 1.10
@ -426,15 +426,15 @@ Validators
.. versionadded:: 1.10
A field validator allowing only ASCII letters, in addition to ``@``, ``.``,
``+``, ``-``, and ``_``. The default validator for ``User.username`` on
Python 2.
A field validator allowing only ASCII letters and numbers, in addition to
``@``, ``.``, ``+``, ``-``, and ``_``. The default validator for
``User.username`` on Python 2.
.. class:: validators.UnicodeUsernameValidator
.. versionadded:: 1.10
A field validator allowing Unicode letters, in addition to ``@``, ``.``,
A field validator allowing Unicode characters, in addition to ``@``, ``.``,
``+``, ``-``, and ``_``. The default validator for ``User.username`` on
Python 3.

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@ -55,11 +55,11 @@ Official support for Unicode usernames
--------------------------------------
The :class:`~django.contrib.auth.models.User` model in ``django.contrib.auth``
originally only accepted ASCII letters in usernames. Although it wasn't a
deliberate choice, Unicode characters have always been accepted when using
Python 3.
originally only accepted ASCII letters and numbers in usernames. Although it
wasn't a deliberate choice, Unicode characters have always been accepted when
using Python 3.
The username validator now explicitly accepts Unicode letters by
The username validator now explicitly accepts Unicode characters by
default on Python 3 only. This default behavior can be overridden by changing
the :attr:`~django.contrib.auth.models.User.username_validator` attribute of
the ``User`` model, or to any proxy of that model, using either