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110 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
110 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
.. _ref-forms-validation:
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Form and field validation
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=========================
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Form validation happens when the data is cleaned. If you want to customize
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this process, there are various places you can change, each one serving a
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different purpose. Three types of cleaning methods are run during form
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processing. These are normally executed when you call the ``is_valid()``
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method on a form. There are other things that can trigger cleaning and
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validation (accessing the ``errors`` attribute or calling ``full_clean()``
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directly), but normally they won't be needed.
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In general, any cleaning method can raise ``ValidationError`` if there is a
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problem with the data it is processing, passing the relevant error message to
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the ``ValidationError`` constructor. If no ``ValidationError`` is raised, the
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method should return the cleaned (normalized) data as a Python object.
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If you detect multiple errors during a cleaning method and wish to signal all
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of them to the form submitter, it is possible to pass a list of errors to the
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``ValidationError`` constructor.
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The three types of cleaning methods are:
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* The ``clean()`` method on a Field subclass. This is responsible
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for cleaning the data in a way that is generic for that type of field.
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For example, a FloatField will turn the data into a Python ``float`` or
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raise a ``ValidationError``.
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* The ``clean_<fieldname>()`` method in a form subclass -- where
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``<fieldname>`` is replaced with the name of the form field attribute.
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This method does any cleaning that is specific to that particular
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attribute, unrelated to the type of field that it is. This method is not
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passed any parameters. You will need to look up the value of the field
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in ``self.cleaned_data`` and remember that it will be a Python object
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at this point, not the original string submitted in the form (it will be
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in ``cleaned_data`` because the general field ``clean()`` method, above,
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has already cleaned the data once).
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For example, if you wanted to validate that the contents of a
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``CharField`` called ``serialnumber`` was unique,
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``clean_serialnumber()`` would be the right place to do this. You don't
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need a specific field (it's just a ``CharField``), but you want a
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formfield-specific piece of validation and, possibly,
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cleaning/normalizing the data.
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* The Form subclass's ``clean()`` method. This method can perform
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any validation that requires access to multiple fields from the form at
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once. This is where you might put in things to check that if field ``A``
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is supplied, field ``B`` must contain a valid e-mail address and the
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like. The data that this method returns is the final ``cleaned_data``
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attribute for the form, so don't forget to return the full list of
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cleaned data if you override this method (by default, ``Form.clean()``
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just returns ``self.cleaned_data``).
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Note that any errors raised by your ``Form.clean()`` override will not
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be associated with any field in particular. They go into a special
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"field" (called ``__all__``), which you can access via the
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``non_field_errors()`` method if you need to.
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These methods are run in the order given above, one field at a time. That is,
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for each field in the form (in the order they are declared in the form
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definition), the ``Field.clean()`` method (or its override) is run, then
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``clean_<fieldname>()``. Finally, once those two methods are run for every
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field, the ``Form.clean()`` method, or its override, is executed.
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As mentioned above, any of these methods can raise a ``ValidationError``. For
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any field, if the ``Field.clean()`` method raises a ``ValidationError``, any
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field-specific cleaning method is not called. However, the cleaning methods
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for all remaining fields are still executed.
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The ``clean()`` method for the ``Form`` class or subclass is always run. If
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that method raises a ``ValidationError``, ``cleaned_data`` will be an empty
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dictionary.
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The previous paragraph means that if you are overriding ``Form.clean()``, you
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should iterate through ``self.cleaned_data.items()``, possibly considering the
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``_errors`` dictionary attribute on the form as well. In this way, you will
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already know which fields have passed their individual validation requirements.
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A simple example
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Here's a simple example of a custom field that validates its input is a string
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containing comma-separated e-mail addresses, with at least one address. We'll
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keep it simple and assume e-mail validation is contained in a function called
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``is_valid_email()``. The full class::
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from django import forms
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class MultiEmailField(forms.Field):
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def clean(self, value):
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if not value:
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raise forms.ValidationError('Enter at least one e-mail address.')
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emails = value.split(',')
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for email in emails:
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if not is_valid_email(email):
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raise forms.ValidationError('%s is not a valid e-mail address.' % email)
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return emails
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Let's alter the ongoing ``ContactForm`` example to demonstrate how you'd use
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this in a form. Simply use ``MultiEmailField`` instead of ``forms.EmailField``,
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like so::
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class ContactForm(forms.Form):
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subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
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message = forms.CharField()
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senders = MultiEmailField()
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cc_myself = forms.BooleanField(required=False)
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