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