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I am working on a site that would allow users to post some data. To successfully add a new post, the users need to go through three states: Form -> Preview -> Posted page. I want to restrict the users from going back to the Preview page with the browser "back button" once they have already reached the Posted page (instead, they should be redirected to the empty Form page). How can I implement this behaviour in Django?

4 Answers 4

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I am not sure how you get this desired behavior from Django as you have limited control over the user's browser. However, in Javascript you can use:

window.location.replace(url);

which will remove history, thus preventing the back button from working.

See this stack overflow question about window location:

What's the difference between window.location= and window.location.replace()?

An idea: from your preview page, use AJAX to submit and if all is successful, window.location.replace to your posted page.

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I can't speak for how to deal with this using browser technologies but with django you could just set a flag in the session.

# posted_page view
request.session['posted_page_visited'] = True

# preview_page view
if request.session.get('posted_page_visited'):
    del request.session['posted_page_visited']
    return http.HttpResponseRedirect("form_page")
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  • I, indeed, have tried your approach but there is another problem. When I click "back button" to go back to the Preview page, somehow the page doesn't get loaded from the server, even with Cache-Control: no-cache to the header of the page. Any idea on how I can force the Preview page always get loaded from the server? Thx. Dec 20, 2011 at 9:40
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Using js (window.location.replace(url)) doesn't fulfill this requirement because "replace url" will just replace the page with another one,Ex: if form flow goes from page1 to page2 then page3 then page4 and (window.location.replace(url)) is used in page2 (window.location.replace(page4);) then page3 will never be visited!! moreover user will still be able to go back in the same forward path meaning from page4 to page2...etc

the good thing, you can solve it by using Django session as shown below assuming users will be able to go back and forth as long as form not yet saved, and once its saved they can't go back anymore:

in page1/view function where first part of form is issued create session varaible:

in view1.py

def view1(request)
.
.
.
     request.session['forward'] = True
        return redirect(....)

in view2.py:

def view2(request):
if not request.session['forward']:
   return redirect(..Select whatever page you want to redirect users to it..) 

the same in rest of pages views..

in the last page/view where after saving the form, reset the variable:

request.session['forward'] = False
return redirect(..Select whatever page you want to redirect users to it..)

hopes its clear enough

-1

django's form wizard should do what you want:

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 saves the current state of the wizard in the backend and redirects to the next step.
  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 email, or whatever the application needs to do.
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  • I don't think you have got my question, because your solution isn't answering my question at all. My implementation has already adopted the Django's Form Preview app and thus the workflow is there. Dec 20, 2011 at 9:43
  • form preview is different than form wizard, the key part is session management - which I understood is your problem. Dec 20, 2011 at 11:01

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