NOTE: Hopefully the upcoming Django 4.0 will make this a whole lot easier, as it offers template based form rendering.
Until then:
The OP asks for a way to use BoundField.label_tag() in a form definition.
The answers by user240515 and user2732686 do provide some suggestions for implementation, but they do not provide any rationale.
Most other solutions based on custom template tags require us to render the form fields manually, so they do not work if we simply want to use {{ form }}
.
Thus, in addition to all those answers, here's an attempt to provide some more background.
About label_tag
Form labels are rendered by the BaseForm.as_table()
, as_ul()
, or as_p()
shortcuts, via the "private" BaseForm._html_output()
method, as can be seen in the source.
This is done by calling BoundField.label_tag()
, as can be seen here.
The label_tag() method takes an attrs
argument with additional HTML attributes for the <label>
tag.
However, the problem is that BaseForm._html_output()
calls label_tag()
without attrs
, and there is no easy alternative for setting the attrs
argument.
How to extend label_tag?
Django's contrib.admin
solves this problem by extending the label_tag()
method in its AdminField
, as becomes clear from the source.
To extend BoundField.label_tag()
, we can create a customized BoundField:
class MyBoundField(forms.BoundField):
def __init__(self, form, field, name, label_attrs=None):
super().__init__(form, field, name)
self.label_attrs = label_attrs
def label_tag(self, contents=None, attrs=None, label_suffix=None):
if attrs is None:
attrs = dict()
attrs.update(self.label_attrs or {})
return super().label_tag(contents, attrs, label_suffix)
Now we can create a bound field with specific label attributes, but what do we do with it?
How to use a custom bound field?
Bound fields are instantiated using forms.Field.get_bound_field(), so, we could override that method to return our custom bound field:
class MyField(forms.Field):
# note typically we would use any of django's forms.Field subclasses
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
# we could also set label_attrs here, based on the field properties
self.label_attrs = kwargs.pop('label_attrs', None)
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def get_bound_field(self, form, field_name):
return MyBoundField(
form=form, field=self, name=field_name, label_attrs=self.label_attrs)
Then we can use the custom field on our Form
:
class MyForm(forms.Form):
some_field = MyField(..., label_attrs={'class': 'my-class'})
But what if we want to do this for all our form fields?
How to use a custom bound field for all form fields?
In the end, Field.get_bound_field()
is called in BaseForm.__getitem__()
(see source). This means we can get a bound field by calling e.g. my_form['some_field']
.
In order to use our custom bound field for all the form's fields, we could either monkey patch field.get_bound_field
for all fields in the form, or we could override the form's __getitem__()
to ignore get_bound_field()
and instead use MyBoundField
directly.
Here's an example of an override, which is mostly a copy of the original source, except for the MyBoundField
line:
class MyForm(forms.Form):
label_attrs = {'class': 'my-class'}
def __getitem__(self, name):
"""Return a MyBoundField with the given name."""
try:
field = self.fields[name]
except KeyError:
... # left out for clarity
if name not in self._bound_fields_cache:
self._bound_fields_cache[name] = MyBoundField(
form=self, field=field, name=name, label_attrs=self.label_attrs)
return self._bound_fields_cache[name]
In the end, this all seems like a lot of trouble for a bit of styling.