In PHP, I would do this to get name as an array.

<input type"text" name="name[]" />
<input type"text" name="name[]" />

Or if I wanted to get name as an associative array:

<input type"text" name="name[first]" />
<input type"text" name="name[last]" />

What is the Django equivalent for such things?

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3 Answers

up vote 35 down vote accepted

Check out the QueryDict documentation, particularly the usage of QueryDict.getlist(key).

Since request.POST and request.GET in the view are instances of QueryDict, you could do this:

<form action='/my/path/' method='POST'>
<input type='text' name='hi' value='heya1'>
<input type='text' name='hi' value='heya2'>
<input type='submit' value='Go'>
</form>

Then something like this:

def mypath(request):
    if request.method == 'POST':
        greetings = request.POST.getlist('hi') # will be ['heya1','heya2']
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This fails when key is important. For example name="question[4]" where 4 is question id. – Pawka Mar 3 '11 at 17:12
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Sorry for digging this up, but Django has an utils.datastructures.DotExpandedDict. Here's a piece of it's docs:

>>> d = DotExpandedDict({'person.1.firstname': ['Simon'], \
        'person.1.lastname': ['Willison'], \
        'person.2.firstname': ['Adrian'], \
        'person.2.lastname': ['Holovaty']})
>>> d
{'person': {'1': {'lastname': ['Willison'], 'firstname': ['Simon']}, '2': {'lastname': ['Holovaty'], 'firstname': ['Adrian']}}}

The only difference being you use dot's instead of brackets. I think it's now conceptually replaced with prefixed forms in formsets, but the class is left in the codebase.

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This is the best solution I have found. Thx. – Pawka Mar 3 '11 at 17:13
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Django does not provide a way to get associative arrays (dictionaries in Python) from the request object. As the first answer pointed out, you can use .getlist() as needed, or write a function that can take a QueryDict and reorganize it to your liking (pulling out key/value pairs if the key matches some key[*] pattern, for example).

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