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I try to pass the variable to another page using GET method in django. It is possible for me to do that, but the problem is that the variable that I passed is not available in the if statement. I try to print out the value then it worked fine. Then I try to use it inside if statement then I come to know that it was not working properly. I have no idea regarding that. Can anyone help me? Thank you very much.

This is my views:

def test(request):
Test = Photos.objects.all()
ID = request.GET['id']
Context = {
    'ID' : ID,
    'test' : Test,
    'testing' : 3,
}
return render(request, 'test.html', Context)

def tests(request):
tests = Photos.objects.all()
Context = {
    'tests' : tests,
}
return render(request, 'tests.html', Context)

This is my urls.py:

urlpatterns = [
url(r'^admin/', include(admin.site.urls)),

url(r'^$', 'flashapp.views.home'),
url(r'^play$', 'flashapp.views.play'),
url(r'^test$', 'flashapp.views.test'),
url(r'^tests$', 'flashapp.views.tests'),]

In tests.html I have buttons for passing id to test.html using GET method.

This is tests.html:

</head>
<body>
    <h1>Welcome to tests pages.....</h1>
    {% for i in tests %}
        <a href="/test?id={{ i.id }}">Click For {{ i.id }}</a><br>
    {% endfor %}
</body>

This is test.html:

<html>
<head>

</head>
<body>
    <h1>Welcome to Test Page</h1>
    <h1>{{ ID }}</h1>
        {% for i in test %}
            <p>{{ i.id }}..........{{ testing }}.........{{ ID }}</p>
            {% if ID == i.id %}
                <p>Test</p>
                <p>Working....ID = {{ i.id }}</p>
            {% else %}
                <p>In else</p>
            {% endif %}
        {% endfor %}
</body>

this is tests.html

this is test.html

I suppose to see the "Working....." but, it gone to else block. I have no idea. Help me please!!! Thank you very much.

1 Answer 1

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I edited my original answer based on your comment

You are passing a QuerySet as your Test object instead of an object in the first view, so it doesn't have an id property.

When you do this:

def test(request):
  Test = Photos.objects.all()
  ...

You are getting a collection of all the Photos objects into the Test variable, which is not what you want, you only want one instance of Photos. For that kind of queries, you need to use the .get method, that returns a single instance or an exception in case it doesn't find it.

Test = Photos.objects.get(pk=request.GET['id'])

Your code now should look like this:

def test(request):
  ID = request.GET['id']
  Test = Photos.objects.get(pk=ID)
  Context = {
    'ID' : ID,
    'test' : Test,
    'testing' : 3,
  }
  return render(request, 'test.html', Context)

Now, for completeness' sake, this would fail in case the ID is not on the database, so we can do something like this:

def test(request):
  try: 
    ID = request.GET['id']
    Test = Photos.objects.get(pk=ID)
    Context = {
      'ID' : ID,
      'test' : Test,
      'testing' : 3,
    }
    return render(request, 'test.html', Context)
  except Photos.DoesNotExist:
    raise Http404("No Photo matches the given query.")

Of course, Django has its own shortcuts for these kind of things, so your code can be written like this:

from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404

def test(request):
  #I strongly suggest you don't use uppercase in variable names
  id = request.GET['id']
  test = get_object_or_404(pk=id)
  context = {
    'ID' : id,
    'test' : test,
    'testing' : 3,
  }
  return render(request, 'test.html', context)
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  • Excuse me, I don't really understand. Would u, please specify more?
    – kenphanith
    Dec 27, 2015 at 17:47

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