2

I am a newbie in Django. I would like the email field in the subclassed UserCreationForm to be required. I have tried the commented methods but none has worked so far. I have tried the solution from this but to no avail. Any help would be appreciated.

class MyRegistrationForm(UserCreationForm):
    captcha = NoReCaptchaField()
    #email = forms.EmailField(required=True, widget=forms.TextInput(attrs={'class': 'mdl-textfield__input'}))

    class Meta:
        model = User
        fields = ('first_name', 'last_name', 'username', 'email', 'password')
        #email = {
        #   'required': True
        #}
        widgets = {
            'first_name': forms.TextInput(attrs={'class': 'mdl-textfield__input'}),
            'last_name': forms.TextInput(attrs={'class': 'mdl-textfield__input'}),
            'username': forms.TextInput(attrs={'class': 'mdl-textfield__input'}),
            #'email': forms.TextInput(attrs={'class': 'mdl-textfield__input'})
        }

    def save(self, commit=True):
        user = super(MyRegistrationForm, self).save(commit=False)
        user.first_name = self.cleaned_data["first_name"]
        user.last_name = self.cleaned_data["last_name"]
        user.username = self.cleaned_data["username"]
        user.email = self.cleaned_data["email"]
        #user.user_level = self.cleaned_data["user_level"]
        if commit:
            user.save()

        return user

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(MyRegistrationForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)

        self.fields['password1'].widget.attrs['class'] = 'mdl-textfield__input'
        self.fields['password2'].widget.attrs['class'] = 'mdl-textfield__input'
        #self.fields['email'].required=True

3 Answers 3

2

This solved the problem: email = forms.CharField(required=True, widget=forms.EmailInput(attrs={'class': 'validate',}))

0
1

I checked Django's User model and it has required=False. So, I think you cannot achieve what you are looking for with the default User model based on note section of "Overriding the default fields" in the django documentation. I have inluded the snippet

ModelForm is a regular Form which can automatically generate certain fields. The fields that are automatically generated depend on the content of the Meta class and on which fields have already been defined declaratively. Basically, ModelForm will only generate fields that are missing from the form, or in other words, fields that weren’t defined declaratively.

Fields defined declaratively are left as-is, therefore any customizations made to Meta attributes such as widgets, labels, help_texts, or error_messages are ignored; these only apply to fields that are generated automatically.

Similarly, fields defined declaratively do not draw their attributes like max_length or required from the corresponding model. If you want to maintain the behavior specified in the model, you must set the relevant arguments explicitly when declaring the form field.

For example, if the Article model looks like this:

class Article(models.Model):
    headline = models.CharField(
    max_length=200,
    null=True,
    blank=True,
    help_text='Use puns liberally',
)
content = models.TextField() and you want to do some custom validation for headline, while keeping the blank and help_text values

as specified, you might define ArticleForm like this:

class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
    headline = MyFormField(
    max_length=200,
    required=False,
    help_text='Use puns liberally',
)

class Meta:
    model = Article
    fields = ['headline', 'content'] You must ensure that the type of the form field can be used to set the contents of the corresponding

model field. When they are not compatible, you will get a ValueError as no implicit conversion takes place.

So try this,

from django.forms import EmailField
from django.core.validators import EMPTY_VALUES

# I used django [emailfield code][2] as reference for the code of MyEmailField
# Also, following comment in django [custom form fields document][2]:
# If the built-in Field classes don’t meet your needs, you can easily create custom Field classes. To do this, just create a subclass of django.forms.Field. Its only requirements are that it implement a clean() method and that its __init__() method accept the core arguments mentioned above (required, label, initial, widget, help_text).
# You can also customize how a field will be accessed by overriding get_bound_field().

class MyEmailField(forms.EmailField):

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(MyEmailField, self).__init__(*args, strip=True, **kwargs)

    # Clean would be called when checking is_clean
    def clean(self,value):
        if value in EMPTY_VALUES:
            raise Exception('Email required')
        value = self.value.strip()
        return super(MyEmailField, self).clean(value)

class MyRegistrationForm(UserCreationForm):
    captcha = NoReCaptchaField()
    # All available arguments listed in django [core fields argument document][2]. Currently they are required, label, label_suffix, initial, widget, help_text, error_messages, validators, localize, disabled
    email = MyEmailField(required=True)

    class Meta:
        model = User
        fields = ('first_name', 'last_name', 'username', 'email', 'password')
        # other part of your code

PS: I have not tested this code but based on the documentation I think this should take you in a good direction.

Few more references:
Django auth.user with unique email
How to make email field unique in model User from contrib.auth in Django
https://simpleisbetterthancomplex.com/tutorial/2016/07/22/how-to-extend-django-user-model.html

1

Add this to your forms.py file:

class Userform(UserCreationForm):
    email = forms.EmailField(required=True)
    class meta:
         model = User
         fields = ('name','email')

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