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I need to render the required and error attributes as part of the markup spit by the field in the template. I know that this can be done by using form.as_p, etc. when the layout is auto generated.

I however have a complex 2 column layout for the form. Is it possible to include required_css_class = 'required' which is part of the form class while spitting out html for individual fields?

I need to do this because I want to drive jquery validation from the generated html without a lot of extra work.

Thanks

1 Answer 1

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The required_css_class appears to be in use by forms.BoundField.css_classes and forms.BaseForm._html_output which is only for as_p, as_table, and such.

It's not a part of the regular widget rendering.

You could use that same css_classes method to return the classes for your element though, so I think the easiest solution would be to wrap the <input> with an element and give that the class {{ field.css_classes }}, and modify your validation selector.


Alternatively, here's a way to hack an error class into the errored fields:

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(form, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
        for field in self.errors:
            if not field == '__all__': 
                # errors dict can have key __all__ for non field errors.
                self.fields[field].widget.attrs['class'] = \
                    self.fields[field].widget.attrs.get('class', '') + 'error'

To use required_css_class, you'd have to use the BoundField.css_classes method, which would involve hacking into the base form __getitem__ and __iter__ since BoundField is constructed on demand. The above method is easier.

1
  • what is form referring to in the above sample? Jul 27, 2012 at 23:50

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