4

I am trying to customize Django's comments form. Inside django.contrib.comments.forms I noticed that all the field forms are declared in the class CommentDetailForm, which is inherited from CommentSecurityForm. Then I think when I write the template tag {% get_comment_form for order as form %}, it's getting the class called CommentForm which inherits CommentDetailForm with a honeypot field.

I wanted to customize the comments form so that it only displays the comments field (and not the optional name, email, or URL fields). Those information will be given by the current logged in user. In fact, only logged in users with certain UserProfile.user_type (UserProfile has a foreign key to User) are allow to comment.

Any tips on how to achieve this? Looking at the source code of the Django's comments already scares me lol.

EDIT:

Here is how the comment template looks so far:

{% get_comment_form for order as form %}
    <form action = "{% comment_form_target %}" method = "post">
        {% csrf_token %}
        {{ form }}
        <input type = "submit" name = "submit" value = "Post">
    </form>

And the site looks like this

I want to hide Name, Email address, and URL.

3
  • UserProfile doesn't have a one-to-one with User? Also, if you're not worried about security, the simplest way is to just make the fields "hidden" in the template, and fill in the user etc.
    – agf
    Mar 27, 2012 at 3:52
  • Well even if I do {% render_comment_form for order %} is there a way to hide it unless User.profile has a certain user_type?
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 4:00
  • Oh you're right lol. Okay what about hiding the other fields? What do you mean make the fields "hidden" in the template? I will update my question to show you what I do right now.
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 4:05

1 Answer 1

3

You should be able to do all of this in the template:

{% ifequal User.profile.user_type "comment_type" %}
{% get_comment_form for order as form %}
  <form action="{% comment_form_target %}" method="post">
    {% csrf_token %}
    {% for field in form %}
    {% ifequal field.name "name" %}
        <input id="id_name" type="hidden" name="name" value="{{ user.username }}" />
    {% else %}{% ifequal field.name "email" %}
        <input type="hidden" name="email" value="{{ user.email }}" id="id_email" />
    {% else %}{{ field }}{% endifequal %}{% endifequal %}
    {% endfor %}    
        <input type="submit" name="submit" value="Post">
  </form>
{% endifequal %}
12
  • I don't think I need to add the value for name or email. They are all optional. In fact, Django comments automatically does that (maybe somewhere in the models.py. How do I just only show the comments field (and yet still have the advantage of the hidden honeypot fields and the built-in security)?
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 4:22
  • If you don't want to have a field at all, just do {% ifequal field.name "name" %}{% else %} Handle the other fields here {% endifequal %}. Just leave the main body of the ifequal blank. I'm not sure what I can add to what I included in the answer -- it allows you to control the form however you want.
    – agf
    Mar 27, 2012 at 4:37
  • 2
    Nevermind, I figured it out by looking at the template form.html inside Django's comment framework under django.contrib.comments. Thanks for all your help!
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 6:26
  • 1
    I'm using Django v1.4, but there is a similar example with overriding the admin templates in the official Django tutorials. Basically you setup your TEMPLATE_DIR inside settings.py (I used os.path.join( os.path.dirname( __file__ ), '..', 'templates' ).replace( '\\', '/' ),), then inside your template folder, create another folder of the app whose template you want to override, then inside that folder add your template with the same name as the the one you want to override (form.html).
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 6:42
  • 1
    So mine looks like mysite/templates/comments/form.html. I hope that helps! Remember in Django v1.4, my settings are in mysite/mysite/settings.py. That's why there is a .. in my os.path.dirname() above.
    – hobbes3
    Mar 27, 2012 at 6:43

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.