For any further visitors of this thread, yes, you can make a FormView
that acts like both a CreateView
and an UpdateView
. This, despite some opinions of other users, can make a lot of sense if you want to have a single form/URL/page for a web form to save some user data which can be optional but needs to be saved once and only once. You don't want to have 2 URLs/views for this, but just only one page/URL which shows a form, filled with previous data to be updated if a model was already saved by the user.
Think in a kind of "contact" model like this one:
from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
class Contact(models.Model):
"""
Contact details for a customer user.
"""
user = models.OneToOneField(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL)
street = models.CharField(max_length=100, blank=True)
number = models.CharField(max_length=5, blank=True)
postal_code = models.CharField(max_length=7, blank=True)
city = models.CharField(max_length=50, blank=True)
phone = models.CharField(max_length=15)
alternative_email = models.CharField(max_length=254)
So, you write a ModelForm
for it, like this:
from django import forms
from .models import Contact
class ContactForm(forms.ModelForm):
class Meta:
model = Contact
exclude = ('user',) # We'll set the user later.
And your FormView
with both "create" and "update" capabilities will look like this:
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
from django.views.generic.edit import FormView
from .forms import ContactForm
from .models import Contact
class ContactView(FormView):
template_name = 'contact.html'
form_class = ContactForm
success_url = reverse('MY_URL_TO_REDIRECT')
def get_form(self, form_class):
"""
Check if the user already saved contact details. If so, then show
the form populated with those details, to let user change them.
"""
try:
contact = Contact.objects.get(user=self.request.user)
return form_class(instance=contact, **self.get_form_kwargs())
except Contact.DoesNotExist:
return form_class(**self.get_form_kwargs())
def form_valid(self, form):
form.instance.user = self.request.user
form.save()
return super(ContactView, self).form_valid(form)
You don't even need to use a pk
in the URL of this example, because the object is retrieved from the DB via the user
one-to-one field. If you have a case similar than this, in which the model to be created/updated has a unique relationship with the user, it is very easy.
Hope this helps somebody...
Cheers.
UpdateView
. Could you post your view code?SingleObjectMixin
(or in stopping to try to use django generic class-based views)blank=True, null=True
to get things to validate enough to do post-processing, you might be better off decoupling your model and form, and just using a Form, then creating the model instance manually. Works better for me in many use cases like when you need access torequest.user
.