11

I am using django's inline formset factory. To use the example in the docs,

author = Author.objects.get(pk=1)
BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book)
formset = BookFormSet(request.POST, instance=author)

will create an inline formset to edit books by a particular author.

I want to create a formset that only allows users to add new books by that author, not edit existing books. Is there a simple way to use inlineformset_factory to do this?

3 Answers 3

9

inlineformset_factory takes a formset kwarg, which defaults to BaseInlineFormSet. BaseInlineFormSet subclasses BaseModelFormSet, which defines a get_queryset method. If you create a BaseInlineFormSet subclass and override get_queryset to return EmptyQuerySet(), you should get what you're after. In the above example then, it would look like this:

from django.db.models.query import EmptyQuerySet
from django.forms.models import BaseInlineFormSet

class BaseInlineAddOnlyFormSet(BaseInlineFormSet):
    def get_queryset(self):
        return EmptyQuerySet()

author = Author.objects.get(pk=1)
BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book, formset=BaseInlineAddOnlyFormSet)
formset = BookFormSet(request.POST, instance=author)
1
  • 1
    The docs appear to say that the preferred way to set the queryset is in overridden __init__ after call to super. But that isn't working for me. Your method does, as does setting the kwarg queryset before call to super's __init__. Thanks.
    – Carl G
    Jun 15, 2012 at 7:32
3

Based on Jeremy Lewis and if you don't want to subclass BaseInlineFormSet, you can just give an empty queryset parameter to your BookFormSet.

See pseudo (untested) Django 1.6 code sample:

BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(parent=Author, model=Book)
if request.method == "POST":
    formset = BookFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES, instance=author)
    if formset.is_valid():
        formset.save()
else:
    queryset = Book.objects.none() # does not allow to edit books
    formset = BookFormSet(instance=project, initial=initial, queryset=queryset)
return render(request, "add_book.html", { "formset": formset, })
2
  • inlineformset_factory now requires the 'fields' param to be explicitly specified. Just an update.
    – KhoPhi
    Apr 20, 2015 at 20:57
  • That is the solution for me! Thanks. Note: you need a queryset with a filter, something like Book.objects.all()[0] will not work. But this will: Book.objects.filter(pk=1)
    – didierCH
    Apr 8, 2019 at 4:16
0

Actually the answer is given in the documentation. Just don't give any instance to the FormSet. From the doc:

>>> from django.forms.models import inlineformset_factory
>>> BookFormSet = inlineformset_factory(Author, Book)
>>> author = Author.objects.get(name=u'Mike Royko')
>>> formset = BookFormSet() # This will create an empty form with your model fields

You can then create view as follows:

if request.method == "POST":
    formset = BookFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES)
    if formset.is_valid():
        formset.save()
else:
    formset = BookFormSet()
return render_to_response("add_book.html", {
    "formset": formset,

Hope it helps.

1
  • This doesn't work for me; it still populates the formset with all Books. django 1.4.
    – Carl G
    Jun 15, 2012 at 7:35

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