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I am having trouble stopping bots filling in spam while letting through legit users. I have a honeypot field with autocomplete="off" attribute but it doesn't seem to be working. From what i've read, the best cross browser solution is to add autocomplete="false" to the main form tag itself, e.g. <form autocomplete="false">...</form>. What is the best way to do this in Django?

1 Answer 1

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Just do that in your template where the form is added.

In a template you'd typically do something like;

    <form autocomplete="false">
        {% csrf_token %}
   
        {% for hidden in form.hidden_fields %}
            {{ hidden }}
        {% endfor %}

        {% for field in form.visible_fields %}
            {{ field.label }}
            {{ field }}
            {{ field.help_text }}
        {% endfor %}

So just add whatever you want to the form tag.

You should probably also have a look at including recaptcha if you've got spam problems.

And remember that v3 doesn't require any selecting street lights etc

https://pypi.org/project/django-recaptcha/

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  • @DermotMcGrath That solves it for you then? Want to mark this as the right answer? Sep 4, 2020 at 12:18

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