Working with forms

About this document

This document provides an introduction to Django’s form handling features. For a more detailed look at specific areas of the forms API, see The Forms API, Form fields, and Form and field validation.

django.forms is Django’s form-handling library.

While it is possible to process form submissions just using Django’s HttpRequest class, using the form library takes care of a number of common form-related tasks. Using it, you can:

  1. Display an HTML form with automatically generated form widgets.
  2. Check submitted data against a set of validation rules.
  3. Redisplay a form in the case of validation errors.
  4. Convert submitted form data to the relevant Python data types.

Overview

The library deals with these concepts:

Widget
A class that corresponds to an HTML form widget, e.g. <input type="text"> or <textarea>. This handles rendering of the widget as HTML.
Field
A class that is responsible for doing validation, e.g. an EmailField that makes sure its data is a valid email address.
Form
A collection of fields that knows how to validate itself and display itself as HTML.
Form Media
The CSS and JavaScript resources that are required to render a form.

The library is decoupled from the other Django components, such as the database layer, views and templates. It relies only on Django settings, a couple of django.utils helper functions and Django’s internationalization hooks (but you’re not required to be using internationalization features to use this library).

Form objects

A Form object encapsulates a sequence of form fields and a collection of validation rules that must be fulfilled in order for the form to be accepted. Form classes are created as subclasses of django.forms.Form and make use of a declarative style that you’ll be familiar with if you’ve used Django’s database models.

For example, consider a form used to implement “contact me” functionality on a personal Web site:

from django import forms

class ContactForm(forms.Form):
    subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
    message = forms.CharField()
    sender = forms.EmailField()
    cc_myself = forms.BooleanField(required=False)

A form is composed of Field objects. In this case, our form has four fields: subject, message, sender and cc_myself. CharField, EmailField and BooleanField are just three of the available field types; a full list can be found in Form fields.

If your form is going to be used to directly add or edit a Django model, you can use a ModelForm to avoid duplicating your model description.

Using a form in a view

The standard pattern for processing a form in a view looks like this:

from django.shortcuts import render
from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect

def contact(request):
    if request.method == 'POST': # If the form has been submitted...
        form = ContactForm(request.POST) # A form bound to the POST data
        if form.is_valid(): # All validation rules pass
            # Process the data in form.cleaned_data
            # ...
            return HttpResponseRedirect('/thanks/') # Redirect after POST
    else:
        form = ContactForm() # An unbound form

    return render(request, 'contact.html', {
        'form': form,
    })

There are three possible code paths here:

Form submitted? Data? What occurs
Unsubmitted None yet Template gets passed unbound instance of ContactForm.
Submitted Invalid data Template gets passed bound instance of ContactForm.
Submitted Valid data Valid data is processed. Redirect to a “thanks” page.

The distinction between Bound and unbound forms is important:

  • An unbound form has no data associated with it. When rendered to the user, it will be empty or will contain default values.
  • A bound form has submitted data, and hence can be used to tell if that data is valid. If an invalid bound form is rendered, it can include inline error messages telling the user what data to correct.

Handling file uploads with a form

To see how to handle file uploads with your form, see Binding uploaded files to a form.

Processing the data from a form

Once is_valid() returns True, the successfully validated form data will be in the form.cleaned_data dictionary. This data will have been converted nicely into Python types for you.

Note

You can still access the unvalidated data directly from request.POST at this point, but the validated data is better.

In the above example, cc_myself will be a boolean value. Likewise, fields such as IntegerField and FloatField convert values to a Python int and float respectively.

Read-only fields are not available in form.cleaned_data (and setting a value in a custom clean() method won’t have any effect). These fields are displayed as text rather than as input elements, and thus are not posted back to the server.

Extending the earlier example, here’s how the form data could be processed:

if form.is_valid():
    subject = form.cleaned_data['subject']
    message = form.cleaned_data['message']
    sender = form.cleaned_data['sender']
    cc_myself = form.cleaned_data['cc_myself']

    recipients = ['info@example.com']
    if cc_myself:
        recipients.append(sender)

    from django.core.mail import send_mail
    send_mail(subject, message, sender, recipients)
    return HttpResponseRedirect('/thanks/') # Redirect after POST

Tip

For more on sending email from Django, see Sending email.

Displaying a form using a template

Forms are designed to work with the Django template language. In the above example, we passed our ContactForm instance to the template using the context variable form. Here’s a simple example template:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">{% csrf_token %}
{{ form.as_p }}
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>

The form only outputs its own fields; it is up to you to provide the surrounding <form> tags and the submit button.

If your form includes uploaded files, be sure to include enctype="multipart/form-data" in the form element. If you wish to write a generic template that will work whether or not the form has files, you can use the is_multipart() attribute on the form:

<form action="/contact/" method="post"
    {% if form.is_multipart %}enctype="multipart/form-data"{% endif %}>

Forms and Cross Site Request Forgery protection

Django ships with an easy-to-use protection against Cross Site Request Forgeries. When submitting a form via POST with CSRF protection enabled you must use the csrf_token template tag as in the preceding example. However, since CSRF protection is not directly tied to forms in templates, this tag is omitted from the following examples in this document.

form.as_p will output the form with each form field and accompanying label wrapped in a paragraph. Here’s the output for our example template:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">
<p><label for="id_subject">Subject:</label>
    <input id="id_subject" type="text" name="subject" maxlength="100" /></p>
<p><label for="id_message">Message:</label>
    <input type="text" name="message" id="id_message" /></p>
<p><label for="id_sender">Sender:</label>
    <input type="text" name="sender" id="id_sender" /></p>
<p><label for="id_cc_myself">Cc myself:</label>
    <input type="checkbox" name="cc_myself" id="id_cc_myself" /></p>
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>

Note that each form field has an ID attribute set to id_<field-name>, which is referenced by the accompanying label tag. This is important for ensuring forms are accessible to assistive technology such as screen reader software. You can also customize the way in which labels and ids are generated.

You can also use form.as_table to output table rows (you’ll need to provide your own <table> tags) and form.as_ul to output list items.

Customizing the form template

If the default generated HTML is not to your taste, you can completely customize the way a form is presented using the Django template language. Extending the above example:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">
    {{ form.non_field_errors }}
    <div class="fieldWrapper">
        {{ form.subject.errors }}
        <label for="id_subject">Email subject:</label>
        {{ form.subject }}
    </div>
    <div class="fieldWrapper">
        {{ form.message.errors }}
        <label for="id_message">Your message:</label>
        {{ form.message }}
    </div>
    <div class="fieldWrapper">
        {{ form.sender.errors }}
        <label for="id_sender">Your email address:</label>
        {{ form.sender }}
    </div>
    <div class="fieldWrapper">
        {{ form.cc_myself.errors }}
        <label for="id_cc_myself">CC yourself?</label>
        {{ form.cc_myself }}
    </div>
    <p><input type="submit" value="Send message" /></p>
</form>

Each named form-field can be output to the template using {{ form.name_of_field }}, which will produce the HTML needed to display the form widget. Using {{ form.name_of_field.errors }} displays a list of form errors, rendered as an unordered list. This might look like:

<ul class="errorlist">
    <li>Sender is required.</li>
</ul>

The list has a CSS class of errorlist to allow you to style its appearance. If you wish to further customize the display of errors you can do so by looping over them:

{% if form.subject.errors %}
    <ol>
    {% for error in form.subject.errors %}
        <li><strong>{{ error|escape }}</strong></li>
    {% endfor %}
    </ol>
{% endif %}

Looping over the form’s fields

If you’re using the same HTML for each of your form fields, you can reduce duplicate code by looping through each field in turn using a {% for %} loop:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">
    {% for field in form %}
        <div class="fieldWrapper">
            {{ field.errors }}
            {{ field.label_tag }}: {{ field }}
        </div>
    {% endfor %}
    <p><input type="submit" value="Send message" /></p>
</form>

Within this loop, {{ field }} is an instance of BoundField. BoundField also has the following attributes, which can be useful in your templates:

{{ field.label }}
The label of the field, e.g. Email address.
{{ field.label_tag }}
The field’s label wrapped in the appropriate HTML <label> tag, e.g. <label for="id_email">Email address</label>
{{ field.value }}
The value of the field. e.g someone@example.com
{{ field.html_name }}
The name of the field that will be used in the input element’s name field. This takes the form prefix into account, if it has been set.
{{ field.help_text }}
Any help text that has been associated with the field.
{{ field.errors }}
Outputs a <ul class="errorlist"> containing any validation errors corresponding to this field. You can customize the presentation of the errors with a {% for error in field.errors %} loop. In this case, each object in the loop is a simple string containing the error message.
{{ field.is_hidden }}

This attribute is True if the form field is a hidden field and False otherwise. It’s not particularly useful as a template variable, but could be useful in conditional tests such as:

{% if field.is_hidden %}
   {# Do something special #}
{% endif %}
{{ field.field }}
The Field instance from the form class that this BoundField wraps. You can use it to access Field attributes , e.g. {{ char_field.field.max_length }}.

Looping over hidden and visible fields

If you’re manually laying out a form in a template, as opposed to relying on Django’s default form layout, you might want to treat <input type="hidden"> fields differently than non-hidden fields. For example, because hidden fields don’t display anything, putting error messages “next to” the field could cause confusion for your users – so errors for those fields should be handled differently.

Django provides two methods on a form that allow you to loop over the hidden and visible fields independently: hidden_fields() and visible_fields(). Here’s a modification of an earlier example that uses these two methods:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">
    {# Include the hidden fields #}
    {% for hidden in form.hidden_fields %}
    {{ hidden }}
    {% endfor %}
    {# Include the visible fields #}
    {% for field in form.visible_fields %}
        <div class="fieldWrapper">
            {{ field.errors }}
            {{ field.label_tag }}: {{ field }}
        </div>
    {% endfor %}
    <p><input type="submit" value="Send message" /></p>
</form>

This example does not handle any errors in the hidden fields. Usually, an error in a hidden field is a sign of form tampering, since normal form interaction won’t alter them. However, you could easily insert some error displays for those form errors, as well.

Reusable form templates

If your site uses the same rendering logic for forms in multiple places, you can reduce duplication by saving the form’s loop in a standalone template and using the include tag to reuse it in other templates:

<form action="/contact/" method="post">
    {% include "form_snippet.html" %}
    <p><input type="submit" value="Send message" /></p>
</form>

# In form_snippet.html:

{% for field in form %}
    <div class="fieldWrapper">
        {{ field.errors }}
        {{ field.label_tag }}: {{ field }}
    </div>
{% endfor %}

If the form object passed to a template has a different name within the context, you can alias it using the with argument of the include tag:

<form action="/comments/add/" method="post">
    {% include "form_snippet.html" with form=comment_form %}
    <p><input type="submit" value="Submit comment" /></p>
</form>

If you find yourself doing this often, you might consider creating a custom inclusion tag.