Krystian Cybulski
Krystian Cybulski

Reputation: 11118

Django and fieldsets on ModelForm

I know you can specify fieldsets in django for Admin helpers. However, I cannot find anything useful for ModelForms. Just some patches which I cannot use. Am I missing something? Is there a way I could achieve something like fieldsets without manually writing out each field on my template in the appropriate tag.

I would ideally like to iterate through a set of BoundFields. However, doing something like this at the end of my ModelForm:

    fieldsets = []
    fieldsets.append(('Personal Information',
                      [username,password,password2,first_name,last_name,email]),) # add a 2 element tuple of string and list of fields
    fieldsets.append(('Terms & Conditions',
                      [acceptterms,acceptprivacy]),) # add a 2 element tuple of string and list of fields

fails as the items contained in my data structure are the raw fields, not the BoundFields. t looks like BoundFields are generated on the fly... this makes me sad. Could I create my own subclass of forms.Form which contains a concept of fieldsets (even a rough one that is not backward compatible... this is just for my own project) and if so, can you give any pointer? I do not want to mess with the django code.

Upvotes: 41

Views: 53799

Answers (6)

You can use the django-forms-fieldset package.

pip install django-forms-fieldset

Add forms_fieldset to your INSTALLED_APPS setting like this:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'forms_fieldset',
]

Add fieldsets in your form

from django.forms import ModelForm

from .models import Student

class StudentForm(ModelForm):
    fieldsets = [
        ("Student Information", {'fields': [
            ('first_name', 'last_name'),
            ('email', 'adress'),
        ]}),
        ("Parent Information", {'fields': [
            'mother_name',
            'father_name',
        ]}),
    ]
    class Meta:
        model = Student
        fields = '__all__'

In your views

def home(request):
    form = StudentForm()
    if request.method == 'POST':
        form = Form(request.POST, request.FILES)
        #save...
    context = {
        'form': form,
    }
    return render(request, 'home.html', context)

in your template

{% load forms_fieldset static %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="{% static 'forms_fieldset/css/main.css' %}">

<form>
    {{ form|fieldset:'#42945c' }}
</form>

Upvotes: 3

Wtower
Wtower

Reputation: 19922

This was the code that I developed in order to understand custom tags (with links). I applied it to create a fieldset.

Disclaimer: I encourage the use of any of the above answers, this was just for the sake of learning.

templatetags/myextras.py:

from django import template
from django.template import Context

register = template.Library()


class FieldsetNode(template.Node):
    """ Fieldset renderer for 'fieldset' tag """
    def __init__(self, nodelist, fieldset_name):
        """ Initialize renderer class
        https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/howto/custom-template-tags/#writing-the-renderer
        :param nodelist: a list of the template nodes inside a block of 'fieldset'
        :param fieldset_name: the name of the fieldset
        :return: None
        """
        self.nodelist = nodelist
        self.fieldset_name = fieldset_name

    def render(self, context):
        """ Render the inside of a fieldset block based on template file
        https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/howto/custom-template-tags/#auto-escaping-considerations
        :param context: the previous template context
        :return: HTML string
        """
        t = context.template.engine.get_template('myapp/fieldset.html')
        return t.render(Context({
            'var': self.nodelist.render(context),
            'name': self.fieldset_name,
        }, autoescape=context.autoescape))


@register.tag
def fieldset(parser, token):
    """ Compilation function for fieldset block tag
    Render a form fieldset
    https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/howto/custom-template-tags/#writing-the-compilation-function
    https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/howto/custom-template-tags/#parsing-until-another-block-tag
    :param parser: template parser
    :param token: tag name and variables
    :return: HTML string
    """
    try:
        tag_name, fieldset_name = token.split_contents()
    except ValueError:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError("%r tag requires a single argument" % token.contents.split()[0])
    if not (fieldset_name[0] == fieldset_name[-1] and fieldset_name[0] in ('"', "'")):
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError("%r tag's argument should be in quotes" % tag_name)
    nodelist = parser.parse(('endfieldset',))
    parser.delete_first_token()
    return FieldsetNode(nodelist, fieldset_name[1:-1])

templates/myapp/fieldset.html:

<div class="fieldset panel panel-default">
    <div class="panel-heading">{{ name }}</div>
    <div class="panel-body">{{ var }}</div>
</div>

templates/myapp/myform.html:

<form action="{% url 'myapp:myurl' %}" method="post">
    {% csrf_token %}
    {% fieldset 'General' %}
        {{form.myfield1 }}
    {% endfieldset %}
    {# my submit button #}
</form>

Upvotes: 0

Carl Meyer
Carl Meyer

Reputation: 126671

I think this snippet does exactly what you want. It gives you a Form subclass that allows you to declaratively subdivide your form into fieldsets and iterate through them in your template.

Update: that snippet has since become part of django-form-utils

Upvotes: 52

oivvio
oivvio

Reputation: 3156

Daniel Greenfelds django-uni-form solves this with a the Layout helper class. I'm trying it out right now and it looks pretty clean to me.

Uniform helpers can use layout objects. A layout can consist of fieldsets, rows, columns, HTML and fields.

I originally picked Django-uni-form because it complies with section 508.

Upvotes: 4

Van Gale
Van Gale

Reputation: 43932

Fieldsets in modelforms are still in "design" stage. There's a ticket in Django trac with low activity.

It's something I've been interested in researching myself in the near future, but since I haven't done it yet the best I can offer are these snippets:

Edit: I just noticed this question again and I realize it needs an edit to point out Carl's project django-form-utils which contains a BetterForm class which can contain fieldsets. If you like this project give him a +1 for his answer below :)

Upvotes: 36

Joe Holloway
Joe Holloway

Reputation: 28958

One thing you can do is break your logical fieldsets into separate model form classes.

class PersonalInfoForm (forms.ModelForm):
    class Meta:
        model=MyModel
        fields=('field1', 'field2', ...)

class TermsForm (forms.ModelForm):
    class Meta:
        model=MyModel
        fields=('fieldX', 'fieldY', ...)

Pass them to your template in different variables and break up the formsets:

<form ...>
   <fieldset><legend>Personal Information</legend>
       {{ personal_info_form }}
   </fieldset>
   <fieldset><legend>Terms and Conditions</legend>
       {{ terms_form }}
   </fieldset>
</form>

In that sense each of your form classes is just a fragment of the actual HTML form.

It introduces a touch of complexity when you call save on the form. You'll probably want to pass commit=False and then merge the resultant objects. Or just avoid using ModelForm.save altogether and populate your model object by hand with 'cleaned_data'

Upvotes: 16

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