Reputation: 110083
How would I add a user to a group in django by the group's name?
I can do this:
user.groups.add(1) # add by id
How would I do something like this:
user.groups.add(name='groupname') # add by name
Upvotes: 186
Views: 152135
Reputation: 682
You can assign multiple groups to a user using the set
method:
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
users = Group.objects.get(name="user")
managers = Group.objects.get(name="manager")
user.groups.set([users, managers])
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 159
coredumperror is right but I have found one thing I need to share that one
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
# get_or_create return error due to
new_group = Group.objects.get_or_create(name = 'groupName')
print(type(new_group)) # return tuple
new_group = Group.objects.get_or_create(name = 'groupName')
user.groups.add(new_group) # new_group as tuple and it return error
# get() didn't return error due to
new_group = Group.objects.get(name = 'groupName')
print(type(new_group)) # return <class 'django.contrib.auth.models.Group'>
user = User.objects.get(username = 'username')
user.groups.add(new_group) # new_group as object and user is added
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 12448
Find the group using Group model with the name of the group, then add the user to the user_set
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
my_group = Group.objects.get(name='my_group_name')
my_group.user_set.add(your_user)
Upvotes: 350
Reputation: 9100
Here's how to do this in modern versions of Django (tested in Django 1.7):
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
group = Group.objects.get(name='groupname')
user.groups.add(group)
Upvotes: 137