Django documentation

Writing your first Django app, part 4

This document describes Django version 0.95. For current documentation, go here.

This tutorial begins where Tutorial 3 left off. We’re continuing the Web-poll application and will focus on simple form processing and cutting down our code.

Write a simple form

Let’s update our poll detail template from the last tutorial, so that the template contains an HTML <form> element:

<h1>{{ poll.question }}</h1>

{% if error_message %}<p><strong>{{ error_message }}</strong></p>{% endif %}

<form action="/polls/{{ poll.id }}/vote/" method="post">
{% for choice in poll.choice_set.all %}
    <input type="radio" name="choice" id="choice{{ forloop.counter }}" value="{{ choice.id }}" />
    <label for="choice{{ forloop.counter }}">{{ choice.choice }}</label><br />
{% endfor %}
<input type="submit" value="Vote" />
</form>

A quick rundown:

  • The above template displays a radio button for each poll choice. The value of each radio button is the associated poll choice’s ID. The name of each radio button is "choice". That means, when somebody selects one of the radio buttons and submits the form, it’ll send the POST data choice=3. This is HTML Forms 101.
  • We set the form’s action to /polls/{{ poll.id }}/vote/, and we set method="post". Using method="post" (as opposed to method="get") is very important, because the act of submitting this form will alter data server-side. Whenever you create a form that alters data server-side, use method="post". This tip isn’t specific to Django; it’s just good Web development practice.

Now, let’s create a Django view that handles the submitted data and does something with it. Remember, in Tutorial 3, we created a URLconf for the polls application that includes this line:

(r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'mysite.polls.views.vote'),

So let’s create a vote() function in mysite/polls/views.py:

from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404, render_to_response
from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect
from mysite.polls.models import Choice, Poll
# ...
def vote(request, poll_id):
    p = get_object_or_404(Poll, pk=poll_id)
    try:
        selected_choice = p.choice_set.get(pk=request.POST['choice'])
    except (KeyError, Choice.DoesNotExist):
        # Redisplay the poll voting form.
        return render_to_response('polls/detail.html', {
            'poll': p,
            'error_message': "You didn't select a choice.",
        })
    else:
        selected_choice.votes += 1
        selected_choice.save()
        # Always return an HttpResponseRedirect after successfully dealing
        # with POST data. This prevents data from being posted twice if a
        # user hits the Back button.
        return HttpResponseRedirect('/polls/%s/results/' % p.id)

This code includes a few things we haven’t covered yet in this tutorial:

  • request.POST is a dictionary-like object that lets you access submitted data by key name. In this case, request.POST['choice'] returns the ID of the selected choice, as a string. request.POST values are always strings.

    Note that Django also provides request.GET for accessing GET data in the same way — but we’re explicitly using request.POST in our code, to ensure that data is only altered via a POST call.

  • request.POST['choice'] will raise KeyError if choice wasn’t provided in POST data. The above code checks for KeyError and redisplays the poll form with an error message if choice isn’t given.

  • After incrementing the choice count, the code returns an HttpResponseRedirect rather than a normal HttpResponse. HttpResponseRedirect takes a single argument: the URL to which the user will be redirected. You should leave off the “http://” and domain name if you can. That helps your app become portable across domains.

    As the Python comment above points out, you should always return an HttpResponseRedirect after successfully dealing with POST data. This tip isn’t specific to Django; it’s just good Web development practice.

As mentioned in Tutorial 3, request is a HTTPRequest object. For more on HTTPRequest objects, see the request and response documentation.

After somebody votes in a poll, the vote() view redirects to the results page for the poll. Let’s write that view:

def results(request, poll_id):
    p = get_object_or_404(Poll, pk=poll_id)
    return render_to_response('polls/results.html', {'poll': p})

This is almost exactly the same as the detail() view from Tutorial 3. The only difference is the template name. We’ll fix this redundancy later.

Now, create a results.html template:

<h1>{{ poll.question }}</h1>

<ul>
{% for choice in poll.choice_set.all %}
    <li>{{ choice.choice }} -- {{ choice.votes }} vote{{ choice.votes|pluralize }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>

Now, go to /polls/1/ in your browser and vote in the poll. You should see a results page that gets updated each time you vote. If you submit the form without having chosen a choice, you should see the error message.

Use generic views: Less code is better

The detail() (from Tutorial 3) and results() views are stupidly simple — and, as mentioned above, redundant. The index() view (also from Tutorial 3), which displays a list of polls, is similar.

These views represent a common case of basic Web development: getting data from the database according to a parameter passed in the URL, loading a template and returning the rendered template. Because this is so common, Django provides a shortcut, called the “generic views” system.

Generic views abstract common patterns to the point where you don’t even need to write Python code to write an app.

Let’s convert our poll app to use the generic views system, so we can delete a bunch of our own code. We’ll just have to take a few steps to make the conversion.

Why the code-shuffle?

Generally, when writing a Django app, you’ll evaluate whether generic views are a good fit for your problem, and you’ll use them from the beginning, rather than refactoring your code halfway through. But this tutorial intentionally has focused on writing the views “the hard way” until now, to focus on core concepts.

You should know basic math before you start using a calculator.

First, open the polls/urls.py URLconf. It looks like this, according to the tutorial so far:

from django.conf.urls.defaults import *

urlpatterns = patterns('mysite.polls.views',
    (r'^$', 'index'),
    (r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/$', 'detail'),
    (r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/results/$', 'results'),
    (r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'vote'),
)

Change it like so:

from django.conf.urls.defaults import *
from mysite.polls.models import Poll

info_dict = {
    'queryset': Poll.objects.all(),
}

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    (r'^$', 'django.views.generic.list_detail.object_list', info_dict),
    (r'^(?P<object_id>\d+)/$', 'django.views.generic.list_detail.object_detail', info_dict),
    (r'^(?P<object_id>\d+)/results/$', 'django.views.generic.list_detail.object_detail', dict(info_dict, template_name='polls/results.html')),
    (r'^(?P<poll_id>\d+)/vote/$', 'mysite.polls.views.vote'),
)

We’re using two generic views here: object_list and object_detail. Respectively, those two views abstract the concepts of “display a list of objects” and “display a detail page for a particular type of object.”

  • Each generic view needs to know what data it will be acting upon. This data is provided in a dictionary. The queryset key in this dictionary points to the list of objects to be manipulated by the generic view.
  • The object_detail generic view expects the ID value captured from the URL to be called "object_id", so we’ve changed poll_id to object_id for the generic views.

By default, the object_detail generic view uses a template called <app name>/<module name>_detail.html. In our case, it’ll use the template "polls/poll_detail.html". Thus, rename your polls/detail.html template to polls/poll_detail.html, and change the render_to_response() line in vote().

Similarly, the object_list generic view uses a template called <app name>/<module name>_list.html. Thus, rename polls/index.html to polls/poll_list.html.

Because we have more than one entry in the URLconf that uses object_detail for the polls app, we manually specify a template name for the results view: template_name='polls/results.html'. Otherwise, both views would use the same template. Note that we use dict() to return an altered dictionary in place.

In previous parts of the tutorial, the templates have been provided with a context that contains the poll` and ``latest_poll_list context variables. However, the generic views provide the variables object and object_list as context. Therefore, you need to change your templates to match the new context variables. Go through your templates, and modify any reference to latest_poll_list to object_list, and change any reference to poll to object.

You can now delete the index(), detail() and results() views from polls/views.py. We don’t need them anymore — they have been replaced by generic views.

The vote() view is still required. However, it must be modified to match the new templates and context variables. Change the template call from polls/detail.html to polls/poll_detail.html, and pass object in the context instead of poll.

Run the server, and use your new polling app based on generic views.

For full details on generic views, see the generic views documentation.

Coming soon

The tutorial ends here for the time being. But check back soon for the next installments:

  • Advanced form processing
  • Using the RSS framework
  • Using the cache framework
  • Using the comments framework
  • Advanced admin features: Permissions
  • Advanced admin features: Custom JavaScript

Questions/Feedback

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Please only use the ticket tracker for criticisms and improvements on the docs. For tech support, ask in the IRC channel or post to the django-users list.