All of these fields and widgets are available from the
django.contrib.postgres.forms
module.
SimpleArrayField
¶A field which maps to an array. It is represented by an HTML <input>
.
This is a required argument.
It specifies the underlying form field for the array. This is not used to render any HTML, but it is used to process the submitted data and validate it. For example:
>>> from django import forms
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.forms import SimpleArrayField
>>> class NumberListForm(forms.Form):
... numbers = SimpleArrayField(forms.IntegerField())
...
>>> form = NumberListForm({"numbers": "1,2,3"})
>>> form.is_valid()
True
>>> form.cleaned_data
{'numbers': [1, 2, 3]}
>>> form = NumberListForm({"numbers": "1,2,a"})
>>> form.is_valid()
False
This is an optional argument which defaults to a comma: ,
. This
value is used to split the submitted data. It allows you to chain
SimpleArrayField
for multidimensional data:
>>> from django import forms
>>> from django.contrib.postgres.forms import SimpleArrayField
>>> class GridForm(forms.Form):
... places = SimpleArrayField(SimpleArrayField(IntegerField()), delimiter="|")
...
>>> form = GridForm({"places": "1,2|2,1|4,3"})
>>> form.is_valid()
True
>>> form.cleaned_data
{'places': [[1, 2], [2, 1], [4, 3]]}
Note
The field does not support escaping of the delimiter, so be careful in cases where the delimiter is a valid character in the underlying field. The delimiter does not need to be only one character.
This is an optional argument which validates that the array does not exceed the stated length.
This is an optional argument which validates that the array reaches at least the stated length.
User friendly forms
SimpleArrayField
is not particularly user friendly in most cases,
however it is a useful way to format data from a client-side widget for
submission to the server.
SplitArrayField
¶This field handles arrays by reproducing the underlying field a fixed number of times.
This is a required argument. It specifies the form field to be repeated.
This is the fixed number of times the underlying field will be used.
By default, this is set to False
. When False
, each value from
the repeated fields is stored. When set to True
, any trailing
values which are blank will be stripped from the result. If the
underlying field has required=True
, but remove_trailing_nulls
is True
, then null values are only allowed at the end, and will be
stripped.
Some examples:
SplitArrayField(IntegerField(required=True), size=3, remove_trailing_nulls=False)
["1", "2", "3"] # -> [1, 2, 3]
["1", "2", ""] # -> ValidationError - third entry required.
["1", "", "3"] # -> ValidationError - second entry required.
["", "2", ""] # -> ValidationError - first and third entries required.
SplitArrayField(IntegerField(required=False), size=3, remove_trailing_nulls=False)
["1", "2", "3"] # -> [1, 2, 3]
["1", "2", ""] # -> [1, 2, None]
["1", "", "3"] # -> [1, None, 3]
["", "2", ""] # -> [None, 2, None]
SplitArrayField(IntegerField(required=True), size=3, remove_trailing_nulls=True)
["1", "2", "3"] # -> [1, 2, 3]
["1", "2", ""] # -> [1, 2]
["1", "", "3"] # -> ValidationError - second entry required.
["", "2", ""] # -> ValidationError - first entry required.
SplitArrayField(IntegerField(required=False), size=3, remove_trailing_nulls=True)
["1", "2", "3"] # -> [1, 2, 3]
["1", "2", ""] # -> [1, 2]
["1", "", "3"] # -> [1, None, 3]
["", "2", ""] # -> [None, 2]
HStoreField
¶A field which accepts JSON encoded data for an
HStoreField
. It casts all values
(except nulls) to strings. It is represented by an HTML <textarea>
.
User friendly forms
HStoreField
is not particularly user friendly in most cases,
however it is a useful way to format data from a client-side widget for
submission to the server.
Note
On occasions it may be useful to require or restrict the keys which are
valid for a given field. This can be done using the
KeysValidator
.
This group of fields all share similar functionality for accepting range data.
They are based on MultiValueField
. They treat one
omitted value as an unbounded range. They also validate that the lower bound is
not greater than the upper bound. All of these fields use
RangeWidget
.
IntegerRangeField
¶Based on IntegerField
and translates its input into
django.db.backends.postgresql.psycopg_any.NumericRange
. Default for
IntegerRangeField
and
BigIntegerRangeField
.
DecimalRangeField
¶Based on DecimalField
and translates its input into
django.db.backends.postgresql.psycopg_any.NumericRange
. Default for
DecimalRangeField
.
DateTimeRangeField
¶Based on DateTimeField
and translates its input into
django.db.backends.postgresql.psycopg_any.DateTimeTZRange
. Default for
DateTimeRangeField
.
DateRangeField
¶Based on DateField
and translates its input into
django.db.backends.postgresql.psycopg_any.DateRange
. Default for
DateRangeField
.
RangeWidget
¶Widget used by all of the range fields.
Based on MultiWidget
.
RangeWidget
has one required argument:
A RangeWidget
comprises a 2-tuple of base_widget
.
Takes a single “compressed” value of a field, for example a
DateRangeField
,
and returns a tuple representing a lower and upper bound.
Dec 25, 2023