New to this, trying to build an app following a well known Flask tutorial, using Flask-bootstrap, Flask-wtforms, Jinja etc
I have a form with 2 select fields and a button.
class Form(FlaskForm):
school_year = SelectField('School year', choices=some_tuples_list)
category = SelectField('Category', choices=[])
submit = SubmitField('submit')
I want only the first field to be pre-populated, and the other to get populated (on the client side?) based on the previous field's selected value.
In the template I try something like
{{ form.school_year(**{"onchange":"getCategories()"}) }}
which works ok (provided that I return the tuples list to populate the next field, using the proper javascript and route) but I want something like the following
{{ wtf.form_field(form.school_year(**{"onchange":"getCategories()"})) }}
which doesn't work (Error: wtforms.widgets.core.HTMLString object' has no attribute 'flags')
So, I guess my question really is: how do I implement an onChange event on this wtf form field? (And is this what I have to do, or is there a way from the view function?)
Thanks in advance.
Here is an example implementation of this logic to work with WTForms native functionality. The trick here, is if you want to use WTForms validation, you need to instantiate the form with every possible value, then modify the available options in Javascript to show the filtered values based on the other select.
For this example I'm going to use the concept of States and Counties (I work with a lot of geo data so this is a common implementation I build).
Here's my form, I've assigned unique IDs to the important elements to access them from Javascript:
class PickCounty(Form):
form_name = HiddenField('Form Name')
state = SelectField('State:', validators=[DataRequired()], id='select_state')
county = SelectField('County:', validators=[DataRequired()], id='select_county')
submit = SubmitField('Select County!')
Now, the Flask view to instantiate and process the form:
@app.route('/pick_county/', methods=['GET', 'POST'])
def pick_county():
form = PickCounty(form_name='PickCounty')
form.state.choices = [(row.ID, row.Name) for row in State.query.all()]
form.county.choices = [(row.ID, row.Name) for row in County.query.all()]
if request.method == 'GET':
return render_template('pick_county.html', form=form)
if form.validate_on_submit() and request.form['form_name'] == 'PickCounty':
# code to process form
flash('state: %s, county: %s' % (form.state.data, form.county.data))
return redirect(url_for('pick_county'))
A Flask view to respond to XHR requests for Counties:
@app.route('/_get_counties/')
def _get_counties():
state = request.args.get('state', '01', type=str)
counties = [(row.ID, row.Name) for row in County.query.filter_by(state=state).all()]
return jsonify(counties)
And, finally, the Javascript to place at the bottom of your Jinja template. I'm assuming because you mentioned Bootstrap, that you are using jQuery. I'm also assuming this is in line javascript so I'm using Jinja to return the correct URL for the endpoint.
<script charset="utf-8" type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
// jQuery selection for the 2 select boxes
var dropdown = {
state: $('#select_state'),
county: $('#select_county')
};
// call to update on load
updateCounties();
// function to call XHR and update county dropdown
function updateCounties() {
var send = {
state: dropdown.state.val()
};
dropdown.county.attr('disabled', 'disabled');
dropdown.county.empty();
$.getJSON("{{ url_for('_get_counties') }}", send, function(data) {
data.forEach(function(item) {
dropdown.county.append(
$('<option>', {
value: item[0],
text: item[1]
})
);
});
dropdown.county.removeAttr('disabled');
});
}
// event listener to state dropdown change
dropdown.state.on('change', function() {
updateCounties();
});
});
</script>
PJ Santoro's answer is great. The update on load was called but the event listener didn't work for me at first. Turned out that I hadn't swapped out 'state' for my own field ID as I thought it was a keyword referring to the state of the field! D'oh! So in looking for other options, I found this also worked, that might be useful for somebody out there:
// event listener to state dropdown change
$('#state').change(function() {
updateCounties();
});
abigperson's answer nailed it for me....eventually.
Only thing to add, which would have saved me hours of screaming at the screen, is that the current Bootstrap code snippets from their website use a slim version of JQuery. The slim version doesn't contain some of the functions that abigperson uses in their code.
Sliding in the full version of jQuery fixed things for me straight away.
A little further reading suggests that Bootstrap will still function just fine with the full version of jQuery so game on.