I am fairly new to flask framework and was creating an edit profile page for a webportal. I am stuck at a point and am unable to autofill a form.
Here is my form class :
class EditProfile(Form):
username = TextField('Username', [Required()])
email = TextField('Email', [Required()])
about = TextAreaField('About', [Required()])
website = TextField('Website', [Required()])
This is my function that evaluates the form.
def editprofile(nickname = None):
if g.fas_user['username'] == nickname or request.method == 'POST':
form = EditProfile()
form_action = url_for('profile.editprofile')
if request.method == 'POST' and form.validate():
if form.username.data == nickname :
query = EditProfile(form.username.data,
form.email.data,
form.about.data,
form.website.data,
)
print query #debug
db.session.add(query)
db.session.commit()
flash('User Updated')
print "added"
return(url_for('profile.editprofile'))
return render_template('profile/add.html', form=form,
form_action=form_action, title="Update Profile")
else:
return "Unauthorised"
And my html template for form is form is :
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block title %}
{{ title }}
{% endblock %}
{% block content %}
{% from "_formhelpers.html" import render_field %}
<div id="Edit Profile">
<h2>{{ title }}</h2>
<form method="post" action="{{ form_action }}">
<fieldset>
<legend></legend>
{{ render_field(form.username) }}
{{ render_field(form.email)}}
{{ render_field(form.about )}}
{{ render_field(form.website) }}
</fieldset>
<input type="submit" class="button" value="Save"/>
</form>
</div>
{% endblock %}
I have an object, of user class. And from that object I want to prefill this form.How can I prepopulate the values in the form. I am trying to implement the edit profile functionality here.
You need to pass your object to the form when you create it.
form = EditProfile(obj=user) # or whatever your object is called
You're going to run into some trouble with
query = EditProfile(form.username.data,
form.email.data,
form.about.data,
form.website.data,
)
db.session.add(query)
It creates a new instance of your EditProfile
form. You then try to add it to the session. The session wants models, not forms.
Instead, after validating the form, you can associate its values with the object.
form.populate_obj(user) # or whatever your object is called
Because your object was already loaded, you won't need to add it to the session. You can remove db.session.add(query)
and just call db.session.commit()
.
The easiest way I've found of doing this is to fill the form fields on a get request.
@decorator_authorized_user # This decorator should make sure the user is authorized, like @login_required from flask-login
def editprofile(nickname = None):
# Prepare the form and user
form = EditProfile()
form_action = url_for('profile.editprofile')
my_user = Users.get(...) # get your user object or whatever you need
if request.method == 'GET':
form.username.data = my_user.username
form.email.data = my_user.email
# and on
if form.validate_on_submit():
# This section needs to be reworked.
# You'll want to take the user object and set the appropriate attributes
# to the appropriate values from the form.
if form.username.data == nickname:
query = EditProfile(form.username.data,
form.email.data,
form.about.data,
form.website.data,
)
print query #debug
db.session.add(query)
db.session.commit()
flash('User Updated')
print "added"
return(url_for('profile.editprofile'))
return render_template('profile/add.html', form=form,
form_action=form_action, title="Update Profile")
This sets up the function to return a prefilled form on a get request. You'll have to rework the section under form.validate_on_submit
. Dirn's answer suggests a few of the right things to do.
To populate the form with your SQLAlchemy object use:
form = EditProfile(obj=<SQLAlchemy_object>)
If your form fields don't match the database columns in your model for whatever reason (they should), the form class takes kwargs:
**kwargs – If neither formdata or obj contains a value for a field, the form will assign the value of a matching keyword argument to the
field, if provided.
I found that one use case for this is if you have a form that contains fields that reference more than one model (e.g. through a relationship); passing the one obj
isn't enough.
So let's take your example and say that in your database model (for user
) you use site
instead of website
(the form field name). You'd do this to populate your form from the SQLAlchemy object:
form = EditProfile(obj=user, website=user.site)
Then in the POST you'd have to do this to populate your SQLAchemy object from your form:
form.populate_obj(user)
user.site = form.website.data
db.session.commit()