I had a little fun looking into how forms works and came up with multiple solutions, just for the heck of it.
Since you are disabling the widget and not the field, as far as the form is concerned it's always receiving nothing for fieldA and that will always fail validation.
Trying something in the clean() method won't help for invalid forms because clean()
data is for processing.
It looks like the way forms pull data for HTML display is field.data
, which is a call to field.widget.value_from_datadict(POST, FILES, field_name)
so it will always be looking at your POST data.
So I think you have a few options. Hack request.POST
, hack the internal form POST data, or hack value_from_datadict
.
Hacking request.POST
: straight forward, makes sense.
myModelobject = get_object_or_404(MyModel.objects, pk=mymodel_id)
if request.method == 'POST':
POST = request.POST.copy()
POST['fieldA'] = myModelobject.fieldA
model_form = MyModelUpdateForm(POST, instance=myModelobject )
if model_form .is_valid():
# ...
Hacking internal dictionary:
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(MyModelUpdateForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.data.update({ 'fieldA': self.instance.fieldA })
Hacking value_from_datadict
: kinda ridiculous, but illustrates what you can learn from digging into the source
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(MyModelUpdateForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.fields['fieldA'].widget.value_from_datadict = lambda *args: self.instance.first_name
Learned some cool things here : ) Hope it helps.
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