This is an implementation of django's model forms for mongoengine documents.
Mongodbforms supports all the fields that have a simple representation in Django's formfields (IntField, TextField, etc). In addition it also supports ListFields
and MapFields
.
Mongodbforms handles file uploads just like the normal Django forms. Uploaded files are stored in GridFS using the mongoengine fields. Because GridFS has no directories and stores files in a flat space an uploaded file whose name already exists gets a unique filename with the form <filename>_<unique_number>.<extension>
.
For container fields like ListFields
and MapFields
a very simple widget is used. The widget renders the container content in the appropriate field plus one empty field. This is mainly done to not introduce any Javascript dependencies, the backend code will happily handle any kind of dynamic form, as long as the field ids are continuously numbered in the POST data.
You can use any of the other supported fields inside list or map fields. Including FileFields
which aren't really supported by mongoengine inside container fields.
mongodbforms supports forms for normal documents and embedded documents.
To use mongodbforms with normal documents replace djangos forms with mongodbform forms.
from mongodbforms import DocumentForm
class BlogForm(DocumentForm)
...
For embedded documents use EmbeddedDocumentForm
. The Meta-object of the form has to be provided with an embedded field name. The embedded object is appended to this. The form constructor takes a couple of additional arguments: The document the embedded document gets added to and an optional position argument.
If no position is provided the form adds a new embedded document to the list if the form is saved. To edit an embedded document stored in a list field the position argument is required. If you provide a position and no instance to the form the instance is automatically loaded using the position argument.
If the embedded field is a plain embedded field the current object is simply overwritten.
# forms.py
from mongodbforms import EmbeddedDocumentForm
class MessageForm(EmbeddedDocumentForm):
class Meta:
document = Message
embedded_field_name = 'messages'
fields = ['subject', 'sender', 'message',]
# views.py
# create a new embedded object
form = MessageForm(parent_document=some_document, ...)
# edit the 4th embedded object
form = MessageForm(parent_document=some_document, position=3, ...)
In theory the documentation Django's modelform documentation should be all you need (except for one exception; read on). If you find a discrepancy between something that mongodbforms does and what Django's documentation says, you have most likely found a bug. Please report it.
Because the fields on mongoengine documents have no notion of form fields mongodbform uses a generator class to generate the form field for a db field, which is not explicitly set.
To use your own field generator you can either set a generator for your whole project using MONGODBFORMS_FIELDGENERATOR
in settings.py or you can use the formfield_generator
option on the form's Meta class.
The default generator is defined in mongodbforms/fieldgenerator.py
and should make it easy to override form fields and widgets. If you set a generator on the document form you can also pass two dicts field_overrides
and widget_overrides
to __init__
. For a list of valid keys have a look at MongoFormFieldGenerator
.
# settings.py
# set the fieldgeneretor for the whole application
MONGODBFORMS_FIELDGENERATOR = 'myproject.fieldgenerator.GeneratorClass'
# generator.py
from mongodbforms.fieldgenerator import MongoFormFieldGenerator
class MyFieldGenerator(MongoFormFieldGenerator):
...
# forms.py
from mongodbforms import DocumentForm
from generator import MyFieldGenerator
class MessageForm(DocumentForm):
class Meta:
formfield_generator = MyFieldGenerator