Django does not respect the max_length attribute of TextField model field while validating a ModelForm.
So I define a LimitedTextField inherited from the models.TextField and added validation bits similar to models.CharField:
from django.core import validators
class LimitedTextField(models.TextField):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(LimitedTextField, self开发者_开发技巧).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.max_length = kwargs.get('max_length')
if self.max_length:
self.validators.append(validators.MaxLengthValidator(self.max_length))
def formfield(self, **kwargs):
defaults = {'max_length': self.max_length}
defaults.update(kwargs)
return super(LimitedTextField, self).formfield(**defaults)
But this still has no affect on ModelForm validation.
What am I missing?
As of Django 1.2 this can be done by validators at model level, as explained here: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/validators/
from django.core.validators import MaxLengthValidator
class Comment(models.Model):
comment = models.TextField(validators=[MaxLengthValidator(200)])
Since Django 1.7, you can use max_length
which is only enforced in client side. See here
You can enforce a max length for a TextField by defining a CharField with a Textarea widget like this:
class MyClass(models.Model):
textfield = models.TextField()
class MyForm(forms.ModelForm):
textfield = forms.CharField(
max_length = 50,
widget = forms.Textarea
)
class Meta:
model = MyClass
fields = ('textfield',)
No need to import MaxLengthValidator from validators for Django 2.x
from django.db import models
class Comment(models.Model):
comment = models.TextField(max_length=200)
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