In a model's Meta class, I define a unique_tog开发者_运维知识库ether. I have a ModelForm based on this model. When I call is_valid on this ModelForm, an error will automatically raised if unique_together validation fails. That's all good.
Now my problem is that I'm not satisfied with the default unique_together error message. I want to override it. How can I do that? For a field related error, I can easily do that by setting error_messages on the field parameters. But unique_together is a non field error. How can I override a non field error message?
You can do this since Django 1.7
from django.forms import ModelForm
from django.core.exceptions import NON_FIELD_ERRORS
class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
class Meta:
error_messages = {
NON_FIELD_ERRORS: {
'unique_together': "%(model_name)s's %(field_labels)s are not unique.",
}
}
Update 2016/10/20: See jifeng-yin's even nicer answer below for Django >= 1.7
The nicest way to override these error messages might be to override the unique_error_message
method on your model. Django calls this method to get the error message whenever it encounters a uniqueness issue during validation.
You can just handle the specific case you want and let all other cases be handled by Django as usual:
def unique_error_message(self, model_class, unique_check):
if model_class == type(self) and unique_check == ('field1', 'field2'):
return 'My custom error message'
else:
return super(Project, self).unique_error_message(model_class, unique_check)
For DRF serializers you can use this
from rest_framework import serializers
class SomeSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = Some
validators = [
serializers.UniqueTogetherValidator(
queryset=model.objects.all(),
fields=('field1', 'field2'),
message="Some custom message."
)
]
Here is the original source.
After a quick check, it seems that unique_together
validation errors are hard-coded deep in django.db.models.Model.unique_error_message
:
def unique_error_message(self, model_class, unique_check):
opts = model_class._meta
model_name = capfirst(opts.verbose_name)
# A unique field
if len(unique_check) == 1:
field_name = unique_check[0]
field_label = capfirst(opts.get_field(field_name).verbose_name)
# Insert the error into the error dict, very sneaky
return _(u"%(model_name)s with this %(field_label)s already exists.") % {
'model_name': unicode(model_name),
'field_label': unicode(field_label)
}
# unique_together
else:
field_labels = map(lambda f: capfirst(opts.get_field(f).verbose_name), unique_check)
field_labels = get_text_list(field_labels, _('and'))
return _(u"%(model_name)s with this %(field_label)s already exists.") % {
'model_name': unicode(model_name),
'field_label': unicode(field_labels)
}
So maybe you should try to override this method from your model, to insert your own message !?
However, I haven't tried, and it seems a rather brutal solution ! But if you don't have something better, you might try...
Notice: A lot had changed in Django since this answer. So better check other answers...
If what sebpiq is true( since i do not check source code), then there is one possible solution you can do, but it is the hard way...
You can define a validation rule in your form, as it described here
You can see examples of validation with more than one field, so by using this method, you can define a unique together check before standard django unique check executed...
Or the worst one, you can do a validation in your view before you try to save the objects...
You might take a look at overriding django/db/models/base.py:Model._perform_unique_checks() in your model.
In that method you can get the "original" errors:
errors = super(MyModel, self)._perform_unique_checks(unique_checks)
-- then modify and return them upwards.
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