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Fix in documentation (#5612)
- typo in serialization document: 'intead' => 'instead'
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@ -1011,7 +1011,7 @@ Takes the object instance that requires serialization, and should return a primi
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Takes the unvalidated incoming data as input and should return the validated data that will be made available as `serializer.validated_data`. The return value will also be passed to the `.create()` or `.update()` methods if `.save()` is called on the serializer class.
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Takes the unvalidated incoming data as input and should return the validated data that will be made available as `serializer.validated_data`. The return value will also be passed to the `.create()` or `.update()` methods if `.save()` is called on the serializer class.
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If any of the validation fails, then the method should raise a `serializers.ValidationError(errors)`. The `errors` argument should be a dictionary mapping field names (or `settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY`) to a list of error messages. If you don't need to alter deserialization behavior and instead want to provide object-level validation, it's recommended that you intead override the [`.validate()`](#object-level-validation) method.
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If any of the validation fails, then the method should raise a `serializers.ValidationError(errors)`. The `errors` argument should be a dictionary mapping field names (or `settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY`) to a list of error messages. If you don't need to alter deserialization behavior and instead want to provide object-level validation, it's recommended that you instead override the [`.validate()`](#object-level-validation) method.
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The `data` argument passed to this method will normally be the value of `request.data`, so the datatype it provides will depend on the parser classes you have configured for your API.
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The `data` argument passed to this method will normally be the value of `request.data`, so the datatype it provides will depend on the parser classes you have configured for your API.
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