django-rest-framework/docs/topics/html-and-forms.md
Tom Christie bd8098e31f Fix template typo.
Closes #3682.
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2015-11-30 17:21:41 +00:00

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# HTML & Forms
REST framework is suitable for returning both API style responses, and regular HTML pages. Additionally, serializers can used as HTML forms and rendered in templates.
## Rendering HTML
In order to return HTML responses you'll need to either `TemplateHTMLRenderer`, or `StaticHTMLRenderer`.
The `TemplateHTMLRenderer` class expects the response to contain a dictionary of context data, and renders an HTML page based on a template that must be specified either in the view or on the response.
The `StaticHTMLRender` class expects the response to contain a string of the pre-rendered HTML content.
Because static HTML pages typically have different behavior from API responses you'll probably need to write any HTML views explicitly, rather than relying on the built-in generic views.
Here's an example of a view that returns a list of "Profile" instances, rendered in an HTML template:
**views.py**:
from my_project.example.models import Profile
from rest_framework.renderers import TemplateHTMLRenderer
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.views import APIView
class ProfileList(APIView):
renderer_classes = [TemplateHTMLRenderer]
template_name = 'profile_list.html'
def get(self, request):
queryset = Profile.objects.all()
return Response({'profiles': queryset})
**profile_list.html**:
<html><body>
<h1>Profiles</h1>
<ul>
{% for profile in profiles %}
<li>{{ profile.name }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</body></html>
## Rendering Forms
Serializers may be rendered as forms by using the `render_form` template tag, and including the serializer instance as context to the template.
The following view demonstrates an example of using a serializer in a template for viewing and updating a model instance:
**views.py**:
from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404
from my_project.example.models import Profile
from rest_framework.renderers import TemplateHTMLRenderer
from rest_framework.views import APIView
class ProfileDetail(APIView):
renderer_classes = [TemplateHTMLRenderer]
template_name = 'profile_detail.html'
def get(self, request, pk):
profile = get_object_or_404(Profile, pk=pk)
serializer = ProfileSerializer(profile)
return Response({'serializer': serializer, 'profile': profile})
def post(self, request, pk):
profile = get_object_or_404(Profile, pk=pk)
serializer = ProfileSerializer(profile)
if not serializer.is_valid():
return Response({'serializer': serializer, 'profile': profile})
return redirect('profile-list')
**profile_detail.html**:
{% load rest_framework %}
<html><body>
<h1>Profile - {{ profile.name }}</h1>
<form action="{% url 'profile-detail' pk=profile.pk %}" method="POST">
{% csrf_token %}
{% render_form serializer %}
<input type="submit" value="Save">
</form>
</body></html>
### Using template packs
The `render_form` tag takes an optional `template_pack` argument, that specifies which template directory should be used for rendering the form and form fields.
REST framework includes three built-in template packs, all based on Bootstrap 3. The built-in styles are `horizontal`, `vertical`, and `inline`. The default style is `horizontal`. To use any of these template packs you'll want to also include the Bootstrap 3 CSS.
The following HTML will link to a CDN hosted version of the Bootstrap 3 CSS:
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.5/css/bootstrap.min.css">
</head>
Third party packages may include alternate template packs, by bundling a template directory containing the necessary form and field templates.
Let's take a look at how to render each of the three available template packs. For these examples we'll use a single serializer class to present a "Login" form.
class LoginSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
email = serializers.EmailField(
max_length=100,
style={'placeholder': 'Email'}
)
password = serializers.CharField(
max_length=100,
style={'input_type': 'password', 'placeholder': 'Password'}
)
remember_me = serializers.BooleanField()
---
#### `rest_framework/vertical`
Presents form labels above their corresponding control inputs, using the standard Bootstrap layout.
*This is the default template pack.*
{% load rest_framework %}
...
<form action="{% url 'login' %}" method="post" novalidate>
{% csrf_token %}
{% render_form serializer template_pack='rest_framework/vertical' %}
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Sign in</button>
</form>
![Vertical form example](../img/vertical.png)
---
#### `rest_framework/horizontal`
Presents labels and controls alongside each other, using a 2/10 column split.
*This is the form style used in the browsable API and admin renderers.*
{% load rest_framework %}
...
<form class="form-horizontal" action="{% url 'login' %}" method="post" novalidate>
{% csrf_token %}
{% render_form serializer %}
<div class="form-group">
<div class="col-sm-offset-2 col-sm-10">
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Sign in</button>
</div>
</div>
</form>
![Horizontal form example](../img/horizontal.png)
---
#### `rest_framework/inline`
A compact form style that presents all the controls inline.
{% load rest_framework %}
...
<form class="form-inline" action="{% url 'login' %}" method="post" novalidate>
{% csrf_token %}
{% render_form serializer template_pack='rest_framework/inline' %}
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Sign in</button>
</form>
![Inline form example](../img/inline.png)
## Field styles
Serializer fields can have their rendering style customized by using the `style` keyword argument. This argument is a dictionary of options that control the template and layout used.
The most common way to customize the field style is to use the `base_template` style keyword argument to select which template in the template pack should be use.
For example, to render a `CharField` as an HTML textarea rather than the default HTML input, you would use something like this:
details = serializers.CharField(
max_length=1000,
style={'base_template': 'textarea.html'}
)
If you instead want a field to be rendered using a custom template that is *not part of an included template pack*, you can instead use the `template` style option, to fully specify a template name:
details = serializers.CharField(
max_length=1000,
style={'template': 'my-field-templates/custom-input.html'}
)
Field templates can also use additional style properties, depending on their type. For example, the `textarea.html` template also accepts a `rows` property that can be used to affect the sizing of the control.
details = serializers.CharField(
max_length=1000,
style={'base_template': 'textarea.html', 'rows': 10}
)
The complete list of `base_template` options and their associated style options is listed below.
base_template | Valid field types | Additional style options
----|----|----
input.html | Any string, numeric or date/time field | input_type, placeholder, hide_label
textarea.html | `CharField` | rows, placeholder, hide_label
select.html | `ChoiceField` or relational field types | hide_label
radio.html | `ChoiceField` or relational field types | inline, hide_label
select_multiple.html | `MultipleChoiceField` or relational fields with `many=True` | hide_label
checkbox_multiple.html | `MultipleChoiceField` or relational fields with `many=True` | inline, hide_label
checkbox.html | `BooleanField` | hide_label
fieldset.html | Nested serializer | hide_label
list_fieldset.html | `ListField` or nested serializer with `many=True` | hide_label