To display and edit my extension of the user model in the admin
interface I simply add

    class Admin:
        list_display = ('account_number','userfield')

how can i get this to display in my ModelForm fields?





On Mar 9, 10:51 am, mike171562 <support.desk....@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks alex, that worked, I have the extra field, and now to figure
> out how to to tie it in to the main form and my user model.
>
> On Mar 9, 10:12 am, Alex Gaynor <alex.gay...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 10:10 AM, mike171562 
> > <support.desk....@gmail.com>wrote:
>
> > > thanks malcolm, thats doesnt seem to work though
>
> > > class UserModelForm(forms.ModelForm):
> > >    class Meta:
> > >        model = User
> > >         account = forms.CharField(max_length=50)
> > >        fields =
> > > ('username','email','first_name','last_name','account')
> > > adding the 'account' field as extra is not displayed in the ((field))
> > > form in the template.
>
> > > On Mar 6, 8:40 pm, Malcolm Tredinnick <malc...@pointy-stick.com>
> > > wrote:
> > > > On Fri, 2009-03-06 at 12:25 -0800, mike171562 wrote:
> > > > > I am using Django's ModelForm in a template im working on. I am trying
> > > > > to use it to display the Django User Object and an extension I added
> > > > > of the user model, what would be the correct way to display my User
> > > > > model extension in my template, I would like to be able to edit the
> > > > > User information and the account number I have added all from the same
> > > > > form. Thanks.
>
> > > > A Django Form object represents only a part of an HTML form (which is
> > > > why need to write the HTML "form" tag in the template, for example). You
> > > > can pass multiple form objects through from your view function to the
> > > > template and render both of them inside the same HTML form.
>
> > > > If you want to intermingle fields, you can define extra form fields on a
> > > > model form. For example:
>
> > > >         class MyForm(forms.ModelForm):
> > > >             extra = forms.CharField(max_length=50)
>
> > > >             class Meta:
> > > >                 model = models.Tag
>
> > > > That will put the extra fields at the end of the model form.
>
> > > > If you want to put the extra fields in the middle of the model fields
> > > > somehow, you can either write a custom __init__ method to tweak the
> > > > field ordering (you'll have to read the forms code a bit to see what
> > > > needs tweaking). Alternatively, you can take the not unreasonable
> > > > approach that you've gone beyond the scope of modelforms by this point
> > > > and just write a normal Form class that contains the fields.
>
> > > > I've always been an interested observer of people trying to make
> > > > automatic model-related forms do all sorts of funky things, because I
> > > > hardly ever use them. So many of my use-cases don't have forms mapping
> > > > directly to models, so I write a normal Form class and then my view
> > > > knows how to take fields from the Form instance and convert that data to
> > > > the appropriate models. At some point, it's a fairly grief-free way to
> > > > handle anything beyond the straight model -> form -> model conversion.
> > > > But, as you can see from the above, you aren't short of options here.
>
> > > > Regards,
> > > > Malcolm
>
> > The account = part shouldn't be in the inner Meta class.
>
> > Alex
>
> > --
> > "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to
> > say it." --Voltaire
> > "The people's good is the highest law."--Cicero
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