For those interested:
In my base template I've added this:
{% load custom_tags %}
{% if form %}
{% formerrors request form %}
{% endif %}
In my custom_tags template tags library:
@register.simple_tag
def formerrors(request, form):
for field, errors in form.errors.items():
for er
I'll explain a bit more what precisely it is what I want to do: Django
1.2 comes with a new messages framework that allows for each message
to have a different "level" (succes, error, warning, etc). I want to
see if a form has errors, and if so, make a message for each error so
all my notices and e
Write your new view so that it can be used generically.
On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 10:22 AM, Kevin Renskers wrote:
> Well yes, but I do not want to change all of my views. I want a
> generic solution to change template variables before they get
> rendered.
>
>
> On Mar 4, 4:14 pm, Bill Freeman wrote
Well yes, but I do not want to change all of my views. I want a
generic solution to change template variables before they get
rendered.
On Mar 4, 4:14 pm, Bill Freeman wrote:
> Write your own view instead of using direct_to_template.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 10:06 AM, Kevin Renskers wrote
Write your own view instead of using direct_to_template.
On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 10:06 AM, Kevin Renskers wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am wondering if it is possible to change template variables before
> they get rendered in a template.
>
> For example, I use something like this in my template:
> return dir
Hi,
I am wondering if it is possible to change template variables before
they get rendered in a template.
For example, I use something like this in my template:
return direct_to_template(request, template='index.html',
extra_context={'form':form})
I would like to extend this form variable before
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