I’m defining a ChoiceField based on a model’s datas.
field = forms.ChoiceField(choices=[[r.id, r.name] for r in Model.objects.all()])
However I’d like to prepend my options with an empty one to select “no” objects.
But I can’t find a nice way to prepend that.
All my tests like :
field = forms.ChoiceField(choices=[[0, '----------']].extend([[r.id, r.name] for r in Model.objects.all()]))
Returns me a “NoneType object not iterable” error.
The only way I’ve found until now is the following :
def append_empty(choices):
ret = [[0, '----------']]
for c in choices:
ret.append(c)
return ret
And when I define my field :
forms.ChoiceField(choices=append_empty([[r.id, r.name] for r in
Restaurant.objects.all()]), required=False)
However I’d like to keep my code clean and not have that kind of horrors.
Would you have an idea for me ? :p
Thanks by advance.
An easy answer is to do:
Unfortunately, your approach is flawed. Even with your ‘working’ approach, the field choices are defined when the form is defined, not when it is instantiated – so if you add elements to the Model table, they will not appear in the choices list.
You can avoid this by doing the allocation in the
__init__method of your Form.However, there is a much easier approach. Rather than messing about with field choices dynamically, you should use the field that is specifically designed to provide choices from a model –
ModelChoiceField. Not only does this get the list of model elements dynamically at instantiation, it already includes a blank choice by default. See the documentation.