Version 11 (modified by 19 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
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NewbieMistakes ¶
Please feel free to share the things that tripped you up when you started with Django. We'll try to improve Django's error handling to catch such mistakes in the future.
POST to views loses POST data ¶
Symptom ¶
You are having a form that does a POST to some view and the view doesn't get the POST data from the form.
Probable cause ¶
You might missing the / at the end of the form action. If that is the case, the CommonMiddleware redirects to the exact name of the view - and that allways includes a trailing /. Because it does so by using the standard HTTP redirection through Location header, it can't pass on the POST data - and that's why it get's lost.
Solution ¶
Allways make sure that your form actions end with / like this:
<form action="/registration/login/" method="POST"> <input name="username"> <input name="password" type="password"> </form>
URLconf include() misbehaving ¶
Symptom ¶
You're trying to get your URLconf files to work, but getting cryptic errors about how there is no module 'index' (where 'index' is some function you are trying to assign as a view), or module 'foo' has no attribute 'urlpatterns'.
Probable cause ¶
You may have tried to load your view files using include() in the URLconf file (in tutorial 3, this is myproject/settings/urls/main.py). The include() call assumes that the file it's loading is also a URLconf file.
Solution ¶
Remove the include(). Just give the module and function name (e.g., 'myproject.apps.polls.views.polls.index'
) as a string, with no include() around it.
Blank object names ¶
Symptom ¶
The automatic admin interface is showing nothing (or a single
) in the "Select [object_type] to change" view.
Probable cause ¶
You may have forgotten to create a __repr__()
function for your model. Django calls __repr__()
to find out how to display objects in the admin interface.
Solution ¶
Add a __repr__()
function to all your models. Make it a habit so it becomes automatic.
Integer & NULLS ¶
Problem ¶
When you have a Field: current_zip = meta.IntegerField(maxlength=5,blank=True)
django will create a not nullable field in the DB. However leaving the field blank (in admin/web) django will try and insert a NULL value in the DB.
Solution ¶
Add null=True:
current_zip = meta.IntegerField(maxlength=5,null=True,blank=True)
Appending to a list in session doesn't work ¶
Problem ¶
If you have a list in your session, append operations don't get saved to the object.
Solution ¶
Copy the list out of the session object, append to it, then copy it back in:
sessionlist = request.session['my_list'] sessionlist.append(new_object) request.session['my_list'] = sessionlist
Errors about undefined attributes with one-char names ¶
Problem ¶
You get an AttributeError with some weird attribute name that's only one char long. You don't have that attribute name anywhere in your code.
Solution ¶
Search your model and code for situations where you have to pass a tuple of values and want to pass a tuple with one element - and that element is a string like in this sample:
class META: ... admin = meta.Admin( list_display = ('total_price'), ... )
It's a standard python error - you are just missing a comma in the list_display assignement like this:
class META: ... admin = meta.Admin( list_display = ('total_price',), ... )
Since a tuple is expected but a string provided, the code will merrily iterate over the characters of the string instead of the tuple elements - and that's where the single-char attribute names come from.