I\'m currently work on some project in pyramid and have problem with wtforms SelectField.
I have a 3 SelectField fields:
What you are asking to do is have WTForms handle "cascading selects" (having the valid fields of one choice be determined by the value of another field). There really isn't a good way using the built in fields.
The SelectField in WTForms does NOT provide you with an option to say "Don't validate that the choice supplied is valid". You MUST provide choices in order for the field to validate the choice.
As shown in the docs, while you typically could fill the choices field with a static list of choices...
class PastebinEntry(Form):
language = SelectField(u'Programming Language', choices=[('cpp', 'C++'), ('py', 'Python'), ('text', 'Plain Text')])
...however, since you are dynamically coming up with the options, you need to set the choices
attribute after instantiating the form.
def edit_user(request, id):
user = User.query.get(id)
form = UserDetails(request.POST, obj=user)
form.group_id.choices = [(g.id, g.name) for g in Group.query.order_by('name')]
In the above sample, the choices for "group_id" is filled dynamically in what would be your Pyramid view. So, that's what you would need to do: you need to fill the choices in your view. This is how you can fix your issue with car_make
(although I think in your question you said that car_make
was okay).
The problem that you have, however, is that the valid choices for car_model
cannot be determined, since they depend on car_make
having already been parsed and validated. WTForms doesn't really handle this well (at least with SelectFields) because it assumes that all of the fields should be validated at once. In other words, in order to generate the list of valid choices for car_model
, you first need to validate the value for car_make
, which is not possible to easily do given how the SelectField works.
The best way I see doing this is to create a new field type that extends the SelectField type, but removes the validation:
class NonValidatingSelectField(SelectField):
def pre_validate(self, form):
pass
This new type overrides pre_validate, which typically does the check to determine if a choice is valid.
If you use this for car_model
, you won't have the error anymore. However, this now means that your field isn't actually being validated! To fix this, you can add an in-line validator on your form...
class MyForm(Form):
car_make = SelectField(u'Make', choices=[...])
car_model = NonValidatingSelectField(u'Model', choices=[])
def validate_car_model(self, field):
choices = query_for_valid_models(self.car_make.data)
# check that field.data is in choices...
You might need to tweak this a bit to get it to work exactly how you want, I haven't actually tested that this works.