Edit JSON-Model Fields using a Standard Django Form.
A Django Model may contain fields which accept arbitrary data stored as JSON. Django itself, provides a JSON field specific to Postgres. For other database implementations, there are plenty of alternatives.
When creating a form from a model, the input field associated with a JSON field, typically is a <textarea ...></textarea>
.
This textarea widget is very inpracticable for editing, because it just contains a textual representation of that
object notation. One possibility is to use a generic JSON editor,
which with some JavaScript, transforms the widget into an attribute-value-pair editor. This approach however requires
to manage the field keys ourself. It furthermore prevents us from utilizing all the nice features provided by the Django
form framework, such as field validation, normalization of data and the usage of foreign keys.
By using django-entangled, one can use a Django ModelForm
, and store all,
or a subset of that form fields in one or more JSON fields inside of the associated model.
Simply install this Django app, for instance by invoking:
pip install django-entangled
There is no need to add any configuration directives to the project's settings.py
.
Say, we have a Django model to describe a bunch of different products. The name and the price fields are common to all products, whereas the properties can vary depending on its product type. Since we don't want to create a different product model for each product type, we use a JSON field to store these arbitrary properties.
from django.db import models
from django.contrib.postgres.fields import JSONField
class Product(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=5, decimal_places=2)
properties = JSONField()
In a typical form editing view, we would create a form inheriting from
ModelForm and refer to this model using
the model
attribute in its Meta
-class. Then the properties
-field would show up as unstructured JSON, rendered
inside a <textarea ...></textarea>
. This definitely is not what we want! Instead we create a typical Django Form using
the alternative class EntangledModelForm
.
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from django.forms import fields, models
from entangled.forms import EntangledModelForm
from .models import Product
class ProductForm(EntangledModelForm):
color = fields.RegexField(
regex=r'^#[0-9a-f]{6}$',
)
size = fields.ChoiceField(
choices=[('s', "small"), ('m', "medium"), ('l', "large"), ('xl', "extra large")],
)
tenant = models.ModelChoiceField(
queryset=get_user_model().objects.filter(is_staff=True),
)
class Meta:
model = Product
entangled_fields = {'properties': ['color', 'size', 'tenant']} # fields provided by this form
untangled_fields = ['name', 'price'] # these fields are provided by the Product model
In case our form inherits from another ModelForm
, rewrite the class declarartion as:
class ProductForm(EntangledModelFormMixin, BaseProductForm):
...
In addition we add a special dictionary named entangled_fields
to our Meta
-options. In this dictionary, the key
(here 'properties'
) refers to the JSON-field in our model Product
. The value (here ['color', 'size', 'tenant']
)
is a list of named form fields, declared in our form- or base-class of thereof. This allows us to assign all standard
Django form fields to arbitrary JSON fields declared in our Django model. Moreover, we can even use a ModelChoiceField
or a ModelMultipleChoiceField
to refer to another model object using a
generic relation
Since in this form we also want to access the non-JSON fields from our Django model, we add a list named
untangled_fields
to our Meta
-options. In this list, (here ['name', 'price']
) we refer to the non-JSON fields
in our model Product
. From both of these iterables, entangled_fields
and untangled_fields
, the parent class
EntangledModelForm
then builds the Meta
-option fields
, otherwise required. Therefore you should not
use fields
to declare this list, but rather rely on entangled_fields
and untangled_fields
.
We can use this form in any Django form view. A typical use-case, is the built-in Django ModelAdmin
:
from django.contrib import admin
from .models import Product
from .forms import ProductForm
@admin.register(Product)
class ProductAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
form = ProductForm
Since the form used by this ModelAdmin
-class
can not be created dynamically,
we have to declare it explicitly using the form
-attribute. This is the only change which has to be performed, in
order to store arbitrary content inside our JSON model-fields.
Sometimes it can be desirable to store the data in a nested hierarchie of dictionaries, rather than having all
attribute-value-pairs in the first level of our JSON field. This can for instance be handy when merging more than one
form, all themselves ineriting from EntangledModelFormMixin
.
Say that we have different types of products, all of which share the same base product form:
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from django.forms import models
from entangled.forms import EntangledModelFormMixin
from .models import Product
class BaseProductForm(EntangledModelFormMixin):
tenant = models.ModelChoiceField(
queryset=get_user_model().objects.filter(is_staff=True),
)
class Meta:
model = Product
entangled_fields = {'properties': ['tenant']}
untangled_fields = ['name', 'price']
In order to specialize our base product towards, say clothing, we typically would inherit from the base form
and add some additional fields, here color
and size
:
from django.forms import fields
from .forms import BaseProductForm
from .models import Product
class ClothingProductForm(BaseProductForm):
color = fields.RegexField(
regex=r'^#[0-9a-f]{6}$',
)
size = fields.ChoiceField(
choices=[('s', "small"), ('m', "medium"), ('l', "large"), ('xl', "extra large")],
)
class Meta:
model = Product
entangled_fields = {'properties': ['color', 'size']}
retangled_fields = {'color': 'variants.color', 'size': 'variants.size'}
By adding a name mapping from our existing field names, we can group the fields color
and size
into a sub-dictionary named variants
inside our properties
fields. Such a field mapping is
declared through the optional Meta-option retangled_fields
. In this dictionary, all entries are
optional; if a field name is missing, it just maps to itself.
This mapping table can also be used to map field names to other keys inside the resulting JSON datastructure. This for instance is handy to map fields containg an underscore into field-names containing instead a dash.
Due to the nature of JSON, indexing and thus building filters or sorting rules based on the fields content is not as simple, as with standard model fields. Therefore, this approach is best suited, if the main focus is to store data, rather than digging through data.
Foreign keys are stored as "fieldname": {"model": "appname.modelname", "pk": 1234}
in our JSON field, meaning that
we have no database constraints. If a target object is deleted, that foreign key points to nowhere. Therefore always
keep in mind, that we don't have any referential integrity and hence must write our code in a defensive manner.