35👍
The most significant difference is that if you supply a password to the .create()
method, it will be set verbatim on the user, and will not be usable to authenticate the user.
>>> user = User.objects.create(username="foo", password="bar")
>>> user.password
'bar'
>>> user.check_password("bar")
False
Instead, the create_user()
method hashes the password argument, which is then.
>>> user = User.objects.create_user(username="foo", password="bar")
>>> user.password
'pbkdf2_sha256$120000$2pHBVu3tYYbK$ESG1nbUY2ZhEmstJ7Fzu1DioXmGYXiLw31YDkOGn9E0='
>>> user.check_password("bar")
True
See https://github.com/django/django/blob/master/django/contrib/auth/models.py#L145.
Some other ‘tidying’ is also done. See the rest of the function linked above.
6👍
User.objects.create_user()
is a helper function that provides helpful utilities to create a user that otherwise you would have to do yourself. As per the documentation:
Creates, saves and returns a User
The username and password are set as given. The domain portion of email is automatically converted to lowercase, and the returned User object will have
is_active
set toTrue
.If no password is provided,
set_unusable_password()
will be called.The
extra_fields
keyword arguments are passed through to the User’s__init__
method to allow setting arbitrary fields on a custom user model.
Without create_user()
you could create the functionality yourself using the methods you mentioned, but it provides useful processing and utility.
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4👍
create()
and save()
are generic methods to create a model instance. They don’t do anything specific to the User model while create_user()
method is specific method to create the user.
While creating user with generic methods, the value you set as a password will not be hashed.You need to do it by yourself like this.
u = User(username="username")
u.set_password("password")
u.save()
Also you can’t do the same with create()
method without an additional database query.
While with the create_user()
the username and password are set as given and password will be hashed automatically and the returned User object will have is_active
set to True
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1👍
You should get the user model:
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
UserModel = get_user_model()
user = UserModel.objects.create(username="Mr Foo", password="bar")
user.save()
Or:
user = UserModel.objects.create_user("Mr Foo", password="bar")
user.save()
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0👍
If you use create_user()
you don’t need to save it with save()
. create_user()
already saves the user to the database see: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/4.0/topics/auth/default/
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