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To validate a single field on it’s own you can use a clean_FIELDNAME() method in your form, so for email:
def clean_email(self):
email = self.cleaned_data['email']
if User.objects.filter(email=email).exists():
raise ValidationError("Email already exists")
return email
then for co-dependant fields that rely on each other, you can overwrite the forms clean()
method which is run after all the fields (like email
above) have been validated individually:
def clean(self):
form_data = self.cleaned_data
if form_data['password'] != form_data['password_repeat']:
self._errors["password"] = ["Password do not match"] # Will raise a error message
del form_data['password']
return form_data
I’m not sure where you got clean_message()
from, but that looks like it is a validation method made for a message
field which doesn’t seem to exist in your form.
Have a read through this for more details:
Source:stackexchange.com