[Django]-How to redirect with post data (Django)

68👍

If you faced such problem there’s a slight chance that you might need to revise your designs.

This is a restriction of HTTP that POST data cannot go with redirects.

Can you describe what are you trying to accomplish and maybe then we can think about some neat solution.

If you do not want use sessions as Matthew suggested you can pass POST params in GET to the new page (consider some limitations such as security and max length of GET params in query string).

UPDATE to your update:)
It sounds strange to me that you have 2 web apps and those apps use one views.py (am I right?). Anyway consider passing your data from POST in GET to the proper view (in case data is not sensitive of course).

👤dzida

65👍

I think how I would probably handle this situation would be to save the post data in session, then remove it when I no longer need it. That way I can access the original post data after a redirect even though that post is gone.

Will that work for what you’re trying to do?

Here is a code sample of what I’m suggesting: (keep in mind this is untested code)

def some_view(request):
    #do some stuff
    request.session['_old_post'] = request.POST
    return HttpResponseRedirect('next_view')

def next_view(request):
    old_post = request.session.get('_old_post')
    #do some stuff using old_post

One other thing to keep in mind… if you’re doing this and also uploading files, i would not do it this way.

26👍

You need to use a HTTP 1.1 Temporary Redirect (307).

Unfortunately, Django redirect() and HTTPResponseRedirect
(permanent) return only a 301 or 302. You have to implement it yourself:

from django.http import HttpResponse, iri_to_uri
class HttpResponseTemporaryRedirect(HttpResponse):
    status_code = 307

    def __init__(self, redirect_to):
        HttpResponse.__init__(self)
        self['Location'] = iri_to_uri(redirect_to)

See also the django.http module.

Edit:

on recent Django versions, change iri_to_uri import to:

from django.utils.encoding import iri_to_uri
👤Lloeki

13👍

use requests package.Its very easy to implement

pip install requests

then you can call any urls with any method and transfer data

in your views import requests

import requests

to post data, follow the format

r = requests.post('http://yourdomain/path/', data = {'key':'value'})

to get the absolute url in django view, use

request.build_absolute_uri(reverse('view_name'))

Thus the django view code looks like

r = requests.post(
            request.build_absolute_uri(reverse('view_name')), 
            data = {'key':'value'}
    )

where r is the response object with status_code and content attribute.
r.status_code gives the status code(on success it will be 200) and r.content gives the body of response. There is a json method(r.json()) that will convert response to json format

requests

requests.post

6👍

Just call your new view from your old view using the same request object.
Of course it won’t result in a redirect as such, but if all you care about is ‘transferring’ data from one view to the other, then it should work.
I tested the following snippet and it works.

from django.views.generic import View

class MyOldView(View):
    def post(self, request):
        return MyNewView().post(request)

class MyNewView(View):
    def post(self, request):
        my_data = request.body
        print "look Ma; my data made it over here:", my_data
👤Komu

1👍

You can use render and context with with it:

Render(request,"your template path",        {'vad name' : var value}

You can recive vars in template :

{% If var name %}
 {{ var name }}
{% endif %}

1👍

I faced a similar issue recently.

Basically I had a form A, upon submitting it another form B would show up, which contains some results + a form. Upon submitting B, i wanted to display some alert to user and keep user on B only.

The way I solved this, is by displaying the results in a <output> field, in B.

<output name="xyz" value="xyz">{{xyz}}</output>

And I used the same view for A->B and B->B. Now I just had to distinguish if the request is coming from A or B and render accordingly.

def view1(request):
    if "xyz" in request.POST:
        # request from B
        # do some processing
        return render(request, 'page.html', {"xyz":request.POST["xyz"]})
    else:
        # request from A
        res = foo() # some random function
        return render(request, 'page.html', {"xyz":res})

But this only works if form B is small and not that dynamic.

👤rkp768

0👍

If you are using a redirect after processing the POST to AppB, you can actually get away with calling the AppB method from the AppA method.

An Example:

def is_appa_request(request):
    ## do some magic.
    return False or True
is_appb_request = is_appa_request

def AppA(request):
    if is_appb_request(request):
       return AppB(request)
    ## Process AppA.
    return HttpResponseRedirect('/appa/thank_you/')

def AppB(request):
    if is_appa_request(request):
       return AppA(request)
    ## Process AppB.
    return HttpResponseRedirect('/appb/thank_you/')

This should yield a transparent experience for the end-user, and the client who hired you will likely never know the difference.

If you’re not redirecting after the POST, aren’t you worried about duplicate data due to the user refreshing the page?

0👍

You can redirect with session using request.session["key"] as shown below:

# "views.py"

from django.shortcuts import redirect

def my_view(request): 
            # Here
    request.session["message"] = "success"
    return redirect("https://example.com")
# "index.html"

{{ request.session.message }} {# success #}

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