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You should use a different name for the UserContentForm
and the BookForm
, instead of calling them both form
.
# User Content Form
if request.method == "POST":
user_content_form = UserContentForm(request.POST)
...
else:
user_content_form = UserContentForm()
# BookingOnline Form
if request.method == "POST":
book_online_form = BookOnlineForm(request.POST)
...
# watch this indentation. In your question above it is incorrect.
else:
book_online_form = BookOnlineForm()
d.update({'doctor': doctor, 'clinic': clinic,'book_online_form': book_online_form, 'user_content_form': user_content_form})
You will have to replace form
with the correct variable in the rest of the view and your template.
Ideally, you should use a prefix when including multiple forms in the same template. However, doing that will require additional changes in your template, as you have hardcoded the form fields (e.g <input ...>
), instead of letting Django render them (e.g. {{ form.patient_name }}
).
Source:stackexchange.com