= Form Processing = Diva comes with a simple module supporting the processing of HTML forms. A [RequestHandlers request handler] that does some simple form processing typically looks something like this: {{{ #!python from diva.forms import Form, TextValidator from diva.routing import redirect_to from diva.templating import output, render class LinkForm(Form): username = TextValidator(required=True) url = TextValidator(required=True, pattern=r'^https?://') title = TextValidator(required=True) @output('submit.html') def submit(request, response): form = LinkForm() if request.method == 'POST': if 'cancel' in request.POST: redirect_to('home') if form.validate(request.POST): # Form is valid, store data into the database link = Link(**form.data) link.store(app.db) redirect_to('info', link.id) return render(errors=form.errors) }}} This simple example already does a couple of things you may not expect: * When the form is redisplayed on `POST` due to validation errors, the form elements will already be populated with the previously entered values. * The form submission is protected against Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) attacks, by adding a form token both as a cookie, and as a hidden form input field. == HTML Forms in Templates == Diva does not generate HTML markup for your forms automatically. The `diva.forms` package is only concerned with the form data, not the rendering of individual form elements and how they assembled into the larger form. For the form defined above, a simple template might contain something like this: {{{ #!genshi

${errors.username}

${errors.url}

${errors.title}


}}} Note that while you don't need to manually take care of filling in the form values, you do have to explicitly add any error messages that need to be displayed after a failed validation. == API Documentation == [[PythonDoc(trunk, diva.forms)]]