As ars and Diarmuid have pointed out, you can pass request.user
into your form, and use it in validating the email. Diarmuid's code, however, is wrong. The code should actually read:
from django import forms
class UserForm(forms.Form):
email_address = forms.EmailField(
widget=forms.TextInput(
attrs={
'class': 'required'
}
)
)
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.user = kwargs.pop('user', None)
super(UserForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def clean_email_address(self):
email = self.cleaned_data.get('email_address')
if self.user and self.user.email == email:
return email
if UserProfile.objects.filter(email=email).count():
raise forms.ValidationError(
u'That email address already exists.'
)
return email
Then, in your view, you can use it like so:
def someview(request):
if request.method == 'POST':
form = UserForm(request.POST, user=request.user)
if form.is_valid():
# Do something with the data
pass
else:
form = UserForm(user=request.user)
# Rest of your view follows
Note that you should pass request.POST as a keyword argument, since your constructor expects 'user' as the first positional argument.
Doing it this way, you need to pass user
as a keyword argument. You can either pass request.POST
as a positional argument, or a keyword argument (via data=request.POST
).
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