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Web Development with Django

You're reading from   Web Development with Django A definitive guide to building modern Python web applications using Django 4

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803230603
Length 764 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (4):
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Bharath Chandra K S Bharath Chandra K S
Author Profile Icon Bharath Chandra K S
Bharath Chandra K S
Saurabh Badhwar Saurabh Badhwar
Author Profile Icon Saurabh Badhwar
Saurabh Badhwar
Ben Shaw Ben Shaw
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Ben Shaw
Chris Guest Chris Guest
Author Profile Icon Chris Guest
Chris Guest
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Django 2. Chapter 2: Models and Migrations FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: URL Mapping, Views, and Templates 4. Chapter 4: An Introduction to Django Admin 5. Chapter 5: Serving Static Files 6. Chapter 6: Forms 7. Chapter 7: Advanced Form Validation and Model Forms 8. Chapter 8: Media Serving and File Uploads 9. Chapter 9: Sessions and Authentication 10. Chapter 10: Advanced Django Admin and Customizations 11. Chapter 11: Advanced Templating and Class-Based Views 12. Chapter 12: Building a REST API 13. Chapter 13: Generating CSV, PDF, and Other Binary Files 14. Chapter 14: Testing Your Django Applications 15. Chapter 15: Django Third-Party Libraries 16. Chapter 16: Using a Frontend JavaScript Library with Django 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Working with GET, POST, and QueryDict objects

Data can come through an HTTP request as parameters on a URL or inside the body of a POST request. You might have noticed parameters in a URL when browsing the web – the text after ? – for example, http://www.example.com/?parameter1=value1&parameter2=value2. We also saw earlier in this chapter an example of form data in a POST request to log in a user (the request body was username=user&password=password1).

Django automatically parses these parameter strings into QueryDict objects. The data is then available on the HttpRequest object that is passed to your view – specifically, in the HttpRequest.GET and HttpRequest.POST attributes for URL parameters and body parameters respectively. QueryDict objects mostly behave like dictionaries, except that they can contain multiple values for a key.

To show different methods of accessing items in, we’ll use a simple QueryDict (the qd variable) with only one...

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