I am making a custom user model using the AbstractBaseUser and
PermissionsMixin by following these two tutorials (tutorial-1
<http://blackglasses.me/2013/09/17/custom-django-user-model/> and tutorial-2
<http://musings.tinbrain.net/blog/2014/sep/21/registration-django-easy-way/>
).
This my model so far:
class User(AbstractBaseUser, PermissionsMixin):
email = models.EmailField('email address', unique=True, db_index=True)
username = models.CharField('username', unique=True, db_index=True)
joined = models.DateField(auto_now_add=True)
is_active = models.BooleanField(default=True)
is_admin = models.BooleanField(default=False)
is_staff = models.BooleanField(default=False)
USERNAME_FIELD = 'email'
def __unicode__(self):
return self.email
Now what I am confused about is that in tutorial-1
<http://blackglasses.me/2013/09/17/custom-django-user-model/>, the author
didn't made any custom manager for the custom User model. Instead he use
forms for creating user.
class RegistrationForm(forms.ModelForm):
email = forms.EmailField(label = 'Email')
password1 = forms.CharField(widget = forms.PasswordInput(), label =
"Password")
password2 = forms.CharField(widget = forms.PasswordInput(), label =
'Retype password')
class Meta:
model = User
fields = ['email', 'username', 'password1', 'password2']
def clean(self):
"""
Verify that the values entered into the password fields match
"""
cleaned_data = super(RegistrationForm, self).clean()
if 'password1' in self.cleaned_data and 'password2' in
self.cleaned_data:
if self.cleaned_data['password1'] !=
self.cleaned_data['password2']:
raise ValidationError("Password don't match.")
return self.cleaned_data
def save(self, commit=True):
user = super(RegistrationForm, self).save(commit=False)
user.set_password(self.cleaned_data['password1'])
if commit:
user.save()
return user
But in tutorial-2
<http://musings.tinbrain.net/blog/2014/sep/21/registration-django-easy-way/>,
its author made a custom manager for the custom User model.
class UserManager(BaseUserManager):
def create_user(self, email, password, **kwargs):
user = self.model(
email=self.normalize_email(email),
is_active=True,
**kwargs
)
user.set_password(password)
user.save(using=self._db)
return user
def create_superuser(self, email, password, **kwargs):
user = self.model(
email=email,
is_staff=True,
is_superuser=True,
is_active=True,
**kwargs
)
user.set_password(password)
user.save(using=self._db)
return user
Referencing with Django Docs, there's an example
<https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/topics/auth/customizing/#a-full-example>
of custom user model, and it uses custom manager. My question is, whether
it is ok not to make any other custom manager and if not what is the use of
creating a custom manager?
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