Django’s forms.Form vs forms.ModelForm

Forms created from forms.Form are manually configured by you. You’re better off using these for forms that do not directly interact with models. For example a contact form, or a newsletter subscription form, where you might not necessarily be interacting with the database.

Where as a form created from forms.ModelForm will be automatically created and then can later be tweaked by you. The best examples really are from the superb documentation provided on the Django website.

forms.Form:
Documentation: Form objects
Example of a normal form created with forms.Form:

from django import forms

class ContactForm(forms.Form):
    subject = forms.CharField(max_length=100)
    message = forms.CharField()
    sender = forms.EmailField()
    cc_myself = forms.BooleanField(required=False)

forms.ModelForm:
Documentation: Creating forms from models
Straight from the docs:

If your form is going to be used to
directly add or edit a Django model,
you can use a ModelForm to avoid
duplicating your model description.

Example of a model form created with forms.Modelform:

from django.forms import ModelForm
from . import models

# Create the form class.
class ArticleForm(ModelForm):
    class Meta:
        model = models.Article

This form automatically has all the same field types as the Article model it was created from.

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