On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 2:34 AM, ashy <ashwinmo...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> I am using django.contrib.auth.views.login for the login view. The
> code for 'registration/login.html' is as below:
>
> <html>
>  <head>
>    <title>User Login</title>
>  </head>
>  <body>
>    <h1>User Login</h1>
>    {% if form.has_errors %}


It looks like you are working from an old book or using some old code,
likely originally written for Django .96 or earlier. has_errors is a very
old method for checking for form errors. It was replaced, prior to Django
1.0, with errors. If you are working from a book, you probably want to
switch to one that covers at least Django 1.0 level code; there were some
major changes made just before 1.0 and working from a book that assumes an
older level is likely going to be frustrating.

Karen
-- 
http://tracey.org/kmt/

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