Thanks. I'll take a look at the articles.

On Feb 2, 3:42 am, Derek <gamesb...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The same question was asked on 
> stackoverflow:http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2303268/djangos-forms-form-vs-form...
> Its a good explanation - I liked the bit at the end:
> "The similarities are that they both generate sets of form inputs
> using widgets, and both validate data sent by the browser. The
> differences are that ModelForm gets its field definition from a
> specified model class, and so has methods that deal with saving of the
> underlying model to the database."
>
> If you want to know *why* it was created, this post has some of the
> history:http://mirobetm.blogspot.com/2008/03/django-modelform-replacement-for...
> (and there a number of others from other folk along the same lines)
>
> And, yes, reading more documentation (which, in the case of Django, is
> actually enjoyable) is a Good Thing.
>
> On Jan 31, 7:37 pm, hank23 <hversem...@stchas.edu> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I think I've read most of the documentation on Model Forms, but I
> > haven't seen much on how to customize them, other than changing the
> > order in which fields are displayed, or not displaying some fields at
> > all. The one ModelForm which I've done so far does not look very good
> > as it is automatically generated. If they can't be customized very
> > easily or very much then I'm not sure I see any big advantage in using
> > them as opposed to just using regular forms, that I can more easily
> > customize. Am I missing something or have I not read enough of the
> > documentation?- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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