RelatedObjectDoesNotExist: User has no userprofile RelatedObjectDoesNotExist: User has no userprofile python python

RelatedObjectDoesNotExist: User has no userprofile


You have to create a userprofile for the user first:

profile = UserProfile.objects.create(user=request.user)

In your views.py you can use get_or_create so that a userprofile is created for a user if the user doesn't have one.

player, created = UserProfile.objects.get_or_create(user=request.user)

UPDATE: For automatically creating user profiles every time a new user is made, use signals.

In myapp/signals.py do something like this:

@receiver(post_save, sender=User, dispatch_uid='save_new_user_profile')def save_profile(sender, instance, created, **kwargs):    user = instance    if created:        profile = UserProfile(user=user)        profile.save()


If you are getting this error even if you've tried the suggestions above, it may caused by the fact that the first user you had created (with createsuperuser command) does not have a profile.

I was getting this error when I tried to login with that user. I solved it this way:

-Create a new user.

-Undo the changes. (Erase the code you've written for Profile or make them comment lines)

-Log in to your superuser.

-Give admin authorization to newly created user.

Now you can delete the first user. (The user with no profile)


Nothing in what you've done forces the creation of a UserProfile object when a User is created. There are two basic ways of handling this:

  1. If you always want a UserProfile to exist (which seems like the case as you give a default value to score, create a post_save handler that creates a new profile when ever the User object is created (but not every time it's saved, so make sure to check the created argument in the handler).

  2. If it's expected a user may not have a profile, you need to catch the UserProfile.DoesNotExist exception when trying to access it. If you do this frequently, make some kind of helper function.

UPDATED TO ANSWER SIGNAL QUESTION

It also looks like somewhere around here post_save.connect(create_profile, sender=User) should be added?

You would need to define a function called create_profile and then wire it up as you have shown. I typically do this right in the models.py file that includes the sender but in this case where the sender is a built-in Django model and you're already importing that model into the file where you define your UserProfile that's the place to do it. It would look something like:

def create_profile(sender, instance, created, *args, **kwargs):    # ignore if this is an existing User    if not created:        return    UserProfile.objects.create(user=instance)post_save.connect(create_profile, sender=User)