Writing a __init__ function to be used in django model

Django expects the signature of a model's constructor to be (self, *args, **kwargs), or some reasonable facsimile. Your changing the signature to something completely incompatible has broken it.


Relying on Django's built-in functionality and passing named parameters would be the simplest way to go.

p = User(name="Fred", email="[email protected]")

But if you're set on saving some keystrokes, I'd suggest adding a static convenience method to the class instead of messing with the initializer.

# In User class declaration
@classmethod
def create(cls, name, email):
  return cls(name=name, email=email)

# Use it
p = User.create("Fred", "[email protected]")

The correct answer is to avoid overriding __init__ and write a classmethod as described in the Django docs.

But this could be done like you're trying, you just need to add in *args, **kwargs to be accepted by your __init__, and pass them on to the super method call.

def __init__(self, name, email, house_id, password, *args, **kwargs):
        super(models.Model, self).__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
        self.name = name
        self.email = email