| ===================== |
| Model field reference |
| ===================== |
|
|
| .. module:: django.db.models.fields |
| :synopsis: Built-in field types. |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| This document contains all the API references of :class:`Field` including the |
| `field options`_ and `field types`_ Django offers. |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| If the built-in fields don't do the trick, you can try `django-localflavor |
| <https://github.com/django/django-localflavor>`_ (`documentation |
| <https://django-localflavor.readthedocs.io/>`_), which contains assorted |
| pieces of code that are useful for particular countries and cultures. |
|
|
| Also, you can easily :doc:`write your own custom model fields |
| </howto/custom-model-fields>`. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Technically, these models are defined in :mod:`django.db.models.fields`, but |
| for convenience they're imported into :mod:`django.db.models`; the standard |
| convention is to use ``from django.db import models`` and refer to fields as |
| ``models.<Foo>Field``. |
|
|
| .. _common-model-field-options: |
|
|
| Field options |
| ============= |
|
|
| The following arguments are available to all field types. All are optional. |
|
|
| ``null`` |
| -------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.null |
|
|
| If ``True``, Django will store empty values as ``NULL`` in the database. Default |
| is ``False``. |
|
|
| Avoid using :attr:`~Field.null` on string-based fields such as |
| :class:`CharField` and :class:`TextField`. If a string-based field has |
| ``null=True``, that means it has two possible values for "no data": ``NULL``, |
| and the empty string. In most cases, it's redundant to have two possible values |
| for "no data;" the Django convention is to use the empty string, not |
| ``NULL``. One exception is when a :class:`CharField` has both ``unique=True`` |
| and ``blank=True`` set. In this situation, ``null=True`` is required to avoid |
| unique constraint violations when saving multiple objects with blank values. |
|
|
| For both string-based and non-string-based fields, you will also need to |
| set ``blank=True`` if you wish to permit empty values in forms, as the |
| :attr:`~Field.null` parameter only affects database storage |
| (see :attr:`~Field.blank`). |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When using the Oracle database backend, the value ``NULL`` will be stored to |
| denote the empty string regardless of this attribute. |
|
|
| ``blank`` |
| --------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.blank |
|
|
| If ``True``, the field is allowed to be blank. Default is ``False``. |
|
|
| Note that this is different than :attr:`~Field.null`. :attr:`~Field.null` is |
| purely database-related, whereas :attr:`~Field.blank` is validation-related. If |
| a field has ``blank=True``, form validation will allow entry of an empty value. |
| If a field has ``blank=False``, the field will be required. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Supplying missing values |
|
|
| ``blank=True`` can be used with fields having ``null=False``, but this will |
| require implementing :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.clean` on the model in |
| order to programmatically supply any missing values. |
|
|
| .. _field-choices: |
|
|
| ``choices`` |
| ----------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.choices |
|
|
| A :term:`sequence` consisting itself of iterables of exactly two items (e.g. |
| ``[(A, B), (A, B) ...]``) to use as choices for this field. If choices are |
| given, they're enforced by :ref:`model validation <validating-objects>` and the |
| default form widget will be a select box with these choices instead of the |
| standard text field. |
|
|
| The first element in each tuple is the actual value to be set on the model, |
| and the second element is the human-readable name. For example:: |
|
|
| YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES = [ |
| ("FR", "Freshman"), |
| ("SO", "Sophomore"), |
| ("JR", "Junior"), |
| ("SR", "Senior"), |
| ("GR", "Graduate"), |
| ] |
|
|
| Generally, it's best to define choices inside a model class, and to |
| define a suitably-named constant for each value:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Student(models.Model): |
| FRESHMAN = "FR" |
| SOPHOMORE = "SO" |
| JUNIOR = "JR" |
| SENIOR = "SR" |
| GRADUATE = "GR" |
| YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES = [ |
| (FRESHMAN, "Freshman"), |
| (SOPHOMORE, "Sophomore"), |
| (JUNIOR, "Junior"), |
| (SENIOR, "Senior"), |
| (GRADUATE, "Graduate"), |
| ] |
| year_in_school = models.CharField( |
| max_length=2, |
| choices=YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES, |
| default=FRESHMAN, |
| ) |
|
|
| def is_upperclass(self): |
| return self.year_in_school in {self.JUNIOR, self.SENIOR} |
|
|
| Though you can define a choices list outside of a model class and then |
| refer to it, defining the choices and names for each choice inside the |
| model class keeps all of that information with the class that uses it, |
| and helps reference the choices (e.g, ``Student.SOPHOMORE`` |
| will work anywhere that the ``Student`` model has been imported). |
|
|
| .. _field-choices-named-groups: |
|
|
| You can also collect your available choices into named groups that can |
| be used for organizational purposes:: |
|
|
| MEDIA_CHOICES = [ |
| ( |
| "Audio", |
| ( |
| ("vinyl", "Vinyl"), |
| ("cd", "CD"), |
| ), |
| ), |
| ( |
| "Video", |
| ( |
| ("vhs", "VHS Tape"), |
| ("dvd", "DVD"), |
| ), |
| ), |
| ("unknown", "Unknown"), |
| ] |
|
|
| The first element in each tuple is the name to apply to the group. The |
| second element is an iterable of 2-tuples, with each 2-tuple containing |
| a value and a human-readable name for an option. Grouped options may be |
| combined with ungrouped options within a single list (such as the |
| ``'unknown'`` option in this example). |
|
|
| For each model field that has :attr:`~Field.choices` set, Django will add a |
| method to retrieve the human-readable name for the field's current value. See |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_FOO_display` in the database API |
| documentation. |
|
|
| Note that choices can be any sequence object -- not necessarily a list or |
| tuple. This lets you construct choices dynamically. But if you find yourself |
| hacking :attr:`~Field.choices` to be dynamic, you're probably better off using |
| a proper database table with a :class:`ForeignKey`. :attr:`~Field.choices` is |
| meant for static data that doesn't change much, if ever. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| A new migration is created each time the order of ``choices`` changes. |
|
|
| .. _field-choices-blank-label: |
|
|
| Unless :attr:`blank=False<Field.blank>` is set on the field along with a |
| :attr:`~Field.default` then a label containing ``"---------"`` will be rendered |
| with the select box. To override this behavior, add a tuple to ``choices`` |
| containing ``None``; e.g. ``(None, 'Your String For Display')``. |
| Alternatively, you can use an empty string instead of ``None`` where this makes |
| sense - such as on a :class:`~django.db.models.CharField`. |
|
|
| .. _field-choices-enum-types: |
|
|
| Enumeration types |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| In addition, Django provides enumeration types that you can subclass to define |
| choices in a concise way:: |
|
|
| from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _ |
|
|
|
|
| class Student(models.Model): |
| class YearInSchool(models.TextChoices): |
| FRESHMAN = "FR", _("Freshman") |
| SOPHOMORE = "SO", _("Sophomore") |
| JUNIOR = "JR", _("Junior") |
| SENIOR = "SR", _("Senior") |
| GRADUATE = "GR", _("Graduate") |
|
|
| year_in_school = models.CharField( |
| max_length=2, |
| choices=YearInSchool, |
| default=YearInSchool.FRESHMAN, |
| ) |
|
|
| def is_upperclass(self): |
| return self.year_in_school in { |
| self.YearInSchool.JUNIOR, |
| self.YearInSchool.SENIOR, |
| } |
|
|
| These work similar to :mod:`enum` from Python's standard library, but with some |
| modifications: |
|
|
| * Enum member values are a tuple of arguments to use when constructing the |
| concrete data type. Django supports adding an extra string value to the end |
| of this tuple to be used as the human-readable name, or ``label``. The |
| ``label`` can be a lazy translatable string. Thus, in most cases, the member |
| value will be a ``(value, label)`` 2-tuple. See below for :ref:`an example |
| of subclassing choices <field-choices-enum-subclassing>` using a more complex |
| data type. If a tuple is not provided, or the last item is not a (lazy) |
| string, the ``label`` is :ref:`automatically generated |
| <field-choices-enum-auto-label>` from the member name. |
| * A ``.label`` property is added on values, to return the human-readable name. |
| * A number of custom properties are added to the enumeration classes -- |
| ``.choices``, ``.labels``, ``.values``, and ``.names`` -- to make it easier |
| to access lists of those separate parts of the enumeration. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| These property names cannot be used as member names as they would conflict. |
|
|
| * The use of :func:`enum.unique()` is enforced to ensure that values cannot be |
| defined multiple times. This is unlikely to be expected in choices for a |
| field. |
|
|
| Note that using ``YearInSchool.SENIOR``, ``YearInSchool['SENIOR']``, or |
| ``YearInSchool('SR')`` to access or lookup enum members work as expected, as do |
| the ``.name`` and ``.value`` properties on the members. |
|
|
| .. _field-choices-enum-auto-label: |
|
|
| If you don't need to have the human-readable names translated, you can have |
| them inferred from the member name (replacing underscores with spaces and using |
| title-case): |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> class Vehicle(models.TextChoices): |
| ... CAR = "C" |
| ... TRUCK = "T" |
| ... JET_SKI = "J" |
| ... |
| >>> Vehicle.JET_SKI.label |
| 'Jet Ski' |
|
|
| Since the case where the enum values need to be integers is extremely common, |
| Django provides an ``IntegerChoices`` class. For example:: |
|
|
| class Card(models.Model): |
| class Suit(models.IntegerChoices): |
| DIAMOND = 1 |
| SPADE = 2 |
| HEART = 3 |
| CLUB = 4 |
|
|
| suit = models.IntegerField(choices=Suit) |
|
|
| It is also possible to make use of the `Enum Functional API |
| <https://docs.python.org/3/howto/enum.html#functional-api>`_ with the caveat |
| that labels are automatically generated as highlighted above: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> MedalType = models.TextChoices("MedalType", "GOLD SILVER BRONZE") |
| >>> MedalType.choices |
| [('GOLD', 'Gold'), ('SILVER', 'Silver'), ('BRONZE', 'Bronze')] |
| >>> Place = models.IntegerChoices("Place", "FIRST SECOND THIRD") |
| >>> Place.choices |
| [(1, 'First'), (2, 'Second'), (3, 'Third')] |
|
|
| .. _field-choices-enum-subclassing: |
|
|
| If you require support for a concrete data type other than ``int`` or ``str``, |
| you can subclass ``Choices`` and the required concrete data type, e.g. |
| :class:`~datetime.date` for use with :class:`~django.db.models.DateField`:: |
|
|
| class MoonLandings(datetime.date, models.Choices): |
| APOLLO_11 = 1969, 7, 20, "Apollo 11 (Eagle)" |
| APOLLO_12 = 1969, 11, 19, "Apollo 12 (Intrepid)" |
| APOLLO_14 = 1971, 2, 5, "Apollo 14 (Antares)" |
| APOLLO_15 = 1971, 7, 30, "Apollo 15 (Falcon)" |
| APOLLO_16 = 1972, 4, 21, "Apollo 16 (Orion)" |
| APOLLO_17 = 1972, 12, 11, "Apollo 17 (Challenger)" |
|
|
| There are some additional caveats to be aware of: |
|
|
| - Enumeration types do not support :ref:`named groups |
| <field-choices-named-groups>`. |
| - Because an enumeration with a concrete data type requires all values to match |
| the type, overriding the :ref:`blank label <field-choices-blank-label>` |
| cannot be achieved by creating a member with a value of ``None``. Instead, |
| set the ``__empty__`` attribute on the class:: |
|
|
| class Answer(models.IntegerChoices): |
| NO = 0, _("No") |
| YES = 1, _("Yes") |
|
|
| __empty__ = _("(Unknown)") |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 5.0 |
|
|
| Support for using enumeration types directly in the ``choices`` was added. |
|
|
| ``db_column`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.db_column |
|
|
| The name of the database column to use for this field. If this isn't given, |
| Django will use the field's name. |
|
|
| If your database column name is an SQL reserved word, or contains |
| characters that aren't allowed in Python variable names -- notably, the |
| hyphen -- that's OK. Django quotes column and table names behind the |
| scenes. |
|
|
| ``db_comment`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 4.2 |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.db_comment |
|
|
| The comment on the database column to use for this field. It is useful for |
| documenting fields for individuals with direct database access who may not be |
| looking at your Django code. For example:: |
|
|
| pub_date = models.DateTimeField( |
| db_comment="Date and time when the article was published", |
| ) |
|
|
| ``db_default`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 5.0 |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.db_default |
|
|
| The database-computed default value for this field. This can be a literal value |
| or a database function, such as :class:`~django.db.models.functions.Now`:: |
|
|
| created = models.DateTimeField(db_default=Now()) |
|
|
| More complex expressions can be used, as long as they are made from literals |
| and database functions:: |
|
|
| month_due = models.DateField( |
| db_default=TruncMonth( |
| Now() + timedelta(days=90), |
| output_field=models.DateField(), |
| ) |
| ) |
|
|
| Database defaults cannot reference other fields or models. For example, this is |
| invalid:: |
|
|
| end = models.IntegerField(db_default=F("start") + 50) |
|
|
| If both ``db_default`` and :attr:`Field.default` are set, ``default`` will take |
| precedence when creating instances in Python code. ``db_default`` will still be |
| set at the database level and will be used when inserting rows outside of the |
| ORM or when adding a new field in a migration. |
|
|
| ``db_index`` |
| ------------ |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.db_index |
|
|
| If ``True``, a database index will be created for this field. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Use the :attr:`~Options.indexes` option instead. |
|
|
| Where possible, use the :attr:`Meta.indexes <Options.indexes>` option |
| instead. In nearly all cases, :attr:`~Options.indexes` provides more |
| functionality than ``db_index``. ``db_index`` may be deprecated in the |
| future. |
|
|
| ``db_tablespace`` |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.db_tablespace |
|
|
| The name of the :doc:`database tablespace </topics/db/tablespaces>` to use for |
| this field's index, if this field is indexed. The default is the project's |
| :setting:`DEFAULT_INDEX_TABLESPACE` setting, if set, or the |
| :attr:`~Options.db_tablespace` of the model, if any. If the backend doesn't |
| support tablespaces for indexes, this option is ignored. |
|
|
| ``default`` |
| ----------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.default |
|
|
| The default value for the field. This can be a value or a callable object. If |
| callable it will be called every time a new object is created. |
|
|
| The default can't be a mutable object (model instance, ``list``, ``set``, etc.), |
| as a reference to the same instance of that object would be used as the default |
| value in all new model instances. Instead, wrap the desired default in a |
| callable. For example, if you want to specify a default ``dict`` for |
| :class:`~django.db.models.JSONField`, use a function:: |
|
|
| def contact_default(): |
| return {"email": "to1@example.com"} |
|
|
|
|
| contact_info = JSONField("ContactInfo", default=contact_default) |
|
|
| ``lambda``\s can't be used for field options like ``default`` because they |
| can't be :ref:`serialized by migrations <migration-serializing>`. See that |
| documentation for other caveats. |
|
|
| For fields like :class:`ForeignKey` that map to model instances, defaults |
| should be the value of the field they reference (``pk`` unless |
| :attr:`~ForeignKey.to_field` is set) instead of model instances. |
|
|
| The default value is used when new model instances are created and a value |
| isn't provided for the field. When the field is a primary key, the default is |
| also used when the field is set to ``None``. |
|
|
| The default value can also be set at the database level with |
| :attr:`Field.db_default`. |
|
|
| ``editable`` |
| ------------ |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.editable |
|
|
| If ``False``, the field will not be displayed in the admin or any other |
| :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm`. They are also skipped during :ref:`model |
| validation <validating-objects>`. Default is ``True``. |
|
|
| ``error_messages`` |
| ------------------ |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.error_messages |
|
|
| The ``error_messages`` argument lets you override the default messages that the |
| field will raise. Pass in a dictionary with keys matching the error messages you |
| want to override. |
|
|
| Error message keys include ``null``, ``blank``, ``invalid``, ``invalid_choice``, |
| ``unique``, and ``unique_for_date``. Additional error message keys are |
| specified for each field in the `Field types`_ section below. |
|
|
| These error messages often don't propagate to forms. See |
| :ref:`considerations-regarding-model-errormessages`. |
|
|
| ``help_text`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.help_text |
|
|
| Extra "help" text to be displayed with the form widget. It's useful for |
| documentation even if your field isn't used on a form. |
|
|
| Note that this value is *not* HTML-escaped in automatically-generated |
| forms. This lets you include HTML in :attr:`~Field.help_text` if you so |
| desire. For example:: |
|
|
| help_text = "Please use the following format: <em>YYYY-MM-DD</em>." |
|
|
| Alternatively you can use plain text and |
| :func:`django.utils.html.escape` to escape any HTML special characters. Ensure |
| that you escape any help text that may come from untrusted users to avoid a |
| cross-site scripting attack. |
|
|
| ``primary_key`` |
| --------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.primary_key |
|
|
| If ``True``, this field is the primary key for the model. |
|
|
| If you don't specify ``primary_key=True`` for any field in your model, Django |
| will automatically add a field to hold the primary key, so you don't need to |
| set ``primary_key=True`` on any of your fields unless you want to override the |
| default primary-key behavior. The type of auto-created primary key fields can |
| be specified per app in :attr:`AppConfig.default_auto_field |
| <django.apps.AppConfig.default_auto_field>` or globally in the |
| :setting:`DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD` setting. For more, see |
| :ref:`automatic-primary-key-fields`. |
|
|
| ``primary_key=True`` implies :attr:`null=False <Field.null>` and |
| :attr:`unique=True <Field.unique>`. Only one primary key is allowed on an |
| object. |
|
|
| The primary key field is read-only. If you change the value of the primary |
| key on an existing object and then save it, a new object will be created |
| alongside the old one. |
|
|
| The primary key field is set to ``None`` when |
| :meth:`deleting <django.db.models.Model.delete>` an object. |
|
|
| ``unique`` |
| ---------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.unique |
|
|
| If ``True``, this field must be unique throughout the table. |
|
|
| This is enforced at the database level and by model validation. If |
| you try to save a model with a duplicate value in a :attr:`~Field.unique` |
| field, a :exc:`django.db.IntegrityError` will be raised by the model's |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save` method. |
|
|
| This option is valid on all field types except :class:`ManyToManyField` and |
| :class:`OneToOneField`. |
|
|
| Note that when ``unique`` is ``True``, you don't need to specify |
| :attr:`~Field.db_index`, because ``unique`` implies the creation of an index. |
|
|
| ``unique_for_date`` |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.unique_for_date |
|
|
| Set this to the name of a :class:`DateField` or :class:`DateTimeField` to |
| require that this field be unique for the value of the date field. |
|
|
| For example, if you have a field ``title`` that has |
| ``unique_for_date="pub_date"``, then Django wouldn't allow the entry of two |
| records with the same ``title`` and ``pub_date``. |
|
|
| Note that if you set this to point to a :class:`DateTimeField`, only the date |
| portion of the field will be considered. Besides, when :setting:`USE_TZ` is |
| ``True``, the check will be performed in the :ref:`current time zone |
| <default-current-time-zone>` at the time the object gets saved. |
|
|
| This is enforced by :meth:`Model.validate_unique()` during model validation |
| but not at the database level. If any :attr:`~Field.unique_for_date` constraint |
| involves fields that are not part of a :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm` (for |
| example, if one of the fields is listed in ``exclude`` or has |
| :attr:`editable=False<Field.editable>`), :meth:`Model.validate_unique()` will |
| skip validation for that particular constraint. |
|
|
| ``unique_for_month`` |
| -------------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.unique_for_month |
|
|
| Like :attr:`~Field.unique_for_date`, but requires the field to be unique with |
| respect to the month. |
|
|
| ``unique_for_year`` |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.unique_for_year |
|
|
| Like :attr:`~Field.unique_for_date` and :attr:`~Field.unique_for_month`. |
|
|
| ``verbose_name`` |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.verbose_name |
|
|
| A human-readable name for the field. If the verbose name isn't given, Django |
| will automatically create it using the field's attribute name, converting |
| underscores to spaces. See :ref:`Verbose field names <verbose-field-names>`. |
|
|
| ``validators`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.validators |
|
|
| A list of validators to run for this field. See the :doc:`validators |
| documentation </ref/validators>` for more information. |
|
|
| .. _model-field-types: |
|
|
| Field types |
| =========== |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| ``AutoField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: AutoField(**options) |
|
|
| An :class:`IntegerField` that automatically increments |
| according to available IDs. You usually won't need to use this directly; a |
| primary key field will automatically be added to your model if you don't specify |
| otherwise. See :ref:`automatic-primary-key-fields`. |
|
|
| ``BigAutoField`` |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: BigAutoField(**options) |
|
|
| A 64-bit integer, much like an :class:`AutoField` except that it is |
| guaranteed to fit numbers from ``1`` to ``9223372036854775807``. |
|
|
| ``BigIntegerField`` |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: BigIntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| A 64-bit integer, much like an :class:`IntegerField` except that it is |
| guaranteed to fit numbers from ``-9223372036854775808`` to |
| ``9223372036854775807``. The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.NumberInput`. |
|
|
| ``BinaryField`` |
| --------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: BinaryField(max_length=None, **options) |
|
|
| A field to store raw binary data. It can be assigned :class:`bytes`, |
| :class:`bytearray`, or :class:`memoryview`. |
|
|
| By default, ``BinaryField`` sets :attr:`~Field.editable` to ``False``, in which |
| case it can't be included in a :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: BinaryField.max_length |
|
|
| Optional. The maximum length (in bytes) of the field. The maximum length is |
| enforced in Django's validation using |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.MaxLengthValidator`. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Abusing ``BinaryField`` |
|
|
| Although you might think about storing files in the database, consider that |
| it is bad design in 99% of the cases. This field is *not* a replacement for |
| proper :doc:`static files </howto/static-files/index>` handling. |
|
|
| ``BooleanField`` |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: BooleanField(**options) |
|
|
| A true/false field. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is :class:`~django.forms.CheckboxInput`, |
| or :class:`~django.forms.NullBooleanSelect` if :attr:`null=True <Field.null>`. |
|
|
| The default value of ``BooleanField`` is ``None`` when :attr:`Field.default` |
| isn't defined. |
|
|
| ``CharField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: CharField(max_length=None, **options) |
|
|
| A string field, for small- to large-sized strings. |
|
|
| For large amounts of text, use :class:`~django.db.models.TextField`. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.TextInput`. |
|
|
| :class:`CharField` has the following extra arguments: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: CharField.max_length |
|
|
| The maximum length (in characters) of the field. The ``max_length`` |
| is enforced at the database level and in Django's validation using |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.MaxLengthValidator`. It's required for all |
| database backends included with Django except PostgreSQL, which supports |
| unlimited ``VARCHAR`` columns. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| If you are writing an application that must be portable to multiple |
| database backends, you should be aware that there are restrictions on |
| ``max_length`` for some backends. Refer to the :doc:`database backend |
| notes </ref/databases>` for details. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 4.2 |
|
|
| Support for unlimited ``VARCHAR`` columns was added on PostgreSQL. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: CharField.db_collation |
|
|
| Optional. The database collation name of the field. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Collation names are not standardized. As such, this will not be |
| portable across multiple database backends. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Oracle |
|
|
| Oracle supports collations only when the ``MAX_STRING_SIZE`` database |
| initialization parameter is set to ``EXTENDED``. |
|
|
| ``DateField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: DateField(auto_now=False, auto_now_add=False, **options) |
|
|
| A date, represented in Python by a ``datetime.date`` instance. Has a few extra, |
| optional arguments: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: DateField.auto_now |
|
|
| Automatically set the field to now every time the object is saved. Useful |
| for "last-modified" timestamps. Note that the current date is *always* |
| used; it's not just a default value that you can override. |
|
|
| The field is only automatically updated when calling :meth:`Model.save() |
| <django.db.models.Model.save>`. The field isn't updated when making updates |
| to other fields in other ways such as :meth:`QuerySet.update() |
| <django.db.models.query.QuerySet.update>`, though you can specify a custom |
| value for the field in an update like that. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: DateField.auto_now_add |
|
|
| Automatically set the field to now when the object is first created. Useful |
| for creation of timestamps. Note that the current date is *always* used; |
| it's not just a default value that you can override. So even if you |
| set a value for this field when creating the object, it will be ignored. |
| If you want to be able to modify this field, set the following instead of |
| ``auto_now_add=True``: |
|
|
| * For :class:`DateField`: ``default=date.today`` - from |
| :meth:`datetime.date.today` |
| * For :class:`DateTimeField`: ``default=timezone.now`` - from |
| :func:`django.utils.timezone.now` |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.DateInput`. The admin adds a JavaScript calendar, |
| and a shortcut for "Today". Includes an additional ``invalid_date`` error |
| message key. |
|
|
| The options ``auto_now_add``, ``auto_now``, and ``default`` are mutually exclusive. |
| Any combination of these options will result in an error. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| As currently implemented, setting ``auto_now`` or ``auto_now_add`` to |
| ``True`` will cause the field to have ``editable=False`` and ``blank=True`` |
| set. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| The ``auto_now`` and ``auto_now_add`` options will always use the date in |
| the :ref:`default timezone <default-current-time-zone>` at the moment of |
| creation or update. If you need something different, you may want to |
| consider using your own callable default or overriding ``save()`` instead |
| of using ``auto_now`` or ``auto_now_add``; or using a ``DateTimeField`` |
| instead of a ``DateField`` and deciding how to handle the conversion from |
| datetime to date at display time. |
|
|
| ``DateTimeField`` |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: DateTimeField(auto_now=False, auto_now_add=False, **options) |
|
|
| A date and time, represented in Python by a ``datetime.datetime`` instance. |
| Takes the same extra arguments as :class:`DateField`. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a single |
| :class:`~django.forms.DateTimeInput`. The admin uses two separate |
| :class:`~django.forms.TextInput` widgets with JavaScript shortcuts. |
|
|
| ``DecimalField`` |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: DecimalField(max_digits=None, decimal_places=None, **options) |
|
|
| A fixed-precision decimal number, represented in Python by a |
| :class:`~decimal.Decimal` instance. It validates the input using |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.DecimalValidator`. |
|
|
| Has the following **required** arguments: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: DecimalField.max_digits |
|
|
| The maximum number of digits allowed in the number. Note that this number |
| must be greater than or equal to ``decimal_places``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: DecimalField.decimal_places |
|
|
| The number of decimal places to store with the number. |
|
|
| For example, to store numbers up to ``999.99`` with a resolution of 2 decimal |
| places, you'd use:: |
|
|
| models.DecimalField(..., max_digits=5, decimal_places=2) |
|
|
| And to store numbers up to approximately one billion with a resolution of 10 |
| decimal places:: |
|
|
| models.DecimalField(..., max_digits=19, decimal_places=10) |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.NumberInput` |
| when :attr:`~django.forms.Field.localize` is ``False`` or |
| :class:`~django.forms.TextInput` otherwise. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| For more information about the differences between the |
| :class:`FloatField` and :class:`DecimalField` classes, please |
| see :ref:`FloatField vs. DecimalField <floatfield_vs_decimalfield>`. You |
| should also be aware of :ref:`SQLite limitations <sqlite-decimal-handling>` |
| of decimal fields. |
|
|
| ``DurationField`` |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: DurationField(**options) |
|
|
| A field for storing periods of time - modeled in Python by |
| :class:`~python:datetime.timedelta`. When used on PostgreSQL, the data type |
| used is an ``interval`` and on Oracle the data type is ``INTERVAL DAY(9) TO |
| SECOND(6)``. Otherwise a ``bigint`` of microseconds is used. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Arithmetic with ``DurationField`` works in most cases. However on all |
| databases other than PostgreSQL, comparing the value of a ``DurationField`` |
| to arithmetic on ``DateTimeField`` instances will not work as expected. |
|
|
| ``EmailField`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: EmailField(max_length=254, **options) |
|
|
| A :class:`CharField` that checks that the value is a valid email address using |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.EmailValidator`. |
|
|
| ``FileField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: FileField(upload_to='', storage=None, max_length=100, **options) |
|
|
| A file-upload field. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| The ``primary_key`` argument isn't supported and will raise an error if |
| used. |
|
|
| Has the following optional arguments: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FileField.upload_to |
|
|
| This attribute provides a way of setting the upload directory and file name, |
| and can be set in two ways. In both cases, the value is passed to the |
| :meth:`Storage.save() <django.core.files.storage.Storage.save>` method. |
|
|
| If you specify a string value or a :class:`~pathlib.Path`, it may contain |
| :func:`~time.strftime` formatting, which will be replaced by the date/time |
| of the file upload (so that uploaded files don't fill up the given |
| directory). For example:: |
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| # file will be uploaded to MEDIA_ROOT/uploads |
| upload = models.FileField(upload_to="uploads/") |
| # or... |
| # file will be saved to MEDIA_ROOT/uploads/2015/01/30 |
| upload = models.FileField(upload_to="uploads/%Y/%m/%d/") |
|
|
| If you are using the default |
| :class:`~django.core.files.storage.FileSystemStorage`, the string value |
| will be appended to your :setting:`MEDIA_ROOT` path to form the location on |
| the local filesystem where uploaded files will be stored. If you are using |
| a different storage, check that storage's documentation to see how it |
| handles ``upload_to``. |
|
|
| ``upload_to`` may also be a callable, such as a function. This will be |
| called to obtain the upload path, including the filename. This callable must |
| accept two arguments and return a Unix-style path (with forward slashes) |
| to be passed along to the storage system. The two arguments are: |
|
|
| ====================== =============================================== |
| Argument Description |
| ====================== =============================================== |
| ``instance`` An instance of the model where the |
| ``FileField`` is defined. More specifically, |
| this is the particular instance where the |
| current file is being attached. |
|
|
| In most cases, this object will not have been |
| saved to the database yet, so if it uses the |
| default ``AutoField``, *it might not yet have a |
| value for its primary key field*. |
|
|
| ``filename`` The filename that was originally given to the |
| file. This may or may not be taken into account |
| when determining the final destination path. |
| ====================== =============================================== |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| def user_directory_path(instance, filename): |
| # file will be uploaded to MEDIA_ROOT/user_<id>/<filename> |
| return "user_{0}/{1}".format(instance.user.id, filename) |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| upload = models.FileField(upload_to=user_directory_path) |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FileField.storage |
|
|
| A storage object, or a callable which returns a storage object. This |
| handles the storage and retrieval of your files. See :doc:`/topics/files` |
| for details on how to provide this object. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.ClearableFileInput`. |
|
|
| Using a :class:`FileField` or an :class:`ImageField` (see below) in a model |
| takes a few steps: |
|
|
| #. In your settings file, you'll need to define :setting:`MEDIA_ROOT` as the |
| full path to a directory where you'd like Django to store uploaded files. |
| (For performance, these files are not stored in the database.) Define |
| :setting:`MEDIA_URL` as the base public URL of that directory. Make sure |
| that this directory is writable by the web server's user account. |
|
|
| #. Add the :class:`FileField` or :class:`ImageField` to your model, defining |
| the :attr:`~FileField.upload_to` option to specify a subdirectory of |
| :setting:`MEDIA_ROOT` to use for uploaded files. |
|
|
| #. All that will be stored in your database is a path to the file |
| (relative to :setting:`MEDIA_ROOT`). You'll most likely want to use the |
| convenience :attr:`~django.db.models.fields.files.FieldFile.url` attribute |
| provided by Django. For example, if your :class:`ImageField` is called |
| ``mug_shot``, you can get the absolute path to your image in a template with |
| ``{{ object.mug_shot.url }}``. |
|
|
| For example, say your :setting:`MEDIA_ROOT` is set to ``'/home/media'``, and |
| :attr:`~FileField.upload_to` is set to ``'photos/%Y/%m/%d'``. The ``'%Y/%m/%d'`` |
| part of :attr:`~FileField.upload_to` is :func:`~time.strftime` formatting; |
| ``'%Y'`` is the four-digit year, ``'%m'`` is the two-digit month and ``'%d'`` is |
| the two-digit day. If you upload a file on Jan. 15, 2007, it will be saved in |
| the directory ``/home/media/photos/2007/01/15``. |
|
|
| If you wanted to retrieve the uploaded file's on-disk filename, or the file's |
| size, you could use the :attr:`~django.core.files.File.name` and |
| :attr:`~django.core.files.File.size` attributes respectively; for more |
| information on the available attributes and methods, see the |
| :class:`~django.core.files.File` class reference and the :doc:`/topics/files` |
| topic guide. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| The file is saved as part of saving the model in the database, so the actual |
| file name used on disk cannot be relied on until after the model has been |
| saved. |
|
|
| The uploaded file's relative URL can be obtained using the |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.fields.files.FieldFile.url` attribute. Internally, |
| this calls the :meth:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage.url` method of the |
| underlying :class:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage` class. |
|
|
| .. _file-upload-security: |
|
|
| Note that whenever you deal with uploaded files, you should pay close attention |
| to where you're uploading them and what type of files they are, to avoid |
| security holes. *Validate all uploaded files* so that you're sure the files are |
| what you think they are. For example, if you blindly let somebody upload files, |
| without validation, to a directory that's within your web server's document |
| root, then somebody could upload a CGI or PHP script and execute that script by |
| visiting its URL on your site. Don't allow that. |
|
|
| Also note that even an uploaded HTML file, since it can be executed by the |
| browser (though not by the server), can pose security threats that are |
| equivalent to XSS or CSRF attacks. |
|
|
| :class:`FileField` instances are created in your database as ``varchar`` |
| columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you |
| can change the maximum length using the :attr:`~CharField.max_length` argument. |
|
|
| ``FileField`` and ``FieldFile`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models.fields.files |
|
|
| .. class:: FieldFile |
|
|
| When you access a :class:`~django.db.models.FileField` on a model, you are |
| given an instance of :class:`FieldFile` as a proxy for accessing the underlying |
| file. |
|
|
| The API of :class:`FieldFile` mirrors that of :class:`~django.core.files.File`, |
| with one key difference: *The object wrapped by the class is not necessarily a |
| wrapper around Python's built-in file object.* Instead, it is a wrapper around |
| the result of the :attr:`Storage.open()<django.core.files.storage.Storage.open>` |
| method, which may be a :class:`~django.core.files.File` object, or it may be a |
| custom storage's implementation of the :class:`~django.core.files.File` API. |
|
|
| In addition to the API inherited from :class:`~django.core.files.File` such as |
| ``read()`` and ``write()``, :class:`FieldFile` includes several methods that |
| can be used to interact with the underlying file: |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| Two methods of this class, :meth:`~FieldFile.save` and |
| :meth:`~FieldFile.delete`, default to saving the model object of the |
| associated ``FieldFile`` in the database. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FieldFile.name |
|
|
| The name of the file including the relative path from the root of the |
| :class:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage` of the associated |
| :class:`~django.db.models.FileField`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FieldFile.path |
|
|
| A read-only property to access the file's local filesystem path by calling the |
| :meth:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage.path` method of the underlying |
| :class:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage` class. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FieldFile.size |
|
|
| The result of the underlying :attr:`Storage.size() |
| <django.core.files.storage.Storage.size>` method. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FieldFile.url |
|
|
| A read-only property to access the file's relative URL by calling the |
| :meth:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage.url` method of the underlying |
| :class:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage` class. |
|
|
| .. method:: FieldFile.open(mode='rb') |
|
|
| Opens or reopens the file associated with this instance in the specified |
| ``mode``. Unlike the standard Python ``open()`` method, it doesn't return a |
| file descriptor. |
|
|
| Since the underlying file is opened implicitly when accessing it, it may be |
| unnecessary to call this method except to reset the pointer to the underlying |
| file or to change the ``mode``. |
|
|
| .. method:: FieldFile.close() |
|
|
| Behaves like the standard Python ``file.close()`` method and closes the file |
| associated with this instance. |
|
|
| .. method:: FieldFile.save(name, content, save=True) |
|
|
| This method takes a filename and file contents and passes them to the storage |
| class for the field, then associates the stored file with the model field. |
| If you want to manually associate file data with |
| :class:`~django.db.models.FileField` instances on your model, the ``save()`` |
| method is used to persist that file data. |
|
|
| Takes two required arguments: ``name`` which is the name of the file, and |
| ``content`` which is an object containing the file's contents. The |
| optional ``save`` argument controls whether or not the model instance is |
| saved after the file associated with this field has been altered. Defaults to |
| ``True``. |
|
|
| Note that the ``content`` argument should be an instance of |
| :class:`django.core.files.File`, not Python's built-in file object. |
| You can construct a :class:`~django.core.files.File` from an existing |
| Python file object like this:: |
|
|
| from django.core.files import File |
|
|
| # Open an existing file using Python's built-in open() |
| f = open("/path/to/hello.world") |
| myfile = File(f) |
|
|
| Or you can construct one from a Python string like this:: |
|
|
| from django.core.files.base import ContentFile |
|
|
| myfile = ContentFile("hello world") |
|
|
| For more information, see :doc:`/topics/files`. |
|
|
| .. method:: FieldFile.delete(save=True) |
|
|
| Deletes the file associated with this instance and clears all attributes on |
| the field. Note: This method will close the file if it happens to be open when |
| ``delete()`` is called. |
|
|
| The optional ``save`` argument controls whether or not the model instance is |
| saved after the file associated with this field has been deleted. Defaults to |
| ``True``. |
|
|
| Note that when a model is deleted, related files are not deleted. If you need |
| to cleanup orphaned files, you'll need to handle it yourself (for instance, |
| with a custom management command that can be run manually or scheduled to run |
| periodically via e.g. cron). |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| ``FilePathField`` |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: FilePathField(path='', match=None, recursive=False, allow_files=True, allow_folders=False, max_length=100, **options) |
|
|
| A :class:`CharField` whose choices are limited to the filenames in a certain |
| directory on the filesystem. Has some special arguments, of which the first is |
| **required**: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilePathField.path |
|
|
| Required. The absolute filesystem path to a directory from which this |
| :class:`FilePathField` should get its choices. Example: ``"/home/images"``. |
|
|
| ``path`` may also be a callable, such as a function to dynamically set the |
| path at runtime. Example:: |
|
|
| import os |
| from django.conf import settings |
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| def images_path(): |
| return os.path.join(settings.LOCAL_FILE_DIR, "images") |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| file = models.FilePathField(path=images_path) |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilePathField.match |
|
|
| Optional. A regular expression, as a string, that :class:`FilePathField` |
| will use to filter filenames. Note that the regex will be applied to the |
| base filename, not the full path. Example: ``"foo.*\.txt$"``, which will |
| match a file called ``foo23.txt`` but not ``bar.txt`` or ``foo23.png``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilePathField.recursive |
|
|
| Optional. Either ``True`` or ``False``. Default is ``False``. Specifies |
| whether all subdirectories of :attr:`~FilePathField.path` should be included |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilePathField.allow_files |
|
|
| Optional. Either ``True`` or ``False``. Default is ``True``. Specifies |
| whether files in the specified location should be included. Either this or |
| :attr:`~FilePathField.allow_folders` must be ``True``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilePathField.allow_folders |
|
|
| Optional. Either ``True`` or ``False``. Default is ``False``. Specifies |
| whether folders in the specified location should be included. Either this |
| or :attr:`~FilePathField.allow_files` must be ``True``. |
|
|
| The one potential gotcha is that :attr:`~FilePathField.match` applies to the |
| base filename, not the full path. So, this example:: |
|
|
| FilePathField(path="/home/images", match="foo.*", recursive=True) |
|
|
| ...will match ``/home/images/foo.png`` but not ``/home/images/foo/bar.png`` |
| because the :attr:`~FilePathField.match` applies to the base filename |
| (``foo.png`` and ``bar.png``). |
|
|
| :class:`FilePathField` instances are created in your database as ``varchar`` |
| columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you |
| can change the maximum length using the :attr:`~CharField.max_length` argument. |
|
|
| ``FloatField`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: FloatField(**options) |
|
|
| A floating-point number represented in Python by a ``float`` instance. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.NumberInput` |
| when :attr:`~django.forms.Field.localize` is ``False`` or |
| :class:`~django.forms.TextInput` otherwise. |
|
|
| .. _floatfield_vs_decimalfield: |
|
|
| .. admonition:: ``FloatField`` vs. ``DecimalField`` |
|
|
| The :class:`FloatField` class is sometimes mixed up with the |
| :class:`DecimalField` class. Although they both represent real numbers, they |
| represent those numbers differently. ``FloatField`` uses Python's ``float`` |
| type internally, while ``DecimalField`` uses Python's ``Decimal`` type. For |
| information on the difference between the two, see Python's documentation |
| for the :mod:`decimal` module. |
|
|
| ``GenericIPAddressField`` |
| ------------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: GenericIPAddressField(protocol='both', unpack_ipv4=False, **options) |
|
|
| An IPv4 or IPv6 address, in string format (e.g. ``192.0.2.30`` or |
| ``2a02:42fe::4``). The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.TextInput`. |
|
|
| The IPv6 address normalization follows :rfc:`4291#section-2.2` section 2.2, |
| including using the IPv4 format suggested in paragraph 3 of that section, like |
| ``::ffff:192.0.2.0``. For example, ``2001:0::0:01`` would be normalized to |
| ``2001::1``, and ``::ffff:0a0a:0a0a`` to ``::ffff:10.10.10.10``. All characters |
| are converted to lowercase. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: GenericIPAddressField.protocol |
|
|
| Limits valid inputs to the specified protocol. |
| Accepted values are ``'both'`` (default), ``'IPv4'`` |
| or ``'IPv6'``. Matching is case insensitive. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: GenericIPAddressField.unpack_ipv4 |
|
|
| Unpacks IPv4 mapped addresses like ``::ffff:192.0.2.1``. |
| If this option is enabled that address would be unpacked to |
| ``192.0.2.1``. Default is disabled. Can only be used |
| when ``protocol`` is set to ``'both'``. |
|
|
| If you allow for blank values, you have to allow for null values since blank |
| values are stored as null. |
|
|
| ``ImageField`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: ImageField(upload_to=None, height_field=None, width_field=None, max_length=100, **options) |
|
|
| Inherits all attributes and methods from :class:`FileField`, but also |
| validates that the uploaded object is a valid image. |
|
|
| In addition to the special attributes that are available for :class:`FileField`, |
| an :class:`ImageField` also has ``height`` and ``width`` attributes. |
|
|
| To facilitate querying on those attributes, :class:`ImageField` has the |
| following optional arguments: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ImageField.height_field |
|
|
| Name of a model field which will be auto-populated with the height of the |
| image each time the model instance is saved. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ImageField.width_field |
|
|
| Name of a model field which will be auto-populated with the width of the |
| image each time the model instance is saved. |
|
|
| Requires the `Pillow`_ library. |
|
|
| .. _Pillow: https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ |
|
|
| :class:`ImageField` instances are created in your database as ``varchar`` |
| columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you |
| can change the maximum length using the :attr:`~CharField.max_length` argument. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.ClearableFileInput`. |
|
|
| ``IntegerField`` |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: IntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| An integer. Values from ``-2147483648`` to ``2147483647`` are safe in all |
| databases supported by Django. |
|
|
| It uses :class:`~django.core.validators.MinValueValidator` and |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.MaxValueValidator` to validate the input based |
| on the values that the default database supports. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.NumberInput` |
| when :attr:`~django.forms.Field.localize` is ``False`` or |
| :class:`~django.forms.TextInput` otherwise. |
|
|
| ``JSONField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: JSONField(encoder=None, decoder=None, **options) |
|
|
| A field for storing JSON encoded data. In Python the data is represented in its |
| Python native format: dictionaries, lists, strings, numbers, booleans and |
| ``None``. |
|
|
| ``JSONField`` is supported on MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, and SQLite |
| (with the :ref:`JSON1 extension enabled <sqlite-json1>`). |
|
|
| .. attribute:: JSONField.encoder |
|
|
| An optional :py:class:`json.JSONEncoder` subclass to serialize data types |
| not supported by the standard JSON serializer (e.g. ``datetime.datetime`` |
| or :class:`~python:uuid.UUID`). For example, you can use the |
| :class:`~django.core.serializers.json.DjangoJSONEncoder` class. |
|
|
| Defaults to ``json.JSONEncoder``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: JSONField.decoder |
|
|
| An optional :py:class:`json.JSONDecoder` subclass to deserialize the value |
| retrieved from the database. The value will be in the format chosen by the |
| custom encoder (most often a string). Your deserialization may need to |
| account for the fact that you can't be certain of the input type. For |
| example, you run the risk of returning a ``datetime`` that was actually a |
| string that just happened to be in the same format chosen for |
| ``datetime``\s. |
|
|
| Defaults to ``json.JSONDecoder``. |
|
|
| To query ``JSONField`` in the database, see :ref:`querying-jsonfield`. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Default value |
|
|
| If you give the field a :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.default`, ensure |
| it's a callable such as the :py:class:`dict` class or a function that |
| returns a fresh object each time. Incorrectly using a mutable object like |
| ``default={}`` or ``default=[]`` creates a mutable default that is shared |
| between all instances. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Indexing |
|
|
| :class:`~django.db.models.Index` and :attr:`.Field.db_index` both create a |
| B-tree index, which isn't particularly helpful when querying ``JSONField``. |
| On PostgreSQL only, you can use |
| :class:`~django.contrib.postgres.indexes.GinIndex` that is better suited. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: PostgreSQL users |
|
|
| PostgreSQL has two native JSON based data types: ``json`` and ``jsonb``. |
| The main difference between them is how they are stored and how they can be |
| queried. PostgreSQL's ``json`` field is stored as the original string |
| representation of the JSON and must be decoded on the fly when queried |
| based on keys. The ``jsonb`` field is stored based on the actual structure |
| of the JSON which allows indexing. The trade-off is a small additional cost |
| on writing to the ``jsonb`` field. ``JSONField`` uses ``jsonb``. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Oracle users |
|
|
| Oracle Database does not support storing JSON scalar values. Only JSON |
| objects and arrays (represented in Python using :py:class:`dict` and |
| :py:class:`list`) are supported. |
|
|
| ``PositiveBigIntegerField`` |
| --------------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: PositiveBigIntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| Like a :class:`PositiveIntegerField`, but only allows values under a certain |
| (database-dependent) point. Values from ``0`` to ``9223372036854775807`` are |
| safe in all databases supported by Django. |
|
|
| ``PositiveIntegerField`` |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| .. class:: PositiveIntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| Like an :class:`IntegerField`, but must be either positive or zero (``0``). |
| Values from ``0`` to ``2147483647`` are safe in all databases supported by |
| Django. The value ``0`` is accepted for backward compatibility reasons. |
|
|
| ``PositiveSmallIntegerField`` |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: PositiveSmallIntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| Like a :class:`PositiveIntegerField`, but only allows values under a certain |
| (database-dependent) point. Values from ``0`` to ``32767`` are safe in all |
| databases supported by Django. |
|
|
| ``SlugField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: SlugField(max_length=50, **options) |
|
|
| :term:`Slug <slug>` is a newspaper term. A slug is a short label for something, |
| containing only letters, numbers, underscores or hyphens. They're generally used |
| in URLs. |
|
|
| Like a CharField, you can specify :attr:`~CharField.max_length` (read the note |
| about database portability and :attr:`~CharField.max_length` in that section, |
| too). If :attr:`~CharField.max_length` is not specified, Django will use a |
| default length of 50. |
|
|
| Implies setting :attr:`Field.db_index` to ``True``. |
|
|
| It is often useful to automatically prepopulate a SlugField based on the value |
| of some other value. You can do this automatically in the admin using |
| :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.prepopulated_fields`. |
|
|
| It uses :class:`~django.core.validators.validate_slug` or |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.validate_unicode_slug` for validation. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: SlugField.allow_unicode |
|
|
| If ``True``, the field accepts Unicode letters in addition to ASCII |
| letters. Defaults to ``False``. |
|
|
| ``SmallAutoField`` |
| ------------------ |
|
|
| .. class:: SmallAutoField(**options) |
|
|
| Like an :class:`AutoField`, but only allows values under a certain |
| (database-dependent) limit. Values from ``1`` to ``32767`` are safe in all |
| databases supported by Django. |
|
|
| ``SmallIntegerField`` |
| --------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: SmallIntegerField(**options) |
|
|
| Like an :class:`IntegerField`, but only allows values under a certain |
| (database-dependent) point. Values from ``-32768`` to ``32767`` are safe in all |
| databases supported by Django. |
|
|
| ``TextField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: TextField(**options) |
|
|
| A large text field. The default form widget for this field is a |
| :class:`~django.forms.Textarea`. |
|
|
| If you specify a ``max_length`` attribute, it will be reflected in the |
| :class:`~django.forms.Textarea` widget of the auto-generated form field. |
| However it is not enforced at the model or database level. Use a |
| :class:`CharField` for that. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: TextField.db_collation |
|
|
| Optional. The database collation name of the field. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Collation names are not standardized. As such, this will not be |
| portable across multiple database backends. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Oracle |
|
|
| Oracle does not support collations for a ``TextField``. |
|
|
| ``TimeField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: TimeField(auto_now=False, auto_now_add=False, **options) |
|
|
| A time, represented in Python by a ``datetime.time`` instance. Accepts the same |
| auto-population options as :class:`DateField`. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.TimeInput`. |
| The admin adds some JavaScript shortcuts. |
|
|
| ``URLField`` |
| ------------ |
|
|
| .. class:: URLField(max_length=200, **options) |
|
|
| A :class:`CharField` for a URL, validated by |
| :class:`~django.core.validators.URLValidator`. |
|
|
| The default form widget for this field is a :class:`~django.forms.URLInput`. |
|
|
| Like all :class:`CharField` subclasses, :class:`URLField` takes the optional |
| :attr:`~CharField.max_length` argument. If you don't specify |
| :attr:`~CharField.max_length`, a default of 200 is used. |
|
|
| ``UUIDField`` |
| ------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: UUIDField(**options) |
|
|
| A field for storing universally unique identifiers. Uses Python's |
| :class:`~python:uuid.UUID` class. When used on PostgreSQL, this stores in a |
| ``uuid`` datatype, otherwise in a ``char(32)``. |
|
|
| Universally unique identifiers are a good alternative to :class:`AutoField` for |
| :attr:`~Field.primary_key`. The database will not generate the UUID for you, so |
| it is recommended to use :attr:`~Field.default`:: |
|
|
| import uuid |
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class MyUUIDModel(models.Model): |
| id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False) |
| # other fields |
|
|
| Note that a callable (with the parentheses omitted) is passed to ``default``, |
| not an instance of ``UUID``. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Lookups on PostgreSQL |
|
|
| Using :lookup:`iexact`, :lookup:`contains`, :lookup:`icontains`, |
| :lookup:`startswith`, :lookup:`istartswith`, :lookup:`endswith`, or |
| :lookup:`iendswith` lookups on PostgreSQL don't work for values without |
| hyphens, because PostgreSQL stores them in a hyphenated uuid datatype type. |
|
|
| Relationship fields |
| =================== |
|
|
| .. module:: django.db.models.fields.related |
| :synopsis: Related field types |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| Django also defines a set of fields that represent relations. |
|
|
| .. _ref-foreignkey: |
|
|
| ``ForeignKey`` |
| -------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: ForeignKey(to, on_delete, **options) |
|
|
| A many-to-one relationship. Requires two positional arguments: the class to |
| which the model is related and the :attr:`~ForeignKey.on_delete` option. |
|
|
| .. _recursive-relationships: |
|
|
| To create a recursive relationship -- an object that has a many-to-one |
| relationship with itself -- use ``models.ForeignKey('self', |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE)``. |
|
|
| .. _lazy-relationships: |
|
|
| If you need to create a relationship on a model that has not yet been defined, |
| you can use the name of the model, rather than the model object itself:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Car(models.Model): |
| manufacturer = models.ForeignKey( |
| "Manufacturer", |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| ) |
| # ... |
|
|
|
|
| class Manufacturer(models.Model): |
| # ... |
| pass |
|
|
| Relationships defined this way on :ref:`abstract models |
| <abstract-base-classes>` are resolved when the model is subclassed as a |
| concrete model and are not relative to the abstract model's ``app_label``: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``products/models.py`` |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class AbstractCar(models.Model): |
| manufacturer = models.ForeignKey("Manufacturer", on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| abstract = True |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``production/models.py`` |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
| from products.models import AbstractCar |
|
|
|
|
| class Manufacturer(models.Model): |
| pass |
|
|
|
|
| class Car(AbstractCar): |
| pass |
|
|
|
|
| # Car.manufacturer will point to `production.Manufacturer` here. |
|
|
| To refer to models defined in another application, you can explicitly specify |
| a model with the full application label. For example, if the ``Manufacturer`` |
| model above is defined in another application called ``production``, you'd |
| need to use:: |
|
|
| class Car(models.Model): |
| manufacturer = models.ForeignKey( |
| "production.Manufacturer", |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| ) |
|
|
| This sort of reference, called a lazy relationship, can be useful when |
| resolving circular import dependencies between two applications. |
|
|
| A database index is automatically created on the ``ForeignKey``. You can |
| disable this by setting :attr:`~Field.db_index` to ``False``. You may want to |
| avoid the overhead of an index if you are creating a foreign key for |
| consistency rather than joins, or if you will be creating an alternative index |
| like a partial or multiple column index. |
|
|
| Database Representation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Behind the scenes, Django appends ``"_id"`` to the field name to create its |
| database column name. In the above example, the database table for the ``Car`` |
| model will have a ``manufacturer_id`` column. (You can change this explicitly by |
| specifying :attr:`~Field.db_column`) However, your code should never have to |
| deal with the database column name, unless you write custom SQL. You'll always |
| deal with the field names of your model object. |
|
|
| .. _foreign-key-arguments: |
|
|
| Arguments |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| :class:`ForeignKey` accepts other arguments that define the details of how the |
| relation works. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.on_delete |
|
|
| When an object referenced by a :class:`ForeignKey` is deleted, Django will |
| emulate the behavior of the SQL constraint specified by the |
| :attr:`on_delete` argument. For example, if you have a nullable |
| :class:`ForeignKey` and you want it to be set null when the referenced |
| object is deleted:: |
|
|
| user = models.ForeignKey( |
| User, |
| models.SET_NULL, |
| blank=True, |
| null=True, |
| ) |
|
|
| ``on_delete`` doesn't create an SQL constraint in the database. Support for |
| database-level cascade options :ticket:`may be implemented later <21961>`. |
|
|
| The possible values for :attr:`~ForeignKey.on_delete` are found in |
| :mod:`django.db.models`: |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: CASCADE |
|
|
| Cascade deletes. Django emulates the behavior of the SQL constraint ON |
| DELETE CASCADE and also deletes the object containing the ForeignKey. |
|
|
| :meth:`.Model.delete` isn't called on related models, but the |
| :data:`~django.db.models.signals.pre_delete` and |
| :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_delete` signals are sent for all |
| deleted objects. |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: PROTECT |
|
|
| Prevent deletion of the referenced object by raising |
| :exc:`~django.db.models.ProtectedError`, a subclass of |
| :exc:`django.db.IntegrityError`. |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: RESTRICT |
|
|
| Prevent deletion of the referenced object by raising |
| :exc:`~django.db.models.RestrictedError` (a subclass of |
| :exc:`django.db.IntegrityError`). Unlike :attr:`PROTECT`, deletion of the |
| referenced object is allowed if it also references a different object |
| that is being deleted in the same operation, but via a :attr:`CASCADE` |
| relationship. |
|
|
| Consider this set of models:: |
|
|
| class Artist(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=10) |
|
|
|
|
| class Album(models.Model): |
| artist = models.ForeignKey(Artist, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
|
|
|
|
| class Song(models.Model): |
| artist = models.ForeignKey(Artist, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
| album = models.ForeignKey(Album, on_delete=models.RESTRICT) |
|
|
| ``Artist`` can be deleted even if that implies deleting an ``Album`` |
| which is referenced by a ``Song``, because ``Song`` also references |
| ``Artist`` itself through a cascading relationship. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> artist_one = Artist.objects.create(name="artist one") |
| >>> artist_two = Artist.objects.create(name="artist two") |
| >>> album_one = Album.objects.create(artist=artist_one) |
| >>> album_two = Album.objects.create(artist=artist_two) |
| >>> song_one = Song.objects.create(artist=artist_one, album=album_one) |
| >>> song_two = Song.objects.create(artist=artist_one, album=album_two) |
| >>> album_one.delete() |
| # Raises RestrictedError. |
| >>> artist_two.delete() |
| # Raises RestrictedError. |
| >>> artist_one.delete() |
| (4, {'Song': 2, 'Album': 1, 'Artist': 1}) |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: SET_NULL |
|
|
| Set the :class:`ForeignKey` null; this is only possible if |
| :attr:`~Field.null` is ``True``. |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: SET_DEFAULT |
|
|
| Set the :class:`ForeignKey` to its default value; a default for the |
| :class:`ForeignKey` must be set. |
|
|
| * .. function:: SET() |
|
|
| Set the :class:`ForeignKey` to the value passed to |
| :func:`~django.db.models.SET()`, or if a callable is passed in, |
| the result of calling it. In most cases, passing a callable will be |
| necessary to avoid executing queries at the time your ``models.py`` is |
| imported:: |
|
|
| from django.conf import settings |
| from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model |
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| def get_sentinel_user(): |
| return get_user_model().objects.get_or_create(username="deleted")[0] |
|
|
|
|
| class MyModel(models.Model): |
| user = models.ForeignKey( |
| settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, |
| on_delete=models.SET(get_sentinel_user), |
| ) |
|
|
| * .. attribute:: DO_NOTHING |
|
|
| Take no action. If your database backend enforces referential |
| integrity, this will cause an :exc:`~django.db.IntegrityError` unless |
| you manually add an SQL ``ON DELETE`` constraint to the database field. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.limit_choices_to |
|
|
| Sets a limit to the available choices for this field when this field is |
| rendered using a ``ModelForm`` or the admin (by default, all objects |
| in the queryset are available to choose). Either a dictionary, a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.Q` object, or a callable returning a |
| dictionary or :class:`~django.db.models.Q` object can be used. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| staff_member = models.ForeignKey( |
| User, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| limit_choices_to={"is_staff": True}, |
| ) |
|
|
| causes the corresponding field on the ``ModelForm`` to list only ``Users`` |
| that have ``is_staff=True``. This may be helpful in the Django admin. |
|
|
| The callable form can be helpful, for instance, when used in conjunction |
| with the Python ``datetime`` module to limit selections by date range. For |
| example:: |
|
|
| def limit_pub_date_choices(): |
| return {"pub_date__lte": datetime.date.today()} |
|
|
|
|
| limit_choices_to = limit_pub_date_choices |
|
|
| If ``limit_choices_to`` is or returns a :class:`Q object |
| <django.db.models.Q>`, which is useful for :ref:`complex queries |
| <complex-lookups-with-q>`, then it will only have an effect on the choices |
| available in the admin when the field is not listed in |
| :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.raw_id_fields` in the |
| ``ModelAdmin`` for the model. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| If a callable is used for ``limit_choices_to``, it will be invoked |
| every time a new form is instantiated. It may also be invoked when a |
| model is validated, for example by management commands or the admin. |
| The admin constructs querysets to validate its form inputs in various |
| edge cases multiple times, so there is a possibility your callable may |
| be invoked several times. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.related_name |
|
|
| The name to use for the relation from the related object back to this one. |
| It's also the default value for :attr:`related_query_name` (the name to use |
| for the reverse filter name from the target model). See the :ref:`related |
| objects documentation <backwards-related-objects>` for a full explanation |
| and example. Note that you must set this value when defining relations on |
| :ref:`abstract models <abstract-base-classes>`; and when you do so |
| :ref:`some special syntax <abstract-related-name>` is available. |
|
|
| If you'd prefer Django not to create a backwards relation, set |
| ``related_name`` to ``'+'`` or end it with ``'+'``. For example, this will |
| ensure that the ``User`` model won't have a backwards relation to this |
| model:: |
|
|
| user = models.ForeignKey( |
| User, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="+", |
| ) |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.related_query_name |
|
|
| The name to use for the reverse filter name from the target model. It |
| defaults to the value of :attr:`related_name` or |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.default_related_name` if set, otherwise it |
| defaults to the name of the model:: |
|
|
| # Declare the ForeignKey with related_query_name |
| class Tag(models.Model): |
| article = models.ForeignKey( |
| Article, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="tags", |
| related_query_name="tag", |
| ) |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=255) |
|
|
|
|
| # That's now the name of the reverse filter |
| Article.objects.filter(tag__name="important") |
|
|
| Like :attr:`related_name`, ``related_query_name`` supports app label and |
| class interpolation via :ref:`some special syntax <abstract-related-name>`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.to_field |
|
|
| The field on the related object that the relation is to. By default, Django |
| uses the primary key of the related object. If you reference a different |
| field, that field must have ``unique=True``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.db_constraint |
|
|
| Controls whether or not a constraint should be created in the database for |
| this foreign key. The default is ``True``, and that's almost certainly what |
| you want; setting this to ``False`` can be very bad for data integrity. |
| That said, here are some scenarios where you might want to do this: |
|
|
| * You have legacy data that is not valid. |
| * You're sharding your database. |
|
|
| If this is set to ``False``, accessing a related object that doesn't exist |
| will raise its ``DoesNotExist`` exception. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ForeignKey.swappable |
|
|
| Controls the migration framework's reaction if this :class:`ForeignKey` |
| is pointing at a swappable model. If it is ``True`` - the default - |
| then if the :class:`ForeignKey` is pointing at a model which matches |
| the current value of ``settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL`` (or another swappable |
| model setting) the relationship will be stored in the migration using |
| a reference to the setting, not to the model directly. |
|
|
| You only want to override this to be ``False`` if you are sure your |
| model should always point toward the swapped-in model - for example, |
| if it is a profile model designed specifically for your custom user model. |
|
|
| Setting it to ``False`` does not mean you can reference a swappable model |
| even if it is swapped out - ``False`` means that the migrations made |
| with this ForeignKey will always reference the exact model you specify |
| (so it will fail hard if the user tries to run with a User model you don't |
| support, for example). |
|
|
| If in doubt, leave it to its default of ``True``. |
|
|
| ``ManyToManyField`` |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: ManyToManyField(to, **options) |
|
|
| A many-to-many relationship. Requires a positional argument: the class to |
| which the model is related, which works exactly the same as it does for |
| :class:`ForeignKey`, including :ref:`recursive <recursive-relationships>` and |
| :ref:`lazy <lazy-relationships>` relationships. |
|
|
| Related objects can be added, removed, or created with the field's |
| :class:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager`. |
|
|
| Database Representation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Behind the scenes, Django creates an intermediary join table to represent the |
| many-to-many relationship. By default, this table name is generated using the |
| name of the many-to-many field and the name of the table for the model that |
| contains it. Since some databases don't support table names above a certain |
| length, these table names will be automatically truncated and a uniqueness hash |
| will be used, e.g. ``author_books_9cdf``. You can manually provide the name of |
| the join table using the :attr:`~ManyToManyField.db_table` option. |
|
|
| .. _manytomany-arguments: |
|
|
| Arguments |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| :class:`ManyToManyField` accepts an extra set of arguments -- all optional -- |
| that control how the relationship functions. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.related_name |
|
|
| Same as :attr:`ForeignKey.related_name`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.related_query_name |
|
|
| Same as :attr:`ForeignKey.related_query_name`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.limit_choices_to |
|
|
| Same as :attr:`ForeignKey.limit_choices_to`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.symmetrical |
|
|
| Only used in the definition of ManyToManyFields on self. Consider the |
| following model:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| friends = models.ManyToManyField("self") |
|
|
| When Django processes this model, it identifies that it has a |
| :class:`ManyToManyField` on itself, and as a result, it doesn't add a |
| ``person_set`` attribute to the ``Person`` class. Instead, the |
| :class:`ManyToManyField` is assumed to be symmetrical -- that is, if I am |
| your friend, then you are my friend. |
|
|
| If you do not want symmetry in many-to-many relationships with ``self``, set |
| :attr:`~ManyToManyField.symmetrical` to ``False``. This will force Django to |
| add the descriptor for the reverse relationship, allowing |
| :class:`ManyToManyField` relationships to be non-symmetrical. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.through |
|
|
| Django will automatically generate a table to manage many-to-many |
| relationships. However, if you want to manually specify the intermediary |
| table, you can use the :attr:`~ManyToManyField.through` option to specify |
| the Django model that represents the intermediate table that you want to |
| use. |
|
|
| The most common use for this option is when you want to associate |
| :ref:`extra data with a many-to-many relationship |
| <intermediary-manytomany>`. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| If you don't want multiple associations between the same instances, add |
| a :class:`~django.db.models.UniqueConstraint` including the from and to |
| fields. Django's automatically generated many-to-many tables include |
| such a constraint. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Recursive relationships using an intermediary model can't determine the |
| reverse accessors names, as they would be the same. You need to set a |
| :attr:`~ForeignKey.related_name` to at least one of them. If you'd |
| prefer Django not to create a backwards relation, set ``related_name`` |
| to ``'+'``. |
|
|
| If you don't specify an explicit ``through`` model, there is still an |
| implicit ``through`` model class you can use to directly access the table |
| created to hold the association. It has three fields to link the models. |
|
|
| If the source and target models differ, the following fields are |
| generated: |
|
|
| * ``id``: the primary key of the relation. |
| * ``<containing_model>_id``: the ``id`` of the model that declares the |
| ``ManyToManyField``. |
| * ``<other_model>_id``: the ``id`` of the model that the |
| ``ManyToManyField`` points to. |
|
|
| If the ``ManyToManyField`` points from and to the same model, the following |
| fields are generated: |
|
|
| * ``id``: the primary key of the relation. |
| * ``from_<model>_id``: the ``id`` of the instance which points at the |
| model (i.e. the source instance). |
| * ``to_<model>_id``: the ``id`` of the instance to which the relationship |
| points (i.e. the target model instance). |
|
|
| This class can be used to query associated records for a given model |
| instance like a normal model:: |
|
|
| Model.m2mfield.through.objects.all() |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.through_fields |
|
|
| Only used when a custom intermediary model is specified. Django will |
| normally determine which fields of the intermediary model to use in order |
| to establish a many-to-many relationship automatically. However, |
| consider the following models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=50) |
|
|
|
|
| class Group(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=128) |
| members = models.ManyToManyField( |
| Person, |
| through="Membership", |
| through_fields=("group", "person"), |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| class Membership(models.Model): |
| group = models.ForeignKey(Group, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
| person = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
| inviter = models.ForeignKey( |
| Person, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="membership_invites", |
| ) |
| invite_reason = models.CharField(max_length=64) |
|
|
| ``Membership`` has *two* foreign keys to ``Person`` (``person`` and |
| ``inviter``), which makes the relationship ambiguous and Django can't know |
| which one to use. In this case, you must explicitly specify which |
| foreign keys Django should use using ``through_fields``, as in the example |
| above. |
|
|
| ``through_fields`` accepts a 2-tuple ``('field1', 'field2')``, where |
| ``field1`` is the name of the foreign key to the model the |
| :class:`ManyToManyField` is defined on (``group`` in this case), and |
| ``field2`` the name of the foreign key to the target model (``person`` |
| in this case). |
|
|
| When you have more than one foreign key on an intermediary model to any |
| (or even both) of the models participating in a many-to-many relationship, |
| you *must* specify ``through_fields``. This also applies to |
| :ref:`recursive relationships <recursive-relationships>` |
| when an intermediary model is used and there are more than two |
| foreign keys to the model, or you want to explicitly specify which two |
| Django should use. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.db_table |
|
|
| The name of the table to create for storing the many-to-many data. If this |
| is not provided, Django will assume a default name based upon the names of: |
| the table for the model defining the relationship and the name of the field |
| itself. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.db_constraint |
|
|
| Controls whether or not constraints should be created in the database for |
| the foreign keys in the intermediary table. The default is ``True``, and |
| that's almost certainly what you want; setting this to ``False`` can be |
| very bad for data integrity. That said, here are some scenarios where you |
| might want to do this: |
|
|
| * You have legacy data that is not valid. |
| * You're sharding your database. |
|
|
| It is an error to pass both ``db_constraint`` and ``through``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ManyToManyField.swappable |
|
|
| Controls the migration framework's reaction if this :class:`ManyToManyField` |
| is pointing at a swappable model. If it is ``True`` - the default - |
| then if the :class:`ManyToManyField` is pointing at a model which matches |
| the current value of ``settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL`` (or another swappable |
| model setting) the relationship will be stored in the migration using |
| a reference to the setting, not to the model directly. |
|
|
| You only want to override this to be ``False`` if you are sure your |
| model should always point toward the swapped-in model - for example, |
| if it is a profile model designed specifically for your custom user model. |
|
|
| If in doubt, leave it to its default of ``True``. |
|
|
| :class:`ManyToManyField` does not support :attr:`~Field.validators`. |
|
|
| :attr:`~Field.null` has no effect since there is no way to require a |
| relationship at the database level. |
|
|
| ``OneToOneField`` |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: OneToOneField(to, on_delete, parent_link=False, **options) |
|
|
| A one-to-one relationship. Conceptually, this is similar to a |
| :class:`ForeignKey` with :attr:`unique=True <Field.unique>`, but the |
| "reverse" side of the relation will directly return a single object. |
|
|
| This is most useful as the primary key of a model which "extends" |
| another model in some way; :ref:`multi-table-inheritance` is |
| implemented by adding an implicit one-to-one relation from the child |
| model to the parent model, for example. |
|
|
| One positional argument is required: the class to which the model will be |
| related. This works exactly the same as it does for :class:`ForeignKey`, |
| including all the options regarding :ref:`recursive <recursive-relationships>` |
| and :ref:`lazy <lazy-relationships>` relationships. |
|
|
| If you do not specify the :attr:`~ForeignKey.related_name` argument for the |
| ``OneToOneField``, Django will use the lowercase name of the current model as |
| default value. |
|
|
| With the following example:: |
|
|
| from django.conf import settings |
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class MySpecialUser(models.Model): |
| user = models.OneToOneField( |
| settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| ) |
| supervisor = models.OneToOneField( |
| settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="supervisor_of", |
| ) |
|
|
| your resulting ``User`` model will have the following attributes: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> user = User.objects.get(pk=1) |
| >>> hasattr(user, "myspecialuser") |
| True |
| >>> hasattr(user, "supervisor_of") |
| True |
|
|
| A ``RelatedObjectDoesNotExist`` exception is raised when accessing the reverse |
| relationship if an entry in the related table doesn't exist. This is a subclass |
| of the target model's :exc:`Model.DoesNotExist |
| <django.db.models.Model.DoesNotExist>` exception and can be accessed as an |
| attribute of the reverse accessor. For example, if a user doesn't have a |
| supervisor designated by ``MySpecialUser``:: |
|
|
| try: |
| user.supervisor_of |
| except User.supervisor_of.RelatedObjectDoesNotExist: |
| pass |
|
|
| .. _onetoone-arguments: |
|
|
| Additionally, ``OneToOneField`` accepts all of the extra arguments |
| accepted by :class:`ForeignKey`, plus one extra argument: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: OneToOneField.parent_link |
|
|
| When ``True`` and used in a model which inherits from another |
| :term:`concrete model`, indicates that this field should be used as the |
| link back to the parent class, rather than the extra |
| ``OneToOneField`` which would normally be implicitly created by |
| subclassing. |
|
|
| See :doc:`One-to-one relationships </topics/db/examples/one_to_one>` for usage |
| examples of ``OneToOneField``. |
|
|
| Field API reference |
| =================== |
|
|
| .. class:: Field |
|
|
| ``Field`` is an abstract class that represents a database table column. |
| Django uses fields to create the database table (:meth:`db_type`), to map |
| Python types to database (:meth:`get_prep_value`) and vice-versa |
| (:meth:`from_db_value`). |
|
|
| A field is thus a fundamental piece in different Django APIs, notably, |
| :class:`models <django.db.models.Model>` and :class:`querysets |
| <django.db.models.query.QuerySet>`. |
|
|
| In models, a field is instantiated as a class attribute and represents a |
| particular table column, see :doc:`/topics/db/models`. It has attributes |
| such as :attr:`null` and :attr:`unique`, and methods that Django uses to |
| map the field value to database-specific values. |
|
|
| A ``Field`` is a subclass of |
| :class:`~django.db.models.lookups.RegisterLookupMixin` and thus both |
| :class:`~django.db.models.Transform` and |
| :class:`~django.db.models.Lookup` can be registered on it to be used |
| in ``QuerySet``\s (e.g. ``field_name__exact="foo"``). All :ref:`built-in |
| lookups <field-lookups>` are registered by default. |
|
|
| All of Django's built-in fields, such as :class:`CharField`, are particular |
| implementations of ``Field``. If you need a custom field, you can either |
| subclass any of the built-in fields or write a ``Field`` from scratch. In |
| either case, see :doc:`/howto/custom-model-fields`. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: description |
|
|
| A verbose description of the field, e.g. for the |
| :mod:`django.contrib.admindocs` application. |
|
|
| The description can be of the form:: |
|
|
| description = _("String (up to %(max_length)s)") |
|
|
| where the arguments are interpolated from the field's ``__dict__``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: descriptor_class |
|
|
| A class implementing the :py:ref:`descriptor protocol <descriptors>` |
| that is instantiated and assigned to the model instance attribute. The |
| constructor must accept a single argument, the ``Field`` instance. |
| Overriding this class attribute allows for customizing the get and set |
| behavior. |
|
|
| To map a ``Field`` to a database-specific type, Django exposes several |
| methods: |
|
|
| .. method:: get_internal_type() |
|
|
| Returns a string naming this field for backend specific purposes. |
| By default, it returns the class name. |
|
|
| See :ref:`emulating-built-in-field-types` for usage in custom fields. |
|
|
| .. method:: db_type(connection) |
|
|
| Returns the database column data type for the :class:`Field`, taking |
| into account the ``connection``. |
|
|
| See :ref:`custom-database-types` for usage in custom fields. |
|
|
| .. method:: rel_db_type(connection) |
|
|
| Returns the database column data type for fields such as ``ForeignKey`` |
| and ``OneToOneField`` that point to the :class:`Field`, taking |
| into account the ``connection``. |
|
|
| See :ref:`custom-database-types` for usage in custom fields. |
|
|
| There are three main situations where Django needs to interact with the |
| database backend and fields: |
|
|
| * when it queries the database (Python value -> database backend value) |
| * when it loads data from the database (database backend value -> Python |
| value) |
| * when it saves to the database (Python value -> database backend value) |
|
|
| When querying, :meth:`get_db_prep_value` and :meth:`get_prep_value` are used: |
|
|
| .. method:: get_prep_value(value) |
|
|
| ``value`` is the current value of the model's attribute, and the method |
| should return data in a format that has been prepared for use as a |
| parameter in a query. |
|
|
| See :ref:`converting-python-objects-to-query-values` for usage. |
|
|
| .. method:: get_db_prep_value(value, connection, prepared=False) |
|
|
| Converts ``value`` to a backend-specific value. By default it returns |
| ``value`` if ``prepared=True`` and :meth:`~Field.get_prep_value` if is |
| ``False``. |
|
|
| See :ref:`converting-query-values-to-database-values` for usage. |
|
|
| When loading data, :meth:`from_db_value` is used: |
|
|
| .. method:: from_db_value(value, expression, connection) |
|
|
| Converts a value as returned by the database to a Python object. It is |
| the reverse of :meth:`get_prep_value`. |
|
|
| This method is not used for most built-in fields as the database |
| backend already returns the correct Python type, or the backend itself |
| does the conversion. |
|
|
| ``expression`` is the same as ``self``. |
|
|
| See :ref:`converting-values-to-python-objects` for usage. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| For performance reasons, ``from_db_value`` is not implemented as a |
| no-op on fields which do not require it (all Django fields). |
| Consequently you may not call ``super`` in your definition. |
|
|
| When saving, :meth:`pre_save` and :meth:`get_db_prep_save` are used: |
|
|
| .. method:: get_db_prep_save(value, connection) |
|
|
| Same as the :meth:`get_db_prep_value`, but called when the field value |
| must be *saved* to the database. By default returns |
| :meth:`get_db_prep_value`. |
|
|
| .. method:: pre_save(model_instance, add) |
|
|
| Method called prior to :meth:`get_db_prep_save` to prepare the value |
| before being saved (e.g. for :attr:`DateField.auto_now`). |
|
|
| ``model_instance`` is the instance this field belongs to and ``add`` |
| is whether the instance is being saved to the database for the first |
| time. |
|
|
| It should return the value of the appropriate attribute from |
| ``model_instance`` for this field. The attribute name is in |
| ``self.attname`` (this is set up by :class:`~django.db.models.Field`). |
|
|
| See :ref:`preprocessing-values-before-saving` for usage. |
|
|
| Fields often receive their values as a different type, either from |
| serialization or from forms. |
|
|
| .. method:: to_python(value) |
|
|
| Converts the value into the correct Python object. It acts as the |
| reverse of :meth:`value_to_string`, and is also called in |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.clean`. |
|
|
| See :ref:`converting-values-to-python-objects` for usage. |
|
|
| Besides saving to the database, the field also needs to know how to |
| serialize its value: |
|
|
| .. method:: value_from_object(obj) |
|
|
| Returns the field's value for the given model instance. |
|
|
| This method is often used by :meth:`value_to_string`. |
|
|
| .. method:: value_to_string(obj) |
|
|
| Converts ``obj`` to a string. Used to serialize the value of the field. |
|
|
| See :ref:`converting-model-field-to-serialization` for usage. |
|
|
| When using :class:`model forms <django.forms.ModelForm>`, the ``Field`` |
| needs to know which form field it should be represented by: |
|
|
| .. method:: formfield(form_class=None, choices_form_class=None, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Returns the default :class:`django.forms.Field` of this field for |
| :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm`. |
|
|
| By default, if both ``form_class`` and ``choices_form_class`` are |
| ``None``, it uses :class:`~django.forms.CharField`. If the field has |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.choices` and ``choices_form_class`` |
| isn't specified, it uses :class:`~django.forms.TypedChoiceField`. |
|
|
| See :ref:`specifying-form-field-for-model-field` for usage. |
|
|
| .. method:: deconstruct() |
|
|
| Returns a 4-tuple with enough information to recreate the field: |
|
|
| 1. The name of the field on the model. |
| 2. The import path of the field (e.g. ``"django.db.models.IntegerField"``). |
| This should be the most portable version, so less specific may be better. |
| 3. A list of positional arguments. |
| 4. A dict of keyword arguments. |
|
|
| This method must be added to fields prior to 1.7 to migrate its data |
| using :doc:`/topics/migrations`. |
|
|
| Registering and fetching lookups |
| ================================ |
|
|
| ``Field`` implements the :ref:`lookup registration API <lookup-registration-api>`. |
| The API can be used to customize which lookups are available for a field class |
| and its instances, and how lookups are fetched from a field. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 4.2 |
|
|
| Support for registering lookups on :class:`~django.db.models.Field` |
| instances was added. |
|
|
| .. _model-field-attributes: |
|
|
| ========================= |
| Field attribute reference |
| ========================= |
|
|
| Every ``Field`` instance contains several attributes that allow |
| introspecting its behavior. Use these attributes instead of ``isinstance`` |
| checks when you need to write code that depends on a field's functionality. |
| These attributes can be used together with the :ref:`Model._meta API |
| <model-meta-field-api>` to narrow down a search for specific field types. |
| Custom model fields should implement these flags. |
|
|
| Attributes for fields |
| ===================== |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.auto_created |
|
|
| Boolean flag that indicates if the field was automatically created, such |
| as the ``OneToOneField`` used by model inheritance. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.concrete |
|
|
| Boolean flag that indicates if the field has a database column associated |
| with it. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.hidden |
|
|
| Boolean flag that indicates if a field is used to back another non-hidden |
| field's functionality (e.g. the ``content_type`` and ``object_id`` fields |
| that make up a ``GenericForeignKey``). The ``hidden`` flag is used to |
| distinguish what constitutes the public subset of fields on the model from |
| all the fields on the model. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| :meth:`Options.get_fields() |
| <django.db.models.options.Options.get_fields()>` |
| excludes hidden fields by default. Pass in ``include_hidden=True`` to |
| return hidden fields in the results. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.is_relation |
|
|
| Boolean flag that indicates if a field contains references to one or |
| more other models for its functionality (e.g. ``ForeignKey``, |
| ``ManyToManyField``, ``OneToOneField``, etc.). |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.model |
|
|
| Returns the model on which the field is defined. If a field is defined on |
| a superclass of a model, ``model`` will refer to the superclass, not the |
| class of the instance. |
|
|
| Attributes for fields with relations |
| ==================================== |
|
|
| These attributes are used to query for the cardinality and other details of a |
| relation. These attribute are present on all fields; however, they will only |
| have boolean values (rather than ``None``) if the field is a relation type |
| (:attr:`Field.is_relation=True <Field.is_relation>`). |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.many_to_many |
|
|
| Boolean flag that is ``True`` if the field has a many-to-many relation; |
| ``False`` otherwise. The only field included with Django where this is |
| ``True`` is ``ManyToManyField``. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.many_to_one |
|
|
| Boolean flag that is ``True`` if the field has a many-to-one relation, such |
| as a ``ForeignKey``; ``False`` otherwise. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.one_to_many |
|
|
| Boolean flag that is ``True`` if the field has a one-to-many relation, such |
| as a ``GenericRelation`` or the reverse of a ``ForeignKey``; ``False`` |
| otherwise. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.one_to_one |
|
|
| Boolean flag that is ``True`` if the field has a one-to-one relation, such |
| as a ``OneToOneField``; ``False`` otherwise. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: Field.related_model |
|
|
| Points to the model the field relates to. For example, ``Author`` in |
| ``ForeignKey(Author, on_delete=models.CASCADE)``. The ``related_model`` for |
| a ``GenericForeignKey`` is always ``None``. |
|
|