| ========================== |
| ``QuerySet`` API reference |
| ========================== |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models.query |
|
|
| This document describes the details of the ``QuerySet`` API. It builds on the |
| material presented in the :doc:`model </topics/db/models>` and :doc:`database |
| query </topics/db/queries>` guides, so you'll probably want to read and |
| understand those documents before reading this one. |
|
|
| Throughout this reference we'll use the :ref:`example blog models |
| <queryset-model-example>` presented in the :doc:`database query guide |
| </topics/db/queries>`. |
|
|
| .. _when-querysets-are-evaluated: |
|
|
| When ``QuerySet``\s are evaluated |
| ================================= |
|
|
| Internally, a ``QuerySet`` can be constructed, filtered, sliced, and generally |
| passed around without actually hitting the database. No database activity |
| actually occurs until you do something to evaluate the queryset. |
|
|
| You can evaluate a ``QuerySet`` in the following ways: |
|
|
| * **Iteration.** A ``QuerySet`` is iterable, and it executes its database |
| query the first time you iterate over it. For example, this will print |
| the headline of all entries in the database:: |
|
|
| for e in Entry.objects.all(): |
| print(e.headline) |
|
|
| Note: Don't use this if all you want to do is determine if at least one |
| result exists. It's more efficient to use :meth:`~QuerySet.exists`. |
|
|
| * **Asynchronous iteration.** A ``QuerySet`` can also be iterated over using |
| ``async for``:: |
|
|
| async for e in Entry.objects.all(): |
| results.append(e) |
|
|
| Both synchronous and asynchronous iterators of QuerySets share the same |
| underlying cache. |
|
|
| * **Slicing.** As explained in :ref:`limiting-querysets`, a ``QuerySet`` can |
| be sliced, using Python's array-slicing syntax. Slicing an unevaluated |
| ``QuerySet`` usually returns another unevaluated ``QuerySet``, but Django |
| will execute the database query if you use the "step" parameter of slice |
| syntax, and will return a list. Slicing a ``QuerySet`` that has been |
| evaluated also returns a list. |
|
|
| Also note that even though slicing an unevaluated ``QuerySet`` returns |
| another unevaluated ``QuerySet``, modifying it further (e.g., adding |
| more filters, or modifying ordering) is not allowed, since that does not |
| translate well into SQL and it would not have a clear meaning either. |
|
|
| * **Pickling/Caching.** See the following section for details of what |
| is involved when `pickling QuerySets`_. The important thing for the |
| purposes of this section is that the results are read from the database. |
|
|
| * **repr().** A ``QuerySet`` is evaluated when you call ``repr()`` on it. |
| This is for convenience in the Python interactive interpreter, so you can |
| immediately see your results when using the API interactively. |
|
|
| * **len().** A ``QuerySet`` is evaluated when you call ``len()`` on it. |
| This, as you might expect, returns the length of the result list. |
|
|
| Note: If you only need to determine the number of records in the set (and |
| don't need the actual objects), it's much more efficient to handle a count |
| at the database level using SQL's ``SELECT COUNT(*)``. Django provides a |
| :meth:`~QuerySet.count` method for precisely this reason. |
|
|
| * **list().** Force evaluation of a ``QuerySet`` by calling ``list()`` on |
| it. For example:: |
|
|
| entry_list = list(Entry.objects.all()) |
|
|
| * **bool().** Testing a ``QuerySet`` in a boolean context, such as using |
| ``bool()``, ``or``, ``and`` or an ``if`` statement, will cause the query |
| to be executed. If there is at least one result, the ``QuerySet`` is |
| ``True``, otherwise ``False``. For example:: |
|
|
| if Entry.objects.filter(headline="Test"): |
| print("There is at least one Entry with the headline Test") |
|
|
| Note: If you only want to determine if at least one result exists (and don't |
| need the actual objects), it's more efficient to use :meth:`~QuerySet.exists`. |
|
|
| .. _pickling QuerySets: |
|
|
| Pickling ``QuerySet``\s |
| ----------------------- |
|
|
| If you :mod:`pickle` a ``QuerySet``, this will force all the results to be loaded |
| into memory prior to pickling. Pickling is usually used as a precursor to |
| caching and when the cached queryset is reloaded, you want the results to |
| already be present and ready for use (reading from the database can take some |
| time, defeating the purpose of caching). This means that when you unpickle a |
| ``QuerySet``, it contains the results at the moment it was pickled, rather |
| than the results that are currently in the database. |
|
|
| If you only want to pickle the necessary information to recreate the |
| ``QuerySet`` from the database at a later time, pickle the ``query`` attribute |
| of the ``QuerySet``. You can then recreate the original ``QuerySet`` (without |
| any results loaded) using some code like this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> import pickle |
| >>> query = pickle.loads(s) # Assuming 's' is the pickled string. |
| >>> qs = MyModel.objects.all() |
| >>> qs.query = query # Restore the original 'query'. |
|
|
| The ``query`` attribute is an opaque object. It represents the internals of |
| the query construction and is not part of the public API. However, it is safe |
| (and fully supported) to pickle and unpickle the attribute's contents as |
| described here. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Restrictions on ``QuerySet.values_list()`` |
|
|
| If you recreate :meth:`QuerySet.values_list` using the pickled ``query`` |
| attribute, it will be converted to :meth:`QuerySet.values`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> import pickle |
| >>> qs = Blog.objects.values_list("id", "name") |
| >>> qs |
| <QuerySet [(1, 'Beatles Blog')]> |
| >>> reloaded_qs = Blog.objects.all() |
| >>> reloaded_qs.query = pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(qs.query)) |
| >>> reloaded_qs |
| <QuerySet [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog'}]> |
|
|
| .. admonition:: You can't share pickles between versions |
|
|
| Pickles of ``QuerySets`` are only valid for the version of Django that |
| was used to generate them. If you generate a pickle using Django |
| version N, there is no guarantee that pickle will be readable with |
| Django version N+1. Pickles should not be used as part of a long-term |
| archival strategy. |
|
|
| Since pickle compatibility errors can be difficult to diagnose, such as |
| silently corrupted objects, a ``RuntimeWarning`` is raised when you try to |
| unpickle a queryset in a Django version that is different than the one in |
| which it was pickled. |
|
|
| .. _queryset-api: |
|
|
| ``QuerySet`` API |
| ================ |
|
|
| Here's the formal declaration of a ``QuerySet``: |
|
|
| .. class:: QuerySet(model=None, query=None, using=None, hints=None) |
|
|
| Usually when you'll interact with a ``QuerySet`` you'll use it by |
| :ref:`chaining filters <chaining-filters>`. To make this work, most |
| ``QuerySet`` methods return new querysets. These methods are covered in |
| detail later in this section. |
|
|
| The ``QuerySet`` class has the following public attributes you can use for |
| introspection: |
|
|
| .. attribute:: ordered |
|
|
| ``True`` if the ``QuerySet`` is ordered — i.e. has an |
| :meth:`order_by()` clause or a default ordering on the model. |
| ``False`` otherwise. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: db |
|
|
| The database that will be used if this query is executed now. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| The ``query`` parameter to :class:`QuerySet` exists so that specialized |
| query subclasses can reconstruct internal query state. The value of the |
| parameter is an opaque representation of that query state and is not |
| part of a public API. |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models.query.QuerySet |
|
|
| Methods that return new ``QuerySet``\s |
| -------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Django provides a range of ``QuerySet`` refinement methods that modify either |
| the types of results returned by the ``QuerySet`` or the way its SQL query is |
| executed. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| These methods do not run database queries, therefore they are **safe to** |
| **run in asynchronous code**, and do not have separate asynchronous |
| versions. |
|
|
| ``filter()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: filter(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Returns a new ``QuerySet`` containing objects that match the given lookup |
| parameters. |
|
|
| The lookup parameters (``**kwargs``) should be in the format described in |
| `Field lookups`_ below. Multiple parameters are joined via ``AND`` in the |
| underlying SQL statement. |
|
|
| If you need to execute more complex queries (for example, queries with ``OR`` statements), |
| you can use :class:`Q objects <django.db.models.Q>` (``*args``). |
|
|
| ``exclude()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: exclude(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Returns a new ``QuerySet`` containing objects that do *not* match the given |
| lookup parameters. |
|
|
| The lookup parameters (``**kwargs``) should be in the format described in |
| `Field lookups`_ below. Multiple parameters are joined via ``AND`` in the |
| underlying SQL statement, and the whole thing is enclosed in a ``NOT()``. |
|
|
| This example excludes all entries whose ``pub_date`` is later than 2005-1-3 |
| AND whose ``headline`` is "Hello":: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.exclude(pub_date__gt=datetime.date(2005, 1, 3), headline="Hello") |
|
|
| In SQL terms, that evaluates to: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... |
| WHERE NOT (pub_date > '2005-1-3' AND headline = 'Hello') |
|
|
| This example excludes all entries whose ``pub_date`` is later than 2005-1-3 |
| OR whose headline is "Hello":: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.exclude(pub_date__gt=datetime.date(2005, 1, 3)).exclude(headline="Hello") |
|
|
| In SQL terms, that evaluates to: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... |
| WHERE NOT pub_date > '2005-1-3' |
| AND NOT headline = 'Hello' |
|
|
| Note the second example is more restrictive. |
|
|
| If you need to execute more complex queries (for example, queries with ``OR`` statements), |
| you can use :class:`Q objects <django.db.models.Q>` (``*args``). |
|
|
| ``annotate()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: annotate(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Annotates each object in the ``QuerySet`` with the provided list of :doc:`query |
| expressions </ref/models/expressions>`. An expression may be a simple value, a |
| reference to a field on the model (or any related models), or an aggregate |
| expression (averages, sums, etc.) that has been computed over the objects that |
| are related to the objects in the ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| Each argument to ``annotate()`` is an annotation that will be added |
| to each object in the ``QuerySet`` that is returned. |
|
|
| The aggregation functions that are provided by Django are described |
| in `Aggregation Functions`_ below. |
|
|
| Annotations specified using keyword arguments will use the keyword as |
| the alias for the annotation. Anonymous arguments will have an alias |
| generated for them based upon the name of the aggregate function and |
| the model field that is being aggregated. Only aggregate expressions |
| that reference a single field can be anonymous arguments. Everything |
| else must be a keyword argument. |
|
|
| For example, if you were manipulating a list of blogs, you may want |
| to determine how many entries have been made in each blog: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Count |
| >>> q = Blog.objects.annotate(Count("entry")) |
| # The name of the first blog |
| >>> q[0].name |
| 'Blogasaurus' |
| # The number of entries on the first blog |
| >>> q[0].entry__count |
| 42 |
|
|
| The ``Blog`` model doesn't define an ``entry__count`` attribute by itself, |
| but by using a keyword argument to specify the aggregate function, you can |
| control the name of the annotation: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> q = Blog.objects.annotate(number_of_entries=Count("entry")) |
| # The number of entries on the first blog, using the name provided |
| >>> q[0].number_of_entries |
| 42 |
|
|
| For an in-depth discussion of aggregation, see :doc:`the topic guide on |
| Aggregation </topics/db/aggregation>`. |
|
|
| ``alias()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: alias(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| Same as :meth:`annotate`, but instead of annotating objects in the |
| ``QuerySet``, saves the expression for later reuse with other ``QuerySet`` |
| methods. This is useful when the result of the expression itself is not needed |
| but it is used for filtering, ordering, or as a part of a complex expression. |
| Not selecting the unused value removes redundant work from the database which |
| should result in better performance. |
|
|
| For example, if you want to find blogs with more than 5 entries, but are not |
| interested in the exact number of entries, you could do this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Count |
| >>> blogs = Blog.objects.alias(entries=Count("entry")).filter(entries__gt=5) |
|
|
| ``alias()`` can be used in conjunction with :meth:`annotate`, :meth:`exclude`, |
| :meth:`filter`, :meth:`order_by`, and :meth:`update`. To use aliased expression |
| with other methods (e.g. :meth:`aggregate`), you must promote it to an |
| annotation:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.alias(entries=Count("entry")).annotate( |
| entries=F("entries"), |
| ).aggregate(Sum("entries")) |
|
|
| :meth:`filter` and :meth:`order_by` can take expressions directly, but |
| expression construction and usage often does not happen in the same place (for |
| example, ``QuerySet`` method creates expressions, for later use in views). |
| ``alias()`` allows building complex expressions incrementally, possibly |
| spanning multiple methods and modules, refer to the expression parts by their |
| aliases and only use :meth:`annotate` for the final result. |
|
|
| ``order_by()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: order_by(*fields) |
|
|
| By default, results returned by a ``QuerySet`` are ordered by the ordering |
| tuple given by the ``ordering`` option in the model's ``Meta``. You can |
| override this on a per-``QuerySet`` basis by using the ``order_by`` method. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2005).order_by("-pub_date", "headline") |
|
|
| The result above will be ordered by ``pub_date`` descending, then by |
| ``headline`` ascending. The negative sign in front of ``"-pub_date"`` indicates |
| *descending* order. Ascending order is implied. To order randomly, use ``"?"``, |
| like so:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("?") |
|
|
| Note: ``order_by('?')`` queries may be expensive and slow, depending on the |
| database backend you're using. |
|
|
| To order by a field in a different model, use the same syntax as when you are |
| querying across model relations. That is, the name of the field, followed by a |
| double underscore (``__``), followed by the name of the field in the new model, |
| and so on for as many models as you want to join. For example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("blog__name", "headline") |
|
|
| If you try to order by a field that is a relation to another model, Django will |
| use the default ordering on the related model, or order by the related model's |
| primary key if there is no :attr:`Meta.ordering |
| <django.db.models.Options.ordering>` specified. For example, since the ``Blog`` |
| model has no default ordering specified:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("blog") |
|
|
| ...is identical to:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("blog__id") |
|
|
| If ``Blog`` had ``ordering = ['name']``, then the first queryset would be |
| identical to:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("blog__name") |
|
|
| You can also order by :doc:`query expressions </ref/models/expressions>` by |
| calling :meth:`~.Expression.asc` or :meth:`~.Expression.desc` on the |
| expression:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by(Coalesce("summary", "headline").desc()) |
|
|
| :meth:`~.Expression.asc` and :meth:`~.Expression.desc` have arguments |
| (``nulls_first`` and ``nulls_last``) that control how null values are sorted. |
|
|
| Be cautious when ordering by fields in related models if you are also using |
| :meth:`distinct()`. See the note in :meth:`distinct` for an explanation of how |
| related model ordering can change the expected results. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| It is permissible to specify a multi-valued field to order the results by |
| (for example, a :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` field, or the |
| reverse relation of a :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey` field). |
|
|
| Consider this case:: |
|
|
| class Event(Model): |
| parent = models.ForeignKey( |
| "self", |
| on_delete=models.CASCADE, |
| related_name="children", |
| ) |
| date = models.DateField() |
|
|
|
|
| Event.objects.order_by("children__date") |
|
|
| Here, there could potentially be multiple ordering data for each ``Event``; |
| each ``Event`` with multiple ``children`` will be returned multiple times |
| into the new ``QuerySet`` that ``order_by()`` creates. In other words, |
| using ``order_by()`` on the ``QuerySet`` could return more items than you |
| were working on to begin with - which is probably neither expected nor |
| useful. |
|
|
| Thus, take care when using multi-valued field to order the results. **If** |
| you can be sure that there will only be one ordering piece of data for each |
| of the items you're ordering, this approach should not present problems. If |
| not, make sure the results are what you expect. |
|
|
| There's no way to specify whether ordering should be case sensitive. With |
| respect to case-sensitivity, Django will order results however your database |
| backend normally orders them. |
|
|
| You can order by a field converted to lowercase with |
| :class:`~django.db.models.functions.Lower` which will achieve case-consistent |
| ordering:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by(Lower("headline").desc()) |
|
|
| If you don't want any ordering to be applied to a query, not even the default |
| ordering, call :meth:`order_by()` with no parameters. |
|
|
| You can tell if a query is ordered or not by checking the |
| :attr:`.QuerySet.ordered` attribute, which will be ``True`` if the |
| ``QuerySet`` has been ordered in any way. |
|
|
| Each ``order_by()`` call will clear any previous ordering. For example, this |
| query will be ordered by ``pub_date`` and not ``headline``:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("headline").order_by("pub_date") |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| Ordering is not a free operation. Each field you add to the ordering |
| incurs a cost to your database. Each foreign key you add will |
| implicitly include all of its default orderings as well. |
|
|
| If a query doesn't have an ordering specified, results are returned from |
| the database in an unspecified order. A particular ordering is guaranteed |
| only when ordering by a set of fields that uniquely identify each object in |
| the results. For example, if a ``name`` field isn't unique, ordering by it |
| won't guarantee objects with the same name always appear in the same order. |
|
|
| ``reverse()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: reverse() |
|
|
| Use the ``reverse()`` method to reverse the order in which a queryset's |
| elements are returned. Calling ``reverse()`` a second time restores the |
| ordering back to the normal direction. |
|
|
| To retrieve the "last" five items in a queryset, you could do this:: |
|
|
| my_queryset.reverse()[:5] |
|
|
| Note that this is not quite the same as slicing from the end of a sequence in |
| Python. The above example will return the last item first, then the |
| penultimate item and so on. If we had a Python sequence and looked at |
| ``seq[-5:]``, we would see the fifth-last item first. Django doesn't support |
| that mode of access (slicing from the end), because it's not possible to do it |
| efficiently in SQL. |
|
|
| Also, note that ``reverse()`` should generally only be called on a ``QuerySet`` |
| which has a defined ordering (e.g., when querying against a model which defines |
| a default ordering, or when using :meth:`order_by()`). If no such ordering is |
| defined for a given ``QuerySet``, calling ``reverse()`` on it has no real |
| effect (the ordering was undefined prior to calling ``reverse()``, and will |
| remain undefined afterward). |
|
|
| ``distinct()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: distinct(*fields) |
|
|
| Returns a new ``QuerySet`` that uses ``SELECT DISTINCT`` in its SQL query. This |
| eliminates duplicate rows from the query results. |
|
|
| By default, a ``QuerySet`` will not eliminate duplicate rows. In practice, this |
| is rarely a problem, because simple queries such as ``Blog.objects.all()`` |
| don't introduce the possibility of duplicate result rows. However, if your |
| query spans multiple tables, it's possible to get duplicate results when a |
| ``QuerySet`` is evaluated. That's when you'd use ``distinct()``. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| Any fields used in an :meth:`order_by` call are included in the SQL |
| ``SELECT`` columns. This can sometimes lead to unexpected results when used |
| in conjunction with ``distinct()``. If you order by fields from a related |
| model, those fields will be added to the selected columns and they may make |
| otherwise duplicate rows appear to be distinct. Since the extra columns |
| don't appear in the returned results (they are only there to support |
| ordering), it sometimes looks like non-distinct results are being returned. |
|
|
| Similarly, if you use a :meth:`values()` query to restrict the columns |
| selected, the columns used in any :meth:`order_by()` (or default model |
| ordering) will still be involved and may affect uniqueness of the results. |
|
|
| The moral here is that if you are using ``distinct()`` be careful about |
| ordering by related models. Similarly, when using ``distinct()`` and |
| :meth:`values()` together, be careful when ordering by fields not in the |
| :meth:`values()` call. |
|
|
| On PostgreSQL only, you can pass positional arguments (``*fields``) in order to |
| specify the names of fields to which the ``DISTINCT`` should apply. This |
| translates to a ``SELECT DISTINCT ON`` SQL query. Here's the difference. For a |
| normal ``distinct()`` call, the database compares *each* field in each row when |
| determining which rows are distinct. For a ``distinct()`` call with specified |
| field names, the database will only compare the specified field names. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| When you specify field names, you *must* provide an ``order_by()`` in the |
| ``QuerySet``, and the fields in ``order_by()`` must start with the fields in |
| ``distinct()``, in the same order. |
|
|
| For example, ``SELECT DISTINCT ON (a)`` gives you the first row for each |
| value in column ``a``. If you don't specify an order, you'll get some |
| arbitrary row. |
|
|
| Examples (those after the first will only work on PostgreSQL): |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Author.objects.distinct() |
| [...] |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.order_by("pub_date").distinct("pub_date") |
| [...] |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.order_by("blog").distinct("blog") |
| [...] |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.order_by("author", "pub_date").distinct("author", "pub_date") |
| [...] |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.order_by("blog__name", "mod_date").distinct("blog__name", "mod_date") |
| [...] |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.order_by("author", "pub_date").distinct("author") |
| [...] |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| Keep in mind that :meth:`order_by` uses any default related model ordering |
| that has been defined. You might have to explicitly order by the relation |
| ``_id`` or referenced field to make sure the ``DISTINCT ON`` expressions |
| match those at the beginning of the ``ORDER BY`` clause. For example, if |
| the ``Blog`` model defined an :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.ordering` by |
| ``name``:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("blog").distinct("blog") |
|
|
| ...wouldn't work because the query would be ordered by ``blog__name`` thus |
| mismatching the ``DISTINCT ON`` expression. You'd have to explicitly order |
| by the relation ``_id`` field (``blog_id`` in this case) or the referenced |
| one (``blog__pk``) to make sure both expressions match. |
|
|
| ``values()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: values(*fields, **expressions) |
|
|
| Returns a ``QuerySet`` that returns dictionaries, rather than model instances, |
| when used as an iterable. |
|
|
| Each of those dictionaries represents an object, with the keys corresponding to |
| the attribute names of model objects. |
|
|
| This example compares the dictionaries of ``values()`` with the normal model |
| objects: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # This list contains a Blog object. |
| >>> Blog.objects.filter(name__startswith="Beatles") |
| <QuerySet [<Blog: Beatles Blog>]> |
|
|
| # This list contains a dictionary. |
| >>> Blog.objects.filter(name__startswith="Beatles").values() |
| <QuerySet [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog', 'tagline': 'All the latest Beatles news.'}]> |
|
|
| The ``values()`` method takes optional positional arguments, ``*fields``, which |
| specify field names to which the ``SELECT`` should be limited. If you specify |
| the fields, each dictionary will contain only the field keys/values for the |
| fields you specify. If you don't specify the fields, each dictionary will |
| contain a key and value for every field in the database table. |
|
|
| Example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Blog.objects.values() |
| <QuerySet [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog', 'tagline': 'All the latest Beatles news.'}]> |
| >>> Blog.objects.values("id", "name") |
| <QuerySet [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog'}]> |
|
|
| The ``values()`` method also takes optional keyword arguments, |
| ``**expressions``, which are passed through to :meth:`annotate`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower |
| >>> Blog.objects.values(lower_name=Lower("name")) |
| <QuerySet [{'lower_name': 'beatles blog'}]> |
|
|
| You can use built-in and :doc:`custom lookups </howto/custom-lookups>` in |
| ordering. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import CharField |
| >>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower |
| >>> CharField.register_lookup(Lower) |
| >>> Blog.objects.values("name__lower") |
| <QuerySet [{'name__lower': 'beatles blog'}]> |
|
|
| An aggregate within a ``values()`` clause is applied before other arguments |
| within the same ``values()`` clause. If you need to group by another value, |
| add it to an earlier ``values()`` clause instead. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Count |
| >>> Blog.objects.values("entry__authors", entries=Count("entry")) |
| <QuerySet [{'entry__authors': 1, 'entries': 20}, {'entry__authors': 1, 'entries': 13}]> |
| >>> Blog.objects.values("entry__authors").annotate(entries=Count("entry")) |
| <QuerySet [{'entry__authors': 1, 'entries': 33}]> |
|
|
| A few subtleties that are worth mentioning: |
|
|
| * If you have a field called ``foo`` that is a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey`, the default ``values()`` call |
| will return a dictionary key called ``foo_id``, since this is the name |
| of the hidden model attribute that stores the actual value (the ``foo`` |
| attribute refers to the related model). When you are calling |
| ``values()`` and passing in field names, you can pass in either ``foo`` |
| or ``foo_id`` and you will get back the same thing (the dictionary key |
| will match the field name you passed in). |
|
|
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values() |
| <QuerySet [{'blog_id': 1, 'headline': 'First Entry', ...}, ...]> |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values("blog") |
| <QuerySet [{'blog': 1}, ...]> |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values("blog_id") |
| <QuerySet [{'blog_id': 1}, ...]> |
|
|
| * When using ``values()`` together with :meth:`distinct()`, be aware that |
| ordering can affect the results. See the note in :meth:`distinct` for |
| details. |
|
|
| * If you use a ``values()`` clause after an :meth:`extra()` call, |
| any fields defined by a ``select`` argument in the :meth:`extra()` must |
| be explicitly included in the ``values()`` call. Any :meth:`extra()` call |
| made after a ``values()`` call will have its extra selected fields |
| ignored. |
|
|
| * Calling :meth:`only()` and :meth:`defer()` after ``values()`` doesn't make |
| sense, so doing so will raise a ``TypeError``. |
|
|
| * Combining transforms and aggregates requires the use of two :meth:`annotate` |
| calls, either explicitly or as keyword arguments to :meth:`values`. As above, |
| if the transform has been registered on the relevant field type the first |
| :meth:`annotate` can be omitted, thus the following examples are equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import CharField, Count |
| >>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower |
| >>> CharField.register_lookup(Lower) |
| >>> Blog.objects.values("entry__authors__name__lower").annotate(entries=Count("entry")) |
| <QuerySet [{'entry__authors__name__lower': 'test author', 'entries': 33}]> |
| >>> Blog.objects.values(entry__authors__name__lower=Lower("entry__authors__name")).annotate( |
| ... entries=Count("entry") |
| ... ) |
| <QuerySet [{'entry__authors__name__lower': 'test author', 'entries': 33}]> |
| >>> Blog.objects.annotate(entry__authors__name__lower=Lower("entry__authors__name")).values( |
| ... "entry__authors__name__lower" |
| ... ).annotate(entries=Count("entry")) |
| <QuerySet [{'entry__authors__name__lower': 'test author', 'entries': 33}]> |
|
|
| It is useful when you know you're only going to need values from a small number |
| of the available fields and you won't need the functionality of a model |
| instance object. It's more efficient to select only the fields you need to use. |
|
|
| Finally, note that you can call ``filter()``, ``order_by()``, etc. after the |
| ``values()`` call, that means that these two calls are identical:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.values().order_by("id") |
| Blog.objects.order_by("id").values() |
|
|
| The people who made Django prefer to put all the SQL-affecting methods first, |
| followed (optionally) by any output-affecting methods (such as ``values()``), |
| but it doesn't really matter. This is your chance to really flaunt your |
| individualism. |
|
|
| You can also refer to fields on related models with reverse relations through |
| ``OneToOneField``, ``ForeignKey`` and ``ManyToManyField`` attributes: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Blog.objects.values("name", "entry__headline") |
| <QuerySet [{'name': 'My blog', 'entry__headline': 'An entry'}, |
| {'name': 'My blog', 'entry__headline': 'Another entry'}, ...]> |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| Because :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` attributes and reverse |
| relations can have multiple related rows, including these can have a |
| multiplier effect on the size of your result set. This will be especially |
| pronounced if you include multiple such fields in your ``values()`` query, |
| in which case all possible combinations will be returned. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Special values for ``JSONField`` on SQLite |
|
|
| Due to the way the ``JSON_EXTRACT`` and ``JSON_TYPE`` SQL functions are |
| implemented on SQLite, and lack of the ``BOOLEAN`` data type, |
| ``values()`` will return ``True``, ``False``, and ``None`` instead of |
| ``"true"``, ``"false"``, and ``"null"`` strings for |
| :class:`~django.db.models.JSONField` key transforms. |
|
|
| ``values_list()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: values_list(*fields, flat=False, named=False) |
|
|
| This is similar to ``values()`` except that instead of returning dictionaries, |
| it returns tuples when iterated over. Each tuple contains the value from the |
| respective field or expression passed into the ``values_list()`` call — so the |
| first item is the first field, etc. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("id", "headline") |
| <QuerySet [(1, 'First entry'), ...]> |
| >>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower |
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("id", Lower("headline")) |
| <QuerySet [(1, 'first entry'), ...]> |
|
|
| If you only pass in a single field, you can also pass in the ``flat`` |
| parameter. If ``True``, this will mean the returned results are single values, |
| rather than 1-tuples. An example should make the difference clearer: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("id").order_by("id") |
| <QuerySet[(1,), (2,), (3,), ...]> |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("id", flat=True).order_by("id") |
| <QuerySet [1, 2, 3, ...]> |
|
|
| It is an error to pass in ``flat`` when there is more than one field. |
|
|
| You can pass ``named=True`` to get results as a |
| :func:`~python:collections.namedtuple`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("id", "headline", named=True) |
| <QuerySet [Row(id=1, headline='First entry'), ...]> |
|
|
| Using a named tuple may make use of the results more readable, at the expense |
| of a small performance penalty for transforming the results into a named tuple. |
|
|
| If you don't pass any values to ``values_list()``, it will return all the |
| fields in the model, in the order they were declared. |
|
|
| A common need is to get a specific field value of a certain model instance. To |
| achieve that, use ``values_list()`` followed by a ``get()`` call: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("headline", flat=True).get(pk=1) |
| 'First entry' |
|
|
| ``values()`` and ``values_list()`` are both intended as optimizations for a |
| specific use case: retrieving a subset of data without the overhead of creating |
| a model instance. This metaphor falls apart when dealing with many-to-many and |
| other multivalued relations (such as the one-to-many relation of a reverse |
| foreign key) because the "one row, one object" assumption doesn't hold. |
|
|
| For example, notice the behavior when querying across a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField`: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Author.objects.values_list("name", "entry__headline") |
| <QuerySet [('Noam Chomsky', 'Impressions of Gaza'), |
| ('George Orwell', 'Why Socialists Do Not Believe in Fun'), |
| ('George Orwell', 'In Defence of English Cooking'), |
| ('Don Quixote', None)]> |
|
|
| Authors with multiple entries appear multiple times and authors without any |
| entries have ``None`` for the entry headline. |
|
|
| Similarly, when querying a reverse foreign key, ``None`` appears for entries |
| not having any author: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.values_list("authors") |
| <QuerySet [('Noam Chomsky',), ('George Orwell',), (None,)]> |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Special values for ``JSONField`` on SQLite |
|
|
| Due to the way the ``JSON_EXTRACT`` and ``JSON_TYPE`` SQL functions are |
| implemented on SQLite, and lack of the ``BOOLEAN`` data type, |
| ``values_list()`` will return ``True``, ``False``, and ``None`` instead of |
| ``"true"``, ``"false"``, and ``"null"`` strings for |
| :class:`~django.db.models.JSONField` key transforms. |
|
|
| ``dates()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: dates(field, kind, order='ASC') |
|
|
| Returns a ``QuerySet`` that evaluates to a list of :class:`datetime.date` |
| objects representing all available dates of a particular kind within the |
| contents of the ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| ``field`` should be the name of a ``DateField`` of your model. |
| ``kind`` should be either ``"year"``, ``"month"``, ``"week"``, or ``"day"``. |
| Each :class:`datetime.date` object in the result list is "truncated" to the |
| given ``type``. |
|
|
| * ``"year"`` returns a list of all distinct year values for the field. |
| * ``"month"`` returns a list of all distinct year/month values for the |
| field. |
| * ``"week"`` returns a list of all distinct year/week values for the field. All |
| dates will be a Monday. |
| * ``"day"`` returns a list of all distinct year/month/day values for the |
| field. |
|
|
| ``order``, which defaults to ``'ASC'``, should be either ``'ASC'`` or |
| ``'DESC'``. This specifies how to order the results. |
|
|
| Examples: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.dates("pub_date", "year") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 1, 1)] |
| >>> Entry.objects.dates("pub_date", "month") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 2, 1), datetime.date(2005, 3, 1)] |
| >>> Entry.objects.dates("pub_date", "week") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 2, 14), datetime.date(2005, 3, 14)] |
| >>> Entry.objects.dates("pub_date", "day") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 2, 20), datetime.date(2005, 3, 20)] |
| >>> Entry.objects.dates("pub_date", "day", order="DESC") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 3, 20), datetime.date(2005, 2, 20)] |
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(headline__contains="Lennon").dates("pub_date", "day") |
| [datetime.date(2005, 3, 20)] |
|
|
| ``datetimes()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: datetimes(field_name, kind, order='ASC', tzinfo=None) |
|
|
| Returns a ``QuerySet`` that evaluates to a list of :class:`datetime.datetime` |
| objects representing all available dates of a particular kind within the |
| contents of the ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| ``field_name`` should be the name of a ``DateTimeField`` of your model. |
|
|
| ``kind`` should be either ``"year"``, ``"month"``, ``"week"``, ``"day"``, |
| ``"hour"``, ``"minute"``, or ``"second"``. Each :class:`datetime.datetime` |
| object in the result list is "truncated" to the given ``type``. |
|
|
| ``order``, which defaults to ``'ASC'``, should be either ``'ASC'`` or |
| ``'DESC'``. This specifies how to order the results. |
|
|
| ``tzinfo`` defines the time zone to which datetimes are converted prior to |
| truncation. Indeed, a given datetime has different representations depending |
| on the time zone in use. This parameter must be a :class:`datetime.tzinfo` |
| object. If it's ``None``, Django uses the :ref:`current time zone |
| <default-current-time-zone>`. It has no effect when :setting:`USE_TZ` is |
| ``False``. |
|
|
| .. _database-time-zone-definitions: |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| This function performs time zone conversions directly in the database. |
| As a consequence, your database must be able to interpret the value of |
| ``tzinfo.tzname(None)``. This translates into the following requirements: |
|
|
| - SQLite: no requirements. Conversions are performed in Python. |
| - PostgreSQL: no requirements (see `Time Zones`_). |
| - Oracle: no requirements (see `Choosing a Time Zone File`_). |
| - MySQL: load the time zone tables with `mysql_tzinfo_to_sql`_. |
|
|
| .. _Time Zones: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-datetime.html#DATATYPE-TIMEZONES |
| .. _Choosing a Time Zone File: https://docs.oracle.com/en/database/oracle/ |
| oracle-database/18/nlspg/datetime-data-types-and-time-zone-support.html |
| #GUID-805AB986-DE12-4FEA-AF56-5AABCD2132DF |
| .. _mysql_tzinfo_to_sql: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/en/mysql-tzinfo-to-sql.html |
|
|
| ``none()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: none() |
|
|
| Calling ``none()`` will create a queryset that never returns any objects and no |
| query will be executed when accessing the results. A ``qs.none()`` queryset |
| is an instance of ``EmptyQuerySet``. |
|
|
| Examples: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.none() |
| <QuerySet []> |
| >>> from django.db.models.query import EmptyQuerySet |
| >>> isinstance(Entry.objects.none(), EmptyQuerySet) |
| True |
|
|
| ``all()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: all() |
|
|
| Returns a *copy* of the current ``QuerySet`` (or ``QuerySet`` subclass). This |
| can be useful in situations where you might want to pass in either a model |
| manager or a ``QuerySet`` and do further filtering on the result. After calling |
| ``all()`` on either object, you'll definitely have a ``QuerySet`` to work with. |
|
|
| When a ``QuerySet`` is :ref:`evaluated <when-querysets-are-evaluated>`, it |
| typically caches its results. If the data in the database might have changed |
| since a ``QuerySet`` was evaluated, you can get updated results for the same |
| query by calling ``all()`` on a previously evaluated ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| ``union()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: union(*other_qs, all=False) |
|
|
| Uses SQL's ``UNION`` operator to combine the results of two or more |
| ``QuerySet``\s. For example: |
|
|
| >>> qs1.union(qs2, qs3) |
|
|
| The ``UNION`` operator selects only distinct values by default. To allow |
| duplicate values, use the ``all=True`` argument. |
|
|
| ``union()``, ``intersection()``, and ``difference()`` return model instances |
| of the type of the first ``QuerySet`` even if the arguments are ``QuerySet``\s |
| of other models. Passing different models works as long as the ``SELECT`` list |
| is the same in all ``QuerySet``\s (at least the types, the names don't matter |
| as long as the types are in the same order). In such cases, you must use the |
| column names from the first ``QuerySet`` in ``QuerySet`` methods applied to the |
| resulting ``QuerySet``. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> qs1 = Author.objects.values_list("name") |
| >>> qs2 = Entry.objects.values_list("headline") |
| >>> qs1.union(qs2).order_by("name") |
|
|
| In addition, only ``LIMIT``, ``OFFSET``, ``COUNT(*)``, ``ORDER BY``, and |
| specifying columns (i.e. slicing, :meth:`count`, :meth:`exists`, |
| :meth:`order_by`, and :meth:`values()`/:meth:`values_list()`) are allowed |
| on the resulting ``QuerySet``. Further, databases place restrictions on |
| what operations are allowed in the combined queries. For example, most |
| databases don't allow ``LIMIT`` or ``OFFSET`` in the combined queries. |
|
|
| ``intersection()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: intersection(*other_qs) |
|
|
| Uses SQL's ``INTERSECT`` operator to return the shared elements of two or more |
| ``QuerySet``\s. For example: |
|
|
| >>> qs1.intersection(qs2, qs3) |
|
|
| See :meth:`union` for some restrictions. |
|
|
| ``difference()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: difference(*other_qs) |
|
|
| Uses SQL's ``EXCEPT`` operator to keep only elements present in the |
| ``QuerySet`` but not in some other ``QuerySet``\s. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> qs1.difference(qs2, qs3) |
|
|
| See :meth:`union` for some restrictions. |
|
|
| ``select_related()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: select_related(*fields) |
|
|
| Returns a ``QuerySet`` that will "follow" foreign-key relationships, selecting |
| additional related-object data when it executes its query. This is a |
| performance booster which results in a single more complex query but means |
| later use of foreign-key relationships won't require database queries. |
|
|
| The following examples illustrate the difference between plain lookups and |
| ``select_related()`` lookups. Here's standard lookup:: |
|
|
| # Hits the database. |
| e = Entry.objects.get(id=5) |
|
|
| # Hits the database again to get the related Blog object. |
| b = e.blog |
|
|
| And here's ``select_related`` lookup:: |
|
|
| # Hits the database. |
| e = Entry.objects.select_related("blog").get(id=5) |
|
|
| # Doesn't hit the database, because e.blog has been prepopulated |
| # in the previous query. |
| b = e.blog |
|
|
| You can use ``select_related()`` with any queryset of objects:: |
|
|
| from django.utils import timezone |
|
|
| # Find all the blogs with entries scheduled to be published in the future. |
| blogs = set() |
|
|
| for e in Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()).select_related("blog"): |
| # Without select_related(), this would make a database query for each |
| # loop iteration in order to fetch the related blog for each entry. |
| blogs.add(e.blog) |
|
|
| The order of ``filter()`` and ``select_related()`` chaining isn't important. |
| These querysets are equivalent:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()).select_related("blog") |
| Entry.objects.select_related("blog").filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()) |
|
|
| You can follow foreign keys in a similar way to querying them. If you have the |
| following models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class City(models.Model): |
| # ... |
| pass |
|
|
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| # ... |
| hometown = models.ForeignKey( |
| City, |
| on_delete=models.SET_NULL, |
| blank=True, |
| null=True, |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| # ... |
| author = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
|
|
| ... then a call to ``Book.objects.select_related('author__hometown').get(id=4)`` |
| will cache the related ``Person`` *and* the related ``City``:: |
|
|
| # Hits the database with joins to the author and hometown tables. |
| b = Book.objects.select_related("author__hometown").get(id=4) |
| p = b.author # Doesn't hit the database. |
| c = p.hometown # Doesn't hit the database. |
|
|
| # Without select_related()... |
| b = Book.objects.get(id=4) # Hits the database. |
| p = b.author # Hits the database. |
| c = p.hometown # Hits the database. |
|
|
| You can refer to any :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey` or |
| :class:`~django.db.models.OneToOneField` relation in the list of fields |
| passed to ``select_related()``. |
|
|
| You can also refer to the reverse direction of a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.OneToOneField` in the list of fields passed to |
| ``select_related`` — that is, you can traverse a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.OneToOneField` back to the object on which the field |
| is defined. Instead of specifying the field name, use the :attr:`related_name |
| <django.db.models.ForeignKey.related_name>` for the field on the related object. |
|
|
| There may be some situations where you wish to call ``select_related()`` with a |
| lot of related objects, or where you don't know all of the relations. In these |
| cases it is possible to call ``select_related()`` with no arguments. This will |
| follow all non-null foreign keys it can find - nullable foreign keys must be |
| specified. This is not recommended in most cases as it is likely to make the |
| underlying query more complex, and return more data, than is actually needed. |
|
|
| If you need to clear the list of related fields added by past calls of |
| ``select_related`` on a ``QuerySet``, you can pass ``None`` as a parameter: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> without_relations = queryset.select_related(None) |
|
|
| Chaining ``select_related`` calls works in a similar way to other methods - |
| that is that ``select_related('foo', 'bar')`` is equivalent to |
| ``select_related('foo').select_related('bar')``. |
|
|
| ``prefetch_related()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: prefetch_related(*lookups) |
|
|
| Returns a ``QuerySet`` that will automatically retrieve, in a single batch, |
| related objects for each of the specified lookups. |
|
|
| This has a similar purpose to ``select_related``, in that both are designed to |
| stop the deluge of database queries that is caused by accessing related objects, |
| but the strategy is quite different. |
|
|
| ``select_related`` works by creating an SQL join and including the fields of the |
| related object in the ``SELECT`` statement. For this reason, ``select_related`` |
| gets the related objects in the same database query. However, to avoid the much |
| larger result set that would result from joining across a 'many' relationship, |
| ``select_related`` is limited to single-valued relationships - foreign key and |
| one-to-one. |
|
|
| ``prefetch_related``, on the other hand, does a separate lookup for each |
| relationship, and does the 'joining' in Python. This allows it to prefetch |
| many-to-many and many-to-one objects, which cannot be done using |
| ``select_related``, in addition to the foreign key and one-to-one relationships |
| that are supported by ``select_related``. It also supports prefetching of |
| :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.fields.GenericRelation` and |
| :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.fields.GenericForeignKey`, however, it |
| must be restricted to a homogeneous set of results. For example, prefetching |
| objects referenced by a ``GenericForeignKey`` is only supported if the query |
| is restricted to one ``ContentType``. |
|
|
| For example, suppose you have these models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Topping(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=30) |
|
|
|
|
| class Pizza(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=50) |
| toppings = models.ManyToManyField(Topping) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return "%s (%s)" % ( |
| self.name, |
| ", ".join(topping.name for topping in self.toppings.all()), |
| ) |
|
|
| and run: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Pizza.objects.all() |
| ["Hawaiian (ham, pineapple)", "Seafood (prawns, smoked salmon)"... |
|
|
| The problem with this is that every time ``Pizza.__str__()`` asks for |
| ``self.toppings.all()`` it has to query the database, so |
| ``Pizza.objects.all()`` will run a query on the Toppings table for **every** |
| item in the Pizza ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| We can reduce to just two queries using ``prefetch_related``: |
|
|
| >>> Pizza.objects.prefetch_related('toppings') |
|
|
| This implies a ``self.toppings.all()`` for each ``Pizza``; now each time |
| ``self.toppings.all()`` is called, instead of having to go to the database for |
| the items, it will find them in a prefetched ``QuerySet`` cache that was |
| populated in a single query. |
|
|
| That is, all the relevant toppings will have been fetched in a single query, |
| and used to make ``QuerySets`` that have a pre-filled cache of the relevant |
| results; these ``QuerySets`` are then used in the ``self.toppings.all()`` calls. |
|
|
| The additional queries in ``prefetch_related()`` are executed after the |
| ``QuerySet`` has begun to be evaluated and the primary query has been executed. |
|
|
| If you have an iterable of model instances, you can prefetch related attributes |
| on those instances using the :func:`~django.db.models.prefetch_related_objects` |
| function. |
|
|
| Note that the result cache of the primary ``QuerySet`` and all specified related |
| objects will then be fully loaded into memory. This changes the typical |
| behavior of ``QuerySets``, which normally try to avoid loading all objects into |
| memory before they are needed, even after a query has been executed in the |
| database. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Remember that, as always with ``QuerySets``, any subsequent chained methods |
| which imply a different database query will ignore previously cached |
| results, and retrieve data using a fresh database query. So, if you write |
| the following: |
|
|
| >>> pizzas = Pizza.objects.prefetch_related('toppings') |
| >>> [list(pizza.toppings.filter(spicy=True)) for pizza in pizzas] |
|
|
| ...then the fact that ``pizza.toppings.all()`` has been prefetched will not |
| help you. The ``prefetch_related('toppings')`` implied |
| ``pizza.toppings.all()``, but ``pizza.toppings.filter()`` is a new and |
| different query. The prefetched cache can't help here; in fact it hurts |
| performance, since you have done a database query that you haven't used. So |
| use this feature with caution! |
|
|
| Also, if you call the database-altering methods |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.add`, |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.remove`, |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.clear` or |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.set`, on |
| :class:`related managers<django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager>`, |
| any prefetched cache for the relation will be cleared. |
|
|
| You can also use the normal join syntax to do related fields of related |
| fields. Suppose we have an additional model to the example above:: |
|
|
| class Restaurant(models.Model): |
| pizzas = models.ManyToManyField(Pizza, related_name="restaurants") |
| best_pizza = models.ForeignKey( |
| Pizza, related_name="championed_by", on_delete=models.CASCADE |
| ) |
|
|
| The following are all legal: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related("pizzas__toppings") |
|
|
| This will prefetch all pizzas belonging to restaurants, and all toppings |
| belonging to those pizzas. This will result in a total of 3 database queries - |
| one for the restaurants, one for the pizzas, and one for the toppings. |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related("best_pizza__toppings") |
|
|
| This will fetch the best pizza and all the toppings for the best pizza for each |
| restaurant. This will be done in 3 database queries - one for the restaurants, |
| one for the 'best pizzas', and one for the toppings. |
|
|
| The ``best_pizza`` relationship could also be fetched using ``select_related`` |
| to reduce the query count to 2: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Restaurant.objects.select_related("best_pizza").prefetch_related("best_pizza__toppings") |
|
|
| Since the prefetch is executed after the main query (which includes the joins |
| needed by ``select_related``), it is able to detect that the ``best_pizza`` |
| objects have already been fetched, and it will skip fetching them again. |
|
|
| Chaining ``prefetch_related`` calls will accumulate the lookups that are |
| prefetched. To clear any ``prefetch_related`` behavior, pass ``None`` as a |
| parameter: |
|
|
| >>> non_prefetched = qs.prefetch_related(None) |
|
|
| One difference to note when using ``prefetch_related`` is that objects created |
| by a query can be shared between the different objects that they are related to |
| i.e. a single Python model instance can appear at more than one point in the |
| tree of objects that are returned. This will normally happen with foreign key |
| relationships. Typically this behavior will not be a problem, and will in fact |
| save both memory and CPU time. |
|
|
| While ``prefetch_related`` supports prefetching ``GenericForeignKey`` |
| relationships, the number of queries will depend on the data. Since a |
| ``GenericForeignKey`` can reference data in multiple tables, one query per table |
| referenced is needed, rather than one query for all the items. There could be |
| additional queries on the ``ContentType`` table if the relevant rows have not |
| already been fetched. |
|
|
| ``prefetch_related`` in most cases will be implemented using an SQL query that |
| uses the 'IN' operator. This means that for a large ``QuerySet`` a large 'IN' clause |
| could be generated, which, depending on the database, might have performance |
| problems of its own when it comes to parsing or executing the SQL query. Always |
| profile for your use case! |
|
|
| If you use ``iterator()`` to run the query, ``prefetch_related()`` calls will |
| only be observed if a value for ``chunk_size`` is provided. |
|
|
| You can use the :class:`~django.db.models.Prefetch` object to further control |
| the prefetch operation. |
|
|
| In its simplest form ``Prefetch`` is equivalent to the traditional string based |
| lookups: |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Prefetch |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related(Prefetch('pizzas__toppings')) |
|
|
| You can provide a custom queryset with the optional ``queryset`` argument. |
| This can be used to change the default ordering of the queryset: |
|
|
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas__toppings', queryset=Toppings.objects.order_by('name'))) |
|
|
| Or to call :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_related()` when |
| applicable to reduce the number of queries even further: |
|
|
| >>> Pizza.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('restaurants', queryset=Restaurant.objects.select_related('best_pizza'))) |
|
|
| You can also assign the prefetched result to a custom attribute with the optional |
| ``to_attr`` argument. The result will be stored directly in a list. |
|
|
| This allows prefetching the same relation multiple times with a different |
| ``QuerySet``; for instance: |
|
|
| >>> vegetarian_pizzas = Pizza.objects.filter(vegetarian=True) |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas', to_attr='menu'), |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas', queryset=vegetarian_pizzas, to_attr='vegetarian_menu')) |
|
|
| Lookups created with custom ``to_attr`` can still be traversed as usual by other |
| lookups: |
|
|
| >>> vegetarian_pizzas = Pizza.objects.filter(vegetarian=True) |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas', queryset=vegetarian_pizzas, to_attr='vegetarian_menu'), |
| ... 'vegetarian_menu__toppings') |
|
|
| Using ``to_attr`` is recommended when filtering down the prefetch result as it is |
| less ambiguous than storing a filtered result in the related manager's cache: |
|
|
| >>> queryset = Pizza.objects.filter(vegetarian=True) |
| >>> |
| >>> # Recommended: |
| >>> restaurants = Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas', queryset=queryset, to_attr='vegetarian_pizzas')) |
| >>> vegetarian_pizzas = restaurants[0].vegetarian_pizzas |
| >>> |
| >>> # Not recommended: |
| >>> restaurants = Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('pizzas', queryset=queryset)) |
| >>> vegetarian_pizzas = restaurants[0].pizzas.all() |
|
|
| Custom prefetching also works with single related relations like |
| forward ``ForeignKey`` or ``OneToOneField``. Generally you'll want to use |
| :meth:`select_related()` for these relations, but there are a number of cases |
| where prefetching with a custom ``QuerySet`` is useful: |
|
|
| * You want to use a ``QuerySet`` that performs further prefetching |
| on related models. |
|
|
| * You want to prefetch only a subset of the related objects. |
|
|
| * You want to use performance optimization techniques like |
| :meth:`deferred fields <defer()>`: |
|
|
| >>> queryset = Pizza.objects.only('name') |
| >>> |
| >>> restaurants = Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch('best_pizza', queryset=queryset)) |
|
|
| When using multiple databases, ``Prefetch`` will respect your choice of |
| database. If the inner query does not specify a database, it will use the |
| database selected by the outer query. All of the following are valid: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> # Both inner and outer queries will use the 'replica' database |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related("pizzas__toppings").using("replica") |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch("pizzas__toppings"), |
| ... ).using("replica") |
| >>> |
| >>> # Inner will use the 'replica' database; outer will use 'default' database |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch("pizzas__toppings", queryset=Toppings.objects.using("replica")), |
| ... ) |
| >>> |
| >>> # Inner will use 'replica' database; outer will use 'cold-storage' database |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.prefetch_related( |
| ... Prefetch("pizzas__toppings", queryset=Toppings.objects.using("replica")), |
| ... ).using("cold-storage") |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| The ordering of lookups matters. |
|
|
| Take the following examples: |
|
|
| >>> prefetch_related('pizzas__toppings', 'pizzas') |
|
|
| This works even though it's unordered because ``'pizzas__toppings'`` |
| already contains all the needed information, therefore the second argument |
| ``'pizzas'`` is actually redundant. |
|
|
| >>> prefetch_related('pizzas__toppings', Prefetch('pizzas', queryset=Pizza.objects.all())) |
|
|
| This will raise a ``ValueError`` because of the attempt to redefine the |
| queryset of a previously seen lookup. Note that an implicit queryset was |
| created to traverse ``'pizzas'`` as part of the ``'pizzas__toppings'`` |
| lookup. |
|
|
| >>> prefetch_related('pizza_list__toppings', Prefetch('pizzas', to_attr='pizza_list')) |
|
|
| This will trigger an ``AttributeError`` because ``'pizza_list'`` doesn't exist yet |
| when ``'pizza_list__toppings'`` is being processed. |
|
|
| This consideration is not limited to the use of ``Prefetch`` objects. Some |
| advanced techniques may require that the lookups be performed in a |
| specific order to avoid creating extra queries; therefore it's recommended |
| to always carefully order ``prefetch_related`` arguments. |
|
|
| ``extra()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: extra(select=None, where=None, params=None, tables=None, order_by=None, select_params=None) |
|
|
| Sometimes, the Django query syntax by itself can't easily express a complex |
| ``WHERE`` clause. For these edge cases, Django provides the ``extra()`` |
| ``QuerySet`` modifier — a hook for injecting specific clauses into the SQL |
| generated by a ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Use this method as a last resort |
|
|
| This is an old API that we aim to deprecate at some point in the future. |
| Use it only if you cannot express your query using other queryset methods. |
| If you do need to use it, please `file a ticket |
| <https://code.djangoproject.com/newticket>`_ using the `QuerySet.extra |
| keyword <https://code.djangoproject.com/query?status=assigned&status=new&keywords=~QuerySet.extra>`_ |
| with your use case (please check the list of existing tickets first) so |
| that we can enhance the QuerySet API to allow removing ``extra()``. We are |
| no longer improving or fixing bugs for this method. |
|
|
| For example, this use of ``extra()``: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> qs.extra( |
| ... select={"val": "select col from sometable where othercol = %s"}, |
| ... select_params=(someparam,), |
| ... ) |
|
|
| is equivalent to: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> qs.annotate(val=RawSQL("select col from sometable where othercol = %s", (someparam,))) |
|
|
| The main benefit of using :class:`~django.db.models.expressions.RawSQL` is |
| that you can set ``output_field`` if needed. The main downside is that if |
| you refer to some table alias of the queryset in the raw SQL, then it is |
| possible that Django might change that alias (for example, when the |
| queryset is used as a subquery in yet another query). |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| You should be very careful whenever you use ``extra()``. Every time you use |
| it, you should escape any parameters that the user can control by using |
| ``params`` in order to protect against SQL injection attacks. |
|
|
| You also must not quote placeholders in the SQL string. This example is |
| vulnerable to SQL injection because of the quotes around ``%s``: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT col FROM sometable WHERE othercol = '%s' # unsafe! |
|
|
| You can read more about how Django's :ref:`SQL injection protection |
| <sql-injection-protection>` works. |
|
|
| By definition, these extra lookups may not be portable to different database |
| engines (because you're explicitly writing SQL code) and violate the DRY |
| principle, so you should avoid them if possible. |
|
|
| Specify one or more of ``params``, ``select``, ``where`` or ``tables``. None |
| of the arguments is required, but you should use at least one of them. |
|
|
| * ``select`` |
|
|
| The ``select`` argument lets you put extra fields in the ``SELECT`` |
| clause. It should be a dictionary mapping attribute names to SQL |
| clauses to use to calculate that attribute. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.extra(select={"is_recent": "pub_date > '2006-01-01'"}) |
|
|
| As a result, each ``Entry`` object will have an extra attribute, |
| ``is_recent``, a boolean representing whether the entry's ``pub_date`` |
| is greater than Jan. 1, 2006. |
|
|
| Django inserts the given SQL snippet directly into the ``SELECT`` |
| statement, so the resulting SQL of the above example would be something like: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT blog_entry.*, (pub_date > '2006-01-01') AS is_recent |
| FROM blog_entry; |
|
|
|
|
| The next example is more advanced; it does a subquery to give each |
| resulting ``Blog`` object an ``entry_count`` attribute, an integer count |
| of associated ``Entry`` objects:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.extra( |
| select={ |
| "entry_count": "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM blog_entry WHERE blog_entry.blog_id = blog_blog.id" |
| }, |
| ) |
|
|
| In this particular case, we're exploiting the fact that the query will |
| already contain the ``blog_blog`` table in its ``FROM`` clause. |
|
|
| The resulting SQL of the above example would be: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT blog_blog.*, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM blog_entry WHERE blog_entry.blog_id = blog_blog.id) AS entry_count |
| FROM blog_blog; |
|
|
| Note that the parentheses required by most database engines around |
| subqueries are not required in Django's ``select`` clauses. Also note |
| that some database backends, such as some MySQL versions, don't support |
| subqueries. |
|
|
| In some rare cases, you might wish to pass parameters to the SQL |
| fragments in ``extra(select=...)``. For this purpose, use the |
| ``select_params`` parameter. |
|
|
| This will work, for example:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.extra( |
| select={"a": "%s", "b": "%s"}, |
| select_params=("one", "two"), |
| ) |
|
|
| If you need to use a literal ``%s`` inside your select string, use |
| the sequence ``%%s``. |
|
|
| * ``where`` / ``tables`` |
|
|
| You can define explicit SQL ``WHERE`` clauses — perhaps to perform |
| non-explicit joins — by using ``where``. You can manually add tables to |
| the SQL ``FROM`` clause by using ``tables``. |
|
|
| ``where`` and ``tables`` both take a list of strings. All ``where`` |
| parameters are "AND"ed to any other search criteria. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.extra(where=["foo='a' OR bar = 'a'", "baz = 'a'"]) |
|
|
| ...translates (roughly) into the following SQL: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT * FROM blog_entry WHERE (foo='a' OR bar='a') AND (baz='a') |
|
|
| Be careful when using the ``tables`` parameter if you're specifying |
| tables that are already used in the query. When you add extra tables |
| via the ``tables`` parameter, Django assumes you want that table |
| included an extra time, if it is already included. That creates a |
| problem, since the table name will then be given an alias. If a table |
| appears multiple times in an SQL statement, the second and subsequent |
| occurrences must use aliases so the database can tell them apart. If |
| you're referring to the extra table you added in the extra ``where`` |
| parameter this is going to cause errors. |
|
|
| Normally you'll only be adding extra tables that don't already appear |
| in the query. However, if the case outlined above does occur, there are |
| a few solutions. First, see if you can get by without including the |
| extra table and use the one already in the query. If that isn't |
| possible, put your ``extra()`` call at the front of the queryset |
| construction so that your table is the first use of that table. |
| Finally, if all else fails, look at the query produced and rewrite your |
| ``where`` addition to use the alias given to your extra table. The |
| alias will be the same each time you construct the queryset in the same |
| way, so you can rely upon the alias name to not change. |
|
|
| * ``order_by`` |
|
|
| If you need to order the resulting queryset using some of the new |
| fields or tables you have included via ``extra()`` use the ``order_by`` |
| parameter to ``extra()`` and pass in a sequence of strings. These |
| strings should either be model fields (as in the normal |
| :meth:`order_by()` method on querysets), of the form |
| ``table_name.column_name`` or an alias for a column that you specified |
| in the ``select`` parameter to ``extra()``. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| q = Entry.objects.extra(select={"is_recent": "pub_date > '2006-01-01'"}) |
| q = q.extra(order_by=["-is_recent"]) |
|
|
| This would sort all the items for which ``is_recent`` is true to the |
| front of the result set (``True`` sorts before ``False`` in a |
| descending ordering). |
|
|
| This shows, by the way, that you can make multiple calls to ``extra()`` |
| and it will behave as you expect (adding new constraints each time). |
|
|
| * ``params`` |
|
|
| The ``where`` parameter described above may use standard Python |
| database string placeholders — ``'%s'`` to indicate parameters the |
| database engine should automatically quote. The ``params`` argument is |
| a list of any extra parameters to be substituted. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.extra(where=["headline=%s"], params=["Lennon"]) |
|
|
| Always use ``params`` instead of embedding values directly into |
| ``where`` because ``params`` will ensure values are quoted correctly |
| according to your particular backend. For example, quotes will be |
| escaped correctly. |
|
|
| Bad:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.extra(where=["headline='Lennon'"]) |
|
|
| Good:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.extra(where=["headline=%s"], params=["Lennon"]) |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| If you are performing queries on MySQL, note that MySQL's silent type coercion |
| may cause unexpected results when mixing types. If you query on a string |
| type column, but with an integer value, MySQL will coerce the types of all values |
| in the table to an integer before performing the comparison. For example, if your |
| table contains the values ``'abc'``, ``'def'`` and you query for ``WHERE mycolumn=0``, |
| both rows will match. To prevent this, perform the correct typecasting |
| before using the value in a query. |
|
|
| ``defer()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: defer(*fields) |
|
|
| In some complex data-modeling situations, your models might contain a lot of |
| fields, some of which could contain a lot of data (for example, text fields), |
| or require expensive processing to convert them to Python objects. If you are |
| using the results of a queryset in some situation where you don't know |
| if you need those particular fields when you initially fetch the data, you can |
| tell Django not to retrieve them from the database. |
|
|
| This is done by passing the names of the fields to not load to ``defer()``:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.defer("headline", "body") |
|
|
| A queryset that has deferred fields will still return model instances. Each |
| deferred field will be retrieved from the database if you access that field |
| (one at a time, not all the deferred fields at once). |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Deferred fields will not lazy-load like this from asynchronous code. |
| Instead, you will get a ``SynchronousOnlyOperation`` exception. If you are |
| writing asynchronous code, you should not try to access any fields that you |
| ``defer()``. |
|
|
| You can make multiple calls to ``defer()``. Each call adds new fields to the |
| deferred set:: |
|
|
| # Defers both the body and headline fields. |
| Entry.objects.defer("body").filter(rating=5).defer("headline") |
|
|
| The order in which fields are added to the deferred set does not matter. |
| Calling ``defer()`` with a field name that has already been deferred is |
| harmless (the field will still be deferred). |
|
|
| You can defer loading of fields in related models (if the related models are |
| loading via :meth:`select_related()`) by using the standard double-underscore |
| notation to separate related fields:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.select_related().defer("entry__headline", "entry__body") |
|
|
| If you want to clear the set of deferred fields, pass ``None`` as a parameter |
| to ``defer()``:: |
|
|
| # Load all fields immediately. |
| my_queryset.defer(None) |
|
|
| Some fields in a model won't be deferred, even if you ask for them. You can |
| never defer the loading of the primary key. If you are using |
| :meth:`select_related()` to retrieve related models, you shouldn't defer the |
| loading of the field that connects from the primary model to the related |
| one, doing so will result in an error. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| The ``defer()`` method (and its cousin, :meth:`only()`, below) are only for |
| advanced use-cases. They provide an optimization for when you have analyzed |
| your queries closely and understand *exactly* what information you need and |
| have measured that the difference between returning the fields you need and |
| the full set of fields for the model will be significant. |
|
|
| Even if you think you are in the advanced use-case situation, **only use** |
| ``defer()`` **when you cannot, at queryset load time, determine if you will |
| need the extra fields or not**. If you are frequently loading and using a |
| particular subset of your data, the best choice you can make is to |
| normalize your models and put the non-loaded data into a separate model |
| (and database table). If the columns *must* stay in the one table for some |
| reason, create a model with ``Meta.managed = False`` (see the |
| :attr:`managed attribute <django.db.models.Options.managed>` documentation) |
| containing just the fields you normally need to load and use that where you |
| might otherwise call ``defer()``. This makes your code more explicit to the |
| reader, is slightly faster and consumes a little less memory in the Python |
| process. |
|
|
| For example, both of these models use the same underlying database table:: |
|
|
| class CommonlyUsedModel(models.Model): |
| f1 = models.CharField(max_length=10) |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| managed = False |
| db_table = "app_largetable" |
|
|
|
|
| class ManagedModel(models.Model): |
| f1 = models.CharField(max_length=10) |
| f2 = models.CharField(max_length=10) |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| db_table = "app_largetable" |
|
|
|
|
| # Two equivalent QuerySets: |
| CommonlyUsedModel.objects.all() |
| ManagedModel.objects.defer("f2") |
|
|
| If many fields need to be duplicated in the unmanaged model, it may be best |
| to create an abstract model with the shared fields and then have the |
| unmanaged and managed models inherit from the abstract model. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When calling :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()` for instances with |
| deferred fields, only the loaded fields will be saved. See |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()` for more details. |
|
|
| ``only()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: only(*fields) |
|
|
| The ``only()`` method is essentially the opposite of :meth:`defer`. Only the |
| fields passed into this method and that are *not* already specified as deferred |
| are loaded immediately when the queryset is evaluated. |
|
|
| If you have a model where almost all the fields need to be deferred, using |
| ``only()`` to specify the complementary set of fields can result in simpler |
| code. |
|
|
| Suppose you have a model with fields ``name``, ``age`` and ``biography``. The |
| following two querysets are the same, in terms of deferred fields:: |
|
|
| Person.objects.defer("age", "biography") |
| Person.objects.only("name") |
|
|
| Whenever you call ``only()`` it *replaces* the set of fields to load |
| immediately. The method's name is mnemonic: **only** those fields are loaded |
| immediately; the remainder are deferred. Thus, successive calls to ``only()`` |
| result in only the final fields being considered:: |
|
|
| # This will defer all fields except the headline. |
| Entry.objects.only("body", "rating").only("headline") |
|
|
| Since ``defer()`` acts incrementally (adding fields to the deferred list), you |
| can combine calls to ``only()`` and ``defer()`` and things will behave |
| logically:: |
|
|
| # Final result is that everything except "headline" is deferred. |
| Entry.objects.only("headline", "body").defer("body") |
|
|
| # Final result loads headline immediately. |
| Entry.objects.defer("body").only("headline", "body") |
|
|
| All of the cautions in the note for the :meth:`defer` documentation apply to |
| ``only()`` as well. Use it cautiously and only after exhausting your other |
| options. |
|
|
| Using :meth:`only` and omitting a field requested using :meth:`select_related` |
| is an error as well. |
|
|
| As with ``defer()``, you cannot access the non-loaded fields from asynchronous |
| code and expect them to load. Instead, you will get a |
| ``SynchronousOnlyOperation`` exception. Ensure that all fields you might access |
| are in your ``only()`` call. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When calling :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()` for instances with |
| deferred fields, only the loaded fields will be saved. See |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()` for more details. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When using :meth:`defer` after ``only()`` the fields in :meth:`defer` will |
| override ``only()`` for fields that are listed in both. |
|
|
| ``using()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: using(alias) |
|
|
| This method is for controlling which database the ``QuerySet`` will be |
| evaluated against if you are using more than one database. The only argument |
| this method takes is the alias of a database, as defined in |
| :setting:`DATABASES`. |
|
|
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| # queries the database with the 'default' alias. |
| >>> Entry.objects.all() |
|
|
| # queries the database with the 'backup' alias |
| >>> Entry.objects.using("backup") |
|
|
| ``select_for_update()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: select_for_update(nowait=False, skip_locked=False, of=(), no_key=False) |
|
|
| Returns a queryset that will lock rows until the end of the transaction, |
| generating a ``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` SQL statement on supported databases. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| from django.db import transaction |
|
|
| entries = Entry.objects.select_for_update().filter(author=request.user) |
| with transaction.atomic(): |
| for entry in entries: |
| ... |
|
|
| When the queryset is evaluated (``for entry in entries`` in this case), all |
| matched entries will be locked until the end of the transaction block, meaning |
| that other transactions will be prevented from changing or acquiring locks on |
| them. |
|
|
| Usually, if another transaction has already acquired a lock on one of the |
| selected rows, the query will block until the lock is released. If this is |
| not the behavior you want, call ``select_for_update(nowait=True)``. This will |
| make the call non-blocking. If a conflicting lock is already acquired by |
| another transaction, :exc:`~django.db.DatabaseError` will be raised when the |
| queryset is evaluated. You can also ignore locked rows by using |
| ``select_for_update(skip_locked=True)`` instead. The ``nowait`` and |
| ``skip_locked`` are mutually exclusive and attempts to call |
| ``select_for_update()`` with both options enabled will result in a |
| :exc:`ValueError`. |
|
|
| By default, ``select_for_update()`` locks all rows that are selected by the |
| query. For example, rows of related objects specified in :meth:`select_related` |
| are locked in addition to rows of the queryset's model. If this isn't desired, |
| specify the related objects you want to lock in ``select_for_update(of=(...))`` |
| using the same fields syntax as :meth:`select_related`. Use the value ``'self'`` |
| to refer to the queryset's model. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Lock parents models in ``select_for_update(of=(...))`` |
|
|
| If you want to lock parents models when using :ref:`multi-table inheritance |
| <multi-table-inheritance>`, you must specify parent link fields (by default |
| ``<parent_model_name>_ptr``) in the ``of`` argument. For example:: |
|
|
| Restaurant.objects.select_for_update(of=("self", "place_ptr")) |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Using ``select_for_update(of=(...))`` with specified fields |
|
|
| If you want to lock models and specify selected fields, e.g. using |
| :meth:`values`, you must select at least one field from each model in the |
| ``of`` argument. Models without selected fields will not be locked. |
|
|
| On PostgreSQL only, you can pass ``no_key=True`` in order to acquire a weaker |
| lock, that still allows creating rows that merely reference locked rows |
| (through a foreign key, for example) while the lock is in place. The |
| PostgreSQL documentation has more details about `row-level lock modes |
| <https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/explicit-locking.html#LOCKING-ROWS>`_. |
|
|
| You can't use ``select_for_update()`` on nullable relations: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Person.objects.select_related("hometown").select_for_update() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| django.db.utils.NotSupportedError: FOR UPDATE cannot be applied to the nullable side of an outer join |
|
|
| To avoid that restriction, you can exclude null objects if you don't care about |
| them: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Person.objects.select_related("hometown").select_for_update().exclude(hometown=None) |
| <QuerySet [<Person: ...)>, ...]> |
|
|
| The ``postgresql``, ``oracle``, and ``mysql`` database backends support |
| ``select_for_update()``. However, MariaDB only supports the ``nowait`` |
| argument, MariaDB 10.6+ also supports the ``skip_locked`` argument, and MySQL |
| 8.0.1+ supports the ``nowait``, ``skip_locked``, and ``of`` arguments. The |
| ``no_key`` argument is only supported on PostgreSQL. |
|
|
| Passing ``nowait=True``, ``skip_locked=True``, ``no_key=True``, or ``of`` to |
| ``select_for_update()`` using database backends that do not support these |
| options, such as MySQL, raises a :exc:`~django.db.NotSupportedError`. This |
| prevents code from unexpectedly blocking. |
|
|
| Evaluating a queryset with ``select_for_update()`` in autocommit mode on |
| backends which support ``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` is a |
| :exc:`~django.db.transaction.TransactionManagementError` error because the |
| rows are not locked in that case. If allowed, this would facilitate data |
| corruption and could easily be caused by calling code that expects to be run in |
| a transaction outside of one. |
|
|
| Using ``select_for_update()`` on backends which do not support |
| ``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` (such as SQLite) will have no effect. |
| ``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` will not be added to the query, and an error isn't |
| raised if ``select_for_update()`` is used in autocommit mode. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| Although ``select_for_update()`` normally fails in autocommit mode, since |
| :class:`~django.test.TestCase` automatically wraps each test in a |
| transaction, calling ``select_for_update()`` in a ``TestCase`` even outside |
| an :func:`~django.db.transaction.atomic()` block will (perhaps unexpectedly) |
| pass without raising a ``TransactionManagementError``. To properly test |
| ``select_for_update()`` you should use |
| :class:`~django.test.TransactionTestCase`. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Certain expressions may not be supported |
|
|
| PostgreSQL doesn't support ``select_for_update()`` with |
| :class:`~django.db.models.expressions.Window` expressions. |
|
|
| ``raw()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: raw(raw_query, params=(), translations=None, using=None) |
|
|
| Takes a raw SQL query, executes it, and returns a |
| ``django.db.models.query.RawQuerySet`` instance. This ``RawQuerySet`` instance |
| can be iterated over just like a normal ``QuerySet`` to provide object |
| instances. |
|
|
| See the :doc:`/topics/db/sql` for more information. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| ``raw()`` always triggers a new query and doesn't account for previous |
| filtering. As such, it should generally be called from the ``Manager`` or |
| from a fresh ``QuerySet`` instance. |
|
|
| Operators that return new ``QuerySet``\s |
| ---------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Combined querysets must use the same model. |
|
|
| AND (``&``) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Combines two ``QuerySet``\s using the SQL ``AND`` operator in a manner similar |
| to chaining filters. |
|
|
| The following are equivalent:: |
|
|
| Model.objects.filter(x=1) & Model.objects.filter(y=2) |
| Model.objects.filter(x=1).filter(y=2) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE x=1 AND y=2 |
|
|
| OR (``|``) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Combines two ``QuerySet``\s using the SQL ``OR`` operator. |
|
|
| The following are equivalent:: |
|
|
| Model.objects.filter(x=1) | Model.objects.filter(y=2) |
| from django.db.models import Q |
|
|
| Model.objects.filter(Q(x=1) | Q(y=2)) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE x=1 OR y=2 |
|
|
| ``|`` is not a commutative operation, as different (though equivalent) queries |
| may be generated. |
|
|
| XOR (``^``) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Combines two ``QuerySet``\s using the SQL ``XOR`` operator. A ``XOR`` |
| expression matches rows that are matched by an odd number of operands. |
|
|
| The following are equivalent:: |
|
|
| Model.objects.filter(x=1) ^ Model.objects.filter(y=2) |
| from django.db.models import Q |
|
|
| Model.objects.filter(Q(x=1) ^ Q(y=2)) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE x=1 XOR y=2 |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| ``XOR`` is natively supported on MariaDB and MySQL. On other databases, |
| ``x ^ y ^ ... ^ z`` is converted to an equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| (x OR y OR ... OR z) AND |
| 1=MOD( |
| (CASE WHEN x THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) + |
| (CASE WHEN y THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) + |
| ... |
| (CASE WHEN z THEN 1 ELSE 0 END), |
| 2 |
| ) |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 5.0 |
|
|
| In older versions, on databases without native support for the SQL |
| ``XOR`` operator, ``XOR`` returned rows that were matched by exactly |
| one operand. The previous behavior was not consistent with MySQL, |
| MariaDB, and Python behavior. |
|
|
| Methods that do not return ``QuerySet``\s |
| ----------------------------------------- |
|
|
| The following ``QuerySet`` methods evaluate the ``QuerySet`` and return |
| something *other than* a ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| These methods do not use a cache (see :ref:`caching-and-querysets`). Rather, |
| they query the database each time they're called. |
|
|
| Because these methods evaluate the QuerySet, they are blocking calls, and so |
| their main (synchronous) versions cannot be called from asynchronous code. For |
| this reason, each has a corresponding asynchronous version with an ``a`` prefix |
| - for example, rather than ``get(…)`` you can ``await aget(…)``. |
|
|
| There is usually no difference in behavior apart from their asynchronous |
| nature, but any differences are noted below next to each method. |
|
|
| ``get()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: get(*args, **kwargs) |
| .. method:: aget(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aget()`` |
|
|
| Returns the object matching the given lookup parameters, which should be in |
| the format described in `Field lookups`_. You should use lookups that are |
| guaranteed unique, such as the primary key or fields in a unique constraint. |
| For example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(id=1) |
| Entry.objects.get(Q(blog=blog) & Q(entry_number=1)) |
|
|
| If you expect a queryset to already return one row, you can use ``get()`` |
| without any arguments to return the object for that row:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pk=1).get() |
|
|
| If ``get()`` doesn't find any object, it raises a :exc:`Model.DoesNotExist |
| <django.db.models.Model.DoesNotExist>` exception:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(id=-999) # raises Entry.DoesNotExist |
|
|
| If ``get()`` finds more than one object, it raises a |
| :exc:`Model.MultipleObjectsReturned |
| <django.db.models.Model.MultipleObjectsReturned>` exception:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(name="A Duplicated Name") # raises Entry.MultipleObjectsReturned |
|
|
| Both these exception classes are attributes of the model class, and specific to |
| that model. If you want to handle such exceptions from several ``get()`` calls |
| for different models, you can use their generic base classes. For example, you |
| can use :exc:`django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist` to handle |
| :exc:`~django.db.models.Model.DoesNotExist` exceptions from multiple models:: |
|
|
| from django.core.exceptions import ObjectDoesNotExist |
|
|
| try: |
| blog = Blog.objects.get(id=1) |
| entry = Entry.objects.get(blog=blog, entry_number=1) |
| except ObjectDoesNotExist: |
| print("Either the blog or entry doesn't exist.") |
|
|
| ``create()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: create(**kwargs) |
| .. method:: acreate(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``acreate()`` |
|
|
| A convenience method for creating an object and saving it all in one step. Thus:: |
|
|
| p = Person.objects.create(first_name="Bruce", last_name="Springsteen") |
|
|
| and:: |
|
|
| p = Person(first_name="Bruce", last_name="Springsteen") |
| p.save(force_insert=True) |
|
|
| are equivalent. |
|
|
| The :ref:`force_insert <ref-models-force-insert>` parameter is documented |
| elsewhere, but all it means is that a new object will always be created. |
| Normally you won't need to worry about this. However, if your model contains a |
| manual primary key value that you set and if that value already exists in the |
| database, a call to ``create()`` will fail with an |
| :exc:`~django.db.IntegrityError` since primary keys must be unique. Be |
| prepared to handle the exception if you are using manual primary keys. |
|
|
| ``get_or_create()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: get_or_create(defaults=None, **kwargs) |
| .. method:: aget_or_create(defaults=None, **kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aget_or_create()`` |
|
|
| A convenience method for looking up an object with the given ``kwargs`` (may be |
| empty if your model has defaults for all fields), creating one if necessary. |
|
|
| Returns a tuple of ``(object, created)``, where ``object`` is the retrieved or |
| created object and ``created`` is a boolean specifying whether a new object was |
| created. |
|
|
| This is meant to prevent duplicate objects from being created when requests are |
| made in parallel, and as a shortcut to boilerplatish code. For example:: |
|
|
| try: |
| obj = Person.objects.get(first_name="John", last_name="Lennon") |
| except Person.DoesNotExist: |
| obj = Person(first_name="John", last_name="Lennon", birthday=date(1940, 10, 9)) |
| obj.save() |
|
|
| Here, with concurrent requests, multiple attempts to save a ``Person`` with |
| the same parameters may be made. To avoid this race condition, the above |
| example can be rewritten using ``get_or_create()`` like so:: |
|
|
| obj, created = Person.objects.get_or_create( |
| first_name="John", |
| last_name="Lennon", |
| defaults={"birthday": date(1940, 10, 9)}, |
| ) |
|
|
| Any keyword arguments passed to ``get_or_create()`` — *except* an optional one |
| called ``defaults`` — will be used in a :meth:`get()` call. If an object is |
| found, ``get_or_create()`` returns a tuple of that object and ``False``. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| This method is atomic assuming that the database enforces uniqueness of the |
| keyword arguments (see :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.unique` or |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.unique_together`). If the fields used in the |
| keyword arguments do not have a uniqueness constraint, concurrent calls to |
| this method may result in multiple rows with the same parameters being |
| inserted. |
|
|
| You can specify more complex conditions for the retrieved object by chaining |
| ``get_or_create()`` with ``filter()`` and using :class:`Q objects |
| <django.db.models.Q>`. For example, to retrieve Robert or Bob Marley if either |
| exists, and create the latter otherwise:: |
|
|
| from django.db.models import Q |
|
|
| obj, created = Person.objects.filter( |
| Q(first_name="Bob") | Q(first_name="Robert"), |
| ).get_or_create(last_name="Marley", defaults={"first_name": "Bob"}) |
|
|
| If multiple objects are found, ``get_or_create()`` raises |
| :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.MultipleObjectsReturned`. If an object is *not* |
| found, ``get_or_create()`` will instantiate and save a new object, returning a |
| tuple of the new object and ``True``. The new object will be created roughly |
| according to this algorithm:: |
|
|
| params = {k: v for k, v in kwargs.items() if "__" not in k} |
| params.update({k: v() if callable(v) else v for k, v in defaults.items()}) |
| obj = self.model(**params) |
| obj.save() |
|
|
| In English, that means start with any non-``'defaults'`` keyword argument that |
| doesn't contain a double underscore (which would indicate a non-exact lookup). |
| Then add the contents of ``defaults``, overriding any keys if necessary, and |
| use the result as the keyword arguments to the model class. If there are any |
| callables in ``defaults``, evaluate them. As hinted at above, this is a |
| simplification of the algorithm that is used, but it contains all the pertinent |
| details. The internal implementation has some more error-checking than this and |
| handles some extra edge-conditions; if you're interested, read the code. |
|
|
| If you have a field named ``defaults`` and want to use it as an exact lookup in |
| ``get_or_create()``, use ``'defaults__exact'``, like so:: |
|
|
| Foo.objects.get_or_create(defaults__exact="bar", defaults={"defaults": "baz"}) |
|
|
| The ``get_or_create()`` method has similar error behavior to :meth:`create()` |
| when you're using manually specified primary keys. If an object needs to be |
| created and the key already exists in the database, an |
| :exc:`~django.db.IntegrityError` will be raised. |
|
|
| Finally, a word on using ``get_or_create()`` in Django views. Please make sure |
| to use it only in ``POST`` requests unless you have a good reason not to. |
| ``GET`` requests shouldn't have any effect on data. Instead, use ``POST`` |
| whenever a request to a page has a side effect on your data. For more, see |
| :rfc:`Safe methods <9110#section-9.2.1>` in the HTTP spec. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| You can use ``get_or_create()`` through :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` |
| attributes and reverse relations. In that case you will restrict the queries |
| inside the context of that relation. That could lead you to some integrity |
| problems if you don't use it consistently. |
|
|
| Being the following models:: |
|
|
| class Chapter(models.Model): |
| title = models.CharField(max_length=255, unique=True) |
|
|
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| title = models.CharField(max_length=256) |
| chapters = models.ManyToManyField(Chapter) |
|
|
| You can use ``get_or_create()`` through Book's chapters field, but it only |
| fetches inside the context of that book: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> book = Book.objects.create(title="Ulysses") |
| >>> book.chapters.get_or_create(title="Telemachus") |
| (<Chapter: Telemachus>, True) |
| >>> book.chapters.get_or_create(title="Telemachus") |
| (<Chapter: Telemachus>, False) |
| >>> Chapter.objects.create(title="Chapter 1") |
| <Chapter: Chapter 1> |
| >>> book.chapters.get_or_create(title="Chapter 1") |
| # Raises IntegrityError |
|
|
| This is happening because it's trying to get or create "Chapter 1" through the |
| book "Ulysses", but it can't do any of them: the relation can't fetch that |
| chapter because it isn't related to that book, but it can't create it either |
| because ``title`` field should be unique. |
|
|
| ``update_or_create()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: update_or_create(defaults=None, create_defaults=None, **kwargs) |
| .. method:: aupdate_or_create(defaults=None, create_defaults=None, **kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aupdate_or_create()`` |
|
|
| A convenience method for updating an object with the given ``kwargs``, creating |
| a new one if necessary. Both ``create_defaults`` and ``defaults`` are |
| dictionaries of (field, value) pairs. The values in both ``create_defaults`` |
| and ``defaults`` can be callables. ``defaults`` is used to update the object |
| while ``create_defaults`` are used for the create operation. If |
| ``create_defaults`` is not supplied, ``defaults`` will be used for the create |
| operation. |
|
|
| Returns a tuple of ``(object, created)``, where ``object`` is the created or |
| updated object and ``created`` is a boolean specifying whether a new object was |
| created. |
|
|
| The ``update_or_create`` method tries to fetch an object from database based on |
| the given ``kwargs``. If a match is found, it updates the fields passed in the |
| ``defaults`` dictionary. |
|
|
| This is meant as a shortcut to boilerplatish code. For example:: |
|
|
| defaults = {"first_name": "Bob"} |
| create_defaults = {"first_name": "Bob", "birthday": date(1940, 10, 9)} |
| try: |
| obj = Person.objects.get(first_name="John", last_name="Lennon") |
| for key, value in defaults.items(): |
| setattr(obj, key, value) |
| obj.save() |
| except Person.DoesNotExist: |
| new_values = {"first_name": "John", "last_name": "Lennon"} |
| new_values.update(create_defaults) |
| obj = Person(**new_values) |
| obj.save() |
|
|
| This pattern gets quite unwieldy as the number of fields in a model goes up. |
| The above example can be rewritten using ``update_or_create()`` like so:: |
|
|
| obj, created = Person.objects.update_or_create( |
| first_name="John", |
| last_name="Lennon", |
| defaults={"first_name": "Bob"}, |
| create_defaults={"first_name": "Bob", "birthday": date(1940, 10, 9)}, |
| ) |
|
|
| For a detailed description of how names passed in ``kwargs`` are resolved, see |
| :meth:`get_or_create`. |
|
|
| As described above in :meth:`get_or_create`, this method is prone to a |
| race-condition which can result in multiple rows being inserted simultaneously |
| if uniqueness is not enforced at the database level. |
|
|
| Like :meth:`get_or_create` and :meth:`create`, if you're using manually |
| specified primary keys and an object needs to be created but the key already |
| exists in the database, an :exc:`~django.db.IntegrityError` is raised. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 4.2 |
|
|
| In older versions, ``update_or_create()`` didn't specify ``update_fields`` |
| when calling :meth:`Model.save() <django.db.models.Model.save>`. |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 5.0 |
|
|
| The ``create_defaults`` argument was added. |
|
|
| ``bulk_create()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: bulk_create(objs, batch_size=None, ignore_conflicts=False, update_conflicts=False, update_fields=None, unique_fields=None) |
| .. method:: abulk_create(objs, batch_size=None, ignore_conflicts=False, update_conflicts=False, update_fields=None, unique_fields=None) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``abulk_create()`` |
|
|
| This method inserts the provided list of objects into the database in an |
| efficient manner (generally only 1 query, no matter how many objects there |
| are), and returns created objects as a list, in the same order as provided: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> objs = Entry.objects.bulk_create( |
| ... [ |
| ... Entry(headline="This is a test"), |
| ... Entry(headline="This is only a test"), |
| ... ] |
| ... ) |
|
|
| This has a number of caveats though: |
|
|
| * The model's ``save()`` method will not be called, and the ``pre_save`` and |
| ``post_save`` signals will not be sent. |
| * It does not work with child models in a multi-table inheritance scenario. |
| * If the model's primary key is an :class:`~django.db.models.AutoField`, the |
| primary key attribute can only be retrieved on certain databases (currently |
| PostgreSQL, MariaDB 10.5+, and SQLite 3.35+). On other databases, it will not |
| be set. |
| * It does not work with many-to-many relationships. |
| * It casts ``objs`` to a list, which fully evaluates ``objs`` if it's a |
| generator. The cast allows inspecting all objects so that any objects with a |
| manually set primary key can be inserted first. If you want to insert objects |
| in batches without evaluating the entire generator at once, you can use this |
| technique as long as the objects don't have any manually set primary keys:: |
|
|
| from itertools import islice |
|
|
| batch_size = 100 |
| objs = (Entry(headline="Test %s" % i) for i in range(1000)) |
| while True: |
| batch = list(islice(objs, batch_size)) |
| if not batch: |
| break |
| Entry.objects.bulk_create(batch, batch_size) |
|
|
| The ``batch_size`` parameter controls how many objects are created in a single |
| query. The default is to create all objects in one batch, except for SQLite |
| where the default is such that at most 999 variables per query are used. |
|
|
| On databases that support it (all but Oracle), setting the ``ignore_conflicts`` |
| parameter to ``True`` tells the database to ignore failure to insert any rows |
| that fail constraints such as duplicate unique values. |
|
|
| On databases that support it (all except Oracle and SQLite < 3.24), setting the |
| ``update_conflicts`` parameter to ``True``, tells the database to update |
| ``update_fields`` when a row insertion fails on conflicts. On PostgreSQL and |
| SQLite, in addition to ``update_fields``, a list of ``unique_fields`` that may |
| be in conflict must be provided. |
|
|
| Enabling the ``ignore_conflicts`` parameter disables setting the primary key on |
| each model instance (if the database normally supports it). |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 5.0 |
|
|
| In older versions, enabling the ``update_conflicts`` parameter prevented |
| setting the primary key on each model instance. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| On MySQL and MariaDB, setting the ``ignore_conflicts`` parameter to |
| ``True`` turns certain types of errors, other than duplicate key, into |
| warnings. Even with Strict Mode. For example: invalid values or |
| non-nullable violations. See the `MySQL documentation`_ and |
| `MariaDB documentation`_ for more details. |
|
|
| .. _MySQL documentation: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/en/sql-mode.html#ignore-strict-comparison |
| .. _MariaDB documentation: https://mariadb.com/kb/en/ignore/ |
|
|
| ``bulk_update()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: bulk_update(objs, fields, batch_size=None) |
| .. method:: abulk_update(objs, fields, batch_size=None) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``abulk_update()`` |
|
|
| This method efficiently updates the given fields on the provided model |
| instances, generally with one query, and returns the number of objects |
| updated: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> objs = [ |
| ... Entry.objects.create(headline="Entry 1"), |
| ... Entry.objects.create(headline="Entry 2"), |
| ... ] |
| >>> objs[0].headline = "This is entry 1" |
| >>> objs[1].headline = "This is entry 2" |
| >>> Entry.objects.bulk_update(objs, ["headline"]) |
| 2 |
|
|
| :meth:`.QuerySet.update` is used to save the changes, so this is more efficient |
| than iterating through the list of models and calling ``save()`` on each of |
| them, but it has a few caveats: |
|
|
| * You cannot update the model's primary key. |
| * Each model's ``save()`` method isn't called, and the |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.signals.pre_save` and |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.signals.post_save` signals aren't sent. |
| * If updating a large number of columns in a large number of rows, the SQL |
| generated can be very large. Avoid this by specifying a suitable |
| ``batch_size``. |
| * Updating fields defined on multi-table inheritance ancestors will incur an |
| extra query per ancestor. |
| * When an individual batch contains duplicates, only the first instance in that |
| batch will result in an update. |
| * The number of objects updated returned by the function may be fewer than the |
| number of objects passed in. This can be due to duplicate objects passed in |
| which are updated in the same batch or race conditions such that objects are |
| no longer present in the database. |
|
|
| The ``batch_size`` parameter controls how many objects are saved in a single |
| query. The default is to update all objects in one batch, except for SQLite |
| and Oracle which have restrictions on the number of variables used in a query. |
|
|
| ``count()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: count() |
| .. method:: acount() |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``acount()`` |
|
|
| Returns an integer representing the number of objects in the database matching |
| the ``QuerySet``. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| # Returns the total number of entries in the database. |
| Entry.objects.count() |
|
|
| # Returns the number of entries whose headline contains 'Lennon' |
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__contains="Lennon").count() |
|
|
| A ``count()`` call performs a ``SELECT COUNT(*)`` behind the scenes, so you |
| should always use ``count()`` rather than loading all of the record into Python |
| objects and calling ``len()`` on the result (unless you need to load the |
| objects into memory anyway, in which case ``len()`` will be faster). |
|
|
| Note that if you want the number of items in a ``QuerySet`` and are also |
| retrieving model instances from it (for example, by iterating over it), it's |
| probably more efficient to use ``len(queryset)`` which won't cause an extra |
| database query like ``count()`` would. |
|
|
| If the queryset has already been fully retrieved, ``count()`` will use that |
| length rather than perform an extra database query. |
|
|
| ``in_bulk()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: in_bulk(id_list=None, *, field_name='pk') |
| .. method:: ain_bulk(id_list=None, *, field_name='pk') |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``ain_bulk()`` |
|
|
| Takes a list of field values (``id_list``) and the ``field_name`` for those |
| values, and returns a dictionary mapping each value to an instance of the |
| object with the given field value. No |
| :exc:`django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist` exceptions will ever be raised |
| by ``in_bulk``; that is, any ``id_list`` value not matching any instance will |
| simply be ignored. If ``id_list`` isn't provided, all objects |
| in the queryset are returned. ``field_name`` must be a unique field or a |
| distinct field (if there's only one field specified in :meth:`distinct`). |
| ``field_name`` defaults to the primary key. |
|
|
| Example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([1]) |
| {1: <Blog: Beatles Blog>} |
| >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([1, 2]) |
| {1: <Blog: Beatles Blog>, 2: <Blog: Cheddar Talk>} |
| >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([]) |
| {} |
| >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk() |
| {1: <Blog: Beatles Blog>, 2: <Blog: Cheddar Talk>, 3: <Blog: Django Weblog>} |
| >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk(["beatles_blog"], field_name="slug") |
| {'beatles_blog': <Blog: Beatles Blog>} |
| >>> Blog.objects.distinct("name").in_bulk(field_name="name") |
| {'Beatles Blog': <Blog: Beatles Blog>, 'Cheddar Talk': <Blog: Cheddar Talk>, 'Django Weblog': <Blog: Django Weblog>} |
|
|
| If you pass ``in_bulk()`` an empty list, you'll get an empty dictionary. |
|
|
| ``iterator()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: iterator(chunk_size=None) |
| .. method:: aiterator(chunk_size=None) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aiterator()`` |
|
|
| Evaluates the ``QuerySet`` (by performing the query) and returns an iterator |
| (see :pep:`234`) over the results, or an asynchronous iterator (see :pep:`492`) |
| if you call its asynchronous version ``aiterator``. |
|
|
| A ``QuerySet`` typically caches its results internally so that repeated |
| evaluations do not result in additional queries. In contrast, ``iterator()`` |
| will read results directly, without doing any caching at the ``QuerySet`` level |
| (internally, the default iterator calls ``iterator()`` and caches the return |
| value). For a ``QuerySet`` which returns a large number of objects that you |
| only need to access once, this can result in better performance and a |
| significant reduction in memory. |
|
|
| Note that using ``iterator()`` on a ``QuerySet`` which has already been |
| evaluated will force it to evaluate again, repeating the query. |
|
|
| ``iterator()`` is compatible with previous calls to ``prefetch_related()`` as |
| long as ``chunk_size`` is given. Larger values will necessitate fewer queries |
| to accomplish the prefetching at the cost of greater memory usage. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| ``aiterator()`` is *not* compatible with previous calls to |
| ``prefetch_related()``. |
|
|
| On some databases (e.g. Oracle, `SQLite |
| <https://www.sqlite.org/limits.html#max_variable_number>`_), the maximum number |
| of terms in an SQL ``IN`` clause might be limited. Hence values below this |
| limit should be used. (In particular, when prefetching across two or more |
| relations, a ``chunk_size`` should be small enough that the anticipated number |
| of results for each prefetched relation still falls below the limit.) |
|
|
| So long as the QuerySet does not prefetch any related objects, providing no |
| value for ``chunk_size`` will result in Django using an implicit default of |
| 2000. |
|
|
| Depending on the database backend, query results will either be loaded all at |
| once or streamed from the database using server-side cursors. |
|
|
| With server-side cursors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| Oracle and :ref:`PostgreSQL <postgresql-server-side-cursors>` use server-side |
| cursors to stream results from the database without loading the entire result |
| set into memory. |
|
|
| The Oracle database driver always uses server-side cursors. |
|
|
| With server-side cursors, the ``chunk_size`` parameter specifies the number of |
| results to cache at the database driver level. Fetching bigger chunks |
| diminishes the number of round trips between the database driver and the |
| database, at the expense of memory. |
|
|
| On PostgreSQL, server-side cursors will only be used when the |
| :setting:`DISABLE_SERVER_SIDE_CURSORS <DATABASE-DISABLE_SERVER_SIDE_CURSORS>` |
| setting is ``False``. Read :ref:`transaction-pooling-server-side-cursors` if |
| you're using a connection pooler configured in transaction pooling mode. When |
| server-side cursors are disabled, the behavior is the same as databases that |
| don't support server-side cursors. |
|
|
| Without server-side cursors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| MySQL doesn't support streaming results, hence the Python database driver loads |
| the entire result set into memory. The result set is then transformed into |
| Python row objects by the database adapter using the ``fetchmany()`` method |
| defined in :pep:`249`. |
|
|
| SQLite can fetch results in batches using ``fetchmany()``, but since SQLite |
| doesn't provide isolation between queries within a connection, be careful when |
| writing to the table being iterated over. See :ref:`sqlite-isolation` for |
| more information. |
|
|
| The ``chunk_size`` parameter controls the size of batches Django retrieves from |
| the database driver. Larger batches decrease the overhead of communicating with |
| the database driver at the expense of a slight increase in memory consumption. |
|
|
| So long as the QuerySet does not prefetch any related objects, providing no |
| value for ``chunk_size`` will result in Django using an implicit default of |
| 2000, a value derived from `a calculation on the psycopg mailing list |
| <https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/4D2F2C71.8080805%40dndg.it>`_: |
|
|
| Assuming rows of 10-20 columns with a mix of textual and numeric data, 2000 |
| is going to fetch less than 100KB of data, which seems a good compromise |
| between the number of rows transferred and the data discarded if the loop |
| is exited early. |
|
|
| ``latest()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: latest(*fields) |
| .. method:: alatest(*fields) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``alatest()`` |
|
|
| Returns the latest object in the table based on the given field(s). |
|
|
| This example returns the latest ``Entry`` in the table, according to the |
| ``pub_date`` field:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.latest("pub_date") |
|
|
| You can also choose the latest based on several fields. For example, to select |
| the ``Entry`` with the earliest ``expire_date`` when two entries have the same |
| ``pub_date``:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.latest("pub_date", "-expire_date") |
|
|
| The negative sign in ``'-expire_date'`` means to sort ``expire_date`` in |
| *descending* order. Since ``latest()`` gets the last result, the ``Entry`` with |
| the earliest ``expire_date`` is selected. |
|
|
| If your model's :ref:`Meta <meta-options>` specifies |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.get_latest_by`, you can omit any arguments to |
| ``earliest()`` or ``latest()``. The fields specified in |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.get_latest_by` will be used by default. |
|
|
| Like :meth:`get()`, ``earliest()`` and ``latest()`` raise |
| :exc:`~django.db.models.Model.DoesNotExist` if there is no object with the |
| given parameters. |
|
|
| Note that ``earliest()`` and ``latest()`` exist purely for convenience and |
| readability. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: ``earliest()`` and ``latest()`` may return instances with null dates. |
|
|
| Since ordering is delegated to the database, results on fields that allow |
| null values may be ordered differently if you use different databases. For |
| example, PostgreSQL and MySQL sort null values as if they are higher than |
| non-null values, while SQLite does the opposite. |
|
|
| You may want to filter out null values:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__isnull=False).latest("pub_date") |
|
|
| ``earliest()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: earliest(*fields) |
| .. method:: aearliest(*fields) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aearliest()`` |
|
|
| Works otherwise like :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.latest` except |
| the direction is changed. |
|
|
| ``first()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: first() |
| .. method:: afirst() |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``afirst()`` |
|
|
| Returns the first object matched by the queryset, or ``None`` if there |
| is no matching object. If the ``QuerySet`` has no ordering defined, then the |
| queryset is automatically ordered by the primary key. This can affect |
| aggregation results as described in :ref:`aggregation-ordering-interaction`. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| p = Article.objects.order_by("title", "pub_date").first() |
|
|
| Note that ``first()`` is a convenience method, the following code sample is |
| equivalent to the above example:: |
|
|
| try: |
| p = Article.objects.order_by("title", "pub_date")[0] |
| except IndexError: |
| p = None |
|
|
| ``last()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: last() |
| .. method:: alast() |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``alast()`` |
|
|
| Works like :meth:`first()`, but returns the last object in the queryset. |
|
|
| ``aggregate()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: aggregate(*args, **kwargs) |
| .. method:: aaggregate(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aaggregate()`` |
|
|
| Returns a dictionary of aggregate values (averages, sums, etc.) calculated over |
| the ``QuerySet``. Each argument to ``aggregate()`` specifies a value that will |
| be included in the dictionary that is returned. |
|
|
| The aggregation functions that are provided by Django are described in |
| `Aggregation Functions`_ below. Since aggregates are also :doc:`query |
| expressions </ref/models/expressions>`, you may combine aggregates with other |
| aggregates or values to create complex aggregates. |
|
|
| Aggregates specified using keyword arguments will use the keyword as the name |
| for the annotation. Anonymous arguments will have a name generated for them |
| based upon the name of the aggregate function and the model field that is being |
| aggregated. Complex aggregates cannot use anonymous arguments and must specify |
| a keyword argument as an alias. |
|
|
| For example, when you are working with blog entries, you may want to know the |
| number of authors that have contributed blog entries: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Count |
| >>> q = Blog.objects.aggregate(Count("entry")) |
| {'entry__count': 16} |
|
|
| By using a keyword argument to specify the aggregate function, you can |
| control the name of the aggregation value that is returned: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> q = Blog.objects.aggregate(number_of_entries=Count("entry")) |
| {'number_of_entries': 16} |
|
|
| For an in-depth discussion of aggregation, see :doc:`the topic guide on |
| Aggregation </topics/db/aggregation>`. |
|
|
| ``exists()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: exists() |
| .. method:: aexists() |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aexists()`` |
|
|
| Returns ``True`` if the :class:`.QuerySet` contains any results, and ``False`` |
| if not. This tries to perform the query in the simplest and fastest way |
| possible, but it *does* execute nearly the same query as a normal |
| :class:`.QuerySet` query. |
|
|
| :meth:`~.QuerySet.exists` is useful for searches relating to the existence of |
| any objects in a :class:`.QuerySet`, particularly in the context of a large |
| :class:`.QuerySet`. |
|
|
| To find whether a queryset contains any items:: |
|
|
| if some_queryset.exists(): |
| print("There is at least one object in some_queryset") |
|
|
| Which will be faster than:: |
|
|
| if some_queryset: |
| print("There is at least one object in some_queryset") |
|
|
| ... but not by a large degree (hence needing a large queryset for efficiency |
| gains). |
|
|
| Additionally, if a ``some_queryset`` has not yet been evaluated, but you know |
| that it will be at some point, then using ``some_queryset.exists()`` will do |
| more overall work (one query for the existence check plus an extra one to later |
| retrieve the results) than using ``bool(some_queryset)``, which retrieves the |
| results and then checks if any were returned. |
|
|
| ``contains()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: contains(obj) |
| .. method:: acontains(obj) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``acontains()`` |
|
|
| Returns ``True`` if the :class:`.QuerySet` contains ``obj``, and ``False`` if |
| not. This tries to perform the query in the simplest and fastest way possible. |
|
|
| :meth:`contains` is useful for checking an object membership in a |
| :class:`.QuerySet`, particularly in the context of a large :class:`.QuerySet`. |
|
|
| To check whether a queryset contains a specific item:: |
|
|
| if some_queryset.contains(obj): |
| print("Entry contained in queryset") |
|
|
| This will be faster than the following which requires evaluating and iterating |
| through the entire queryset:: |
|
|
| if obj in some_queryset: |
| print("Entry contained in queryset") |
|
|
| Like :meth:`exists`, if ``some_queryset`` has not yet been evaluated, but you |
| know that it will be at some point, then using ``some_queryset.contains(obj)`` |
| will make an additional database query, generally resulting in slower overall |
| performance. |
|
|
| ``update()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: update(**kwargs) |
| .. method:: aupdate(**kwargs) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aupdate()`` |
|
|
| Performs an SQL update query for the specified fields, and returns |
| the number of rows matched (which may not be equal to the number of rows |
| updated if some rows already have the new value). |
|
|
| For example, to turn comments off for all blog entries published in 2010, |
| you could do this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2010).update(comments_on=False) |
|
|
| (This assumes your ``Entry`` model has fields ``pub_date`` and ``comments_on``.) |
|
|
| You can update multiple fields — there's no limit on how many. For example, |
| here we update the ``comments_on`` and ``headline`` fields: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2010).update( |
| ... comments_on=False, headline="This is old" |
| ... ) |
|
|
| The ``update()`` method is applied instantly, and the only restriction on the |
| :class:`.QuerySet` that is updated is that it can only update columns in the |
| model's main table, not on related models. You can't do this, for example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.update(blog__name="foo") # Won't work! |
|
|
| Filtering based on related fields is still possible, though: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(blog__id=1).update(comments_on=True) |
|
|
| You cannot call ``update()`` on a :class:`.QuerySet` that has had a slice taken |
| or can otherwise no longer be filtered. |
|
|
| The ``update()`` method returns the number of affected rows: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(id=64).update(comments_on=True) |
| 1 |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(slug="nonexistent-slug").update(comments_on=True) |
| 0 |
|
|
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2010).update(comments_on=False) |
| 132 |
|
|
| If you're just updating a record and don't need to do anything with the model |
| object, the most efficient approach is to call ``update()``, rather than |
| loading the model object into memory. For example, instead of doing this:: |
|
|
| e = Entry.objects.get(id=10) |
| e.comments_on = False |
| e.save() |
|
|
| ...do this:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(id=10).update(comments_on=False) |
|
|
| Using ``update()`` also prevents a race condition wherein something might |
| change in your database in the short period of time between loading the object |
| and calling ``save()``. |
|
|
| Finally, realize that ``update()`` does an update at the SQL level and, thus, |
| does not call any ``save()`` methods on your models, nor does it emit the |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.signals.pre_save` or |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.signals.post_save` signals (which are a consequence of |
| calling :meth:`Model.save() <django.db.models.Model.save>`). If you want to |
| update a bunch of records for a model that has a custom |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()` method, loop over them and call |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save()`, like this:: |
|
|
| for e in Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2010): |
| e.comments_on = False |
| e.save() |
|
|
| Ordered queryset |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| Chaining ``order_by()`` with ``update()`` is supported only on MariaDB and |
| MySQL, and is ignored for different databases. This is useful for updating a |
| unique field in the order that is specified without conflicts. For example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.order_by("-number").update(number=F("number") + 1) |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| ``order_by()`` clause will be ignored if it contains annotations, inherited |
| fields, or lookups spanning relations. |
|
|
| ``delete()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: delete() |
| .. method:: adelete() |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``adelete()`` |
|
|
| Performs an SQL delete query on all rows in the :class:`.QuerySet` and |
| returns the number of objects deleted and a dictionary with the number of |
| deletions per object type. |
|
|
| The ``delete()`` is applied instantly. You cannot call ``delete()`` on a |
| :class:`.QuerySet` that has had a slice taken or can otherwise no longer be |
| filtered. |
|
|
| For example, to delete all the entries in a particular blog: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> b = Blog.objects.get(pk=1) |
|
|
| # Delete all the entries belonging to this Blog. |
| >>> Entry.objects.filter(blog=b).delete() |
| (4, {'blog.Entry': 2, 'blog.Entry_authors': 2}) |
|
|
| By default, Django's :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey` emulates the SQL |
| constraint ``ON DELETE CASCADE`` — in other words, any objects with foreign |
| keys pointing at the objects to be deleted will be deleted along with them. |
| For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> blogs = Blog.objects.all() |
|
|
| # This will delete all Blogs and all of their Entry objects. |
| >>> blogs.delete() |
| (5, {'blog.Blog': 1, 'blog.Entry': 2, 'blog.Entry_authors': 2}) |
|
|
| This cascade behavior is customizable via the |
| :attr:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey.on_delete` argument to the |
| :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey`. |
|
|
| The ``delete()`` method does a bulk delete and does not call any ``delete()`` |
| methods on your models. It does, however, emit the |
| :data:`~django.db.models.signals.pre_delete` and |
| :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_delete` signals for all deleted objects |
| (including cascaded deletions). |
|
|
| Django needs to fetch objects into memory to send signals and handle cascades. |
| However, if there are no cascades and no signals, then Django may take a |
| fast-path and delete objects without fetching into memory. For large |
| deletes this can result in significantly reduced memory usage. The amount of |
| executed queries can be reduced, too. |
|
|
| ForeignKeys which are set to :attr:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey.on_delete` |
| ``DO_NOTHING`` do not prevent taking the fast-path in deletion. |
|
|
| Note that the queries generated in object deletion is an implementation |
| detail subject to change. |
|
|
| ``as_manager()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. classmethod:: as_manager() |
|
|
| Class method that returns an instance of :class:`~django.db.models.Manager` |
| with a copy of the ``QuerySet``’s methods. See |
| :ref:`create-manager-with-queryset-methods` for more details. |
|
|
| Note that unlike the other entries in this section, this does not have an |
| asynchronous variant as it does not execute a query. |
|
|
| ``explain()`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. method:: explain(format=None, **options) |
| .. method:: aexplain(format=None, **options) |
|
|
| *Asynchronous version*: ``aexplain()`` |
|
|
| Returns a string of the ``QuerySet``’s execution plan, which details how the |
| database would execute the query, including any indexes or joins that would be |
| used. Knowing these details may help you improve the performance of slow |
| queries. |
|
|
| For example, when using PostgreSQL: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> print(Blog.objects.filter(title="My Blog").explain()) |
| Seq Scan on blog (cost=0.00..35.50 rows=10 width=12) |
| Filter: (title = 'My Blog'::bpchar) |
|
|
| The output differs significantly between databases. |
|
|
| ``explain()`` is supported by all built-in database backends except Oracle |
| because an implementation there isn't straightforward. |
|
|
| The ``format`` parameter changes the output format from the databases's |
| default, which is usually text-based. PostgreSQL supports ``'TEXT'``, |
| ``'JSON'``, ``'YAML'``, and ``'XML'`` formats. MariaDB and MySQL support |
| ``'TEXT'`` (also called ``'TRADITIONAL'``) and ``'JSON'`` formats. MySQL |
| 8.0.16+ also supports an improved ``'TREE'`` format, which is similar to |
| PostgreSQL's ``'TEXT'`` output and is used by default, if supported. |
|
|
| Some databases accept flags that can return more information about the query. |
| Pass these flags as keyword arguments. For example, when using PostgreSQL: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> print(Blog.objects.filter(title="My Blog").explain(verbose=True, analyze=True)) |
| Seq Scan on public.blog (cost=0.00..35.50 rows=10 width=12) (actual time=0.004..0.004 rows=10 loops=1) |
| Output: id, title |
| Filter: (blog.title = 'My Blog'::bpchar) |
| Planning time: 0.064 ms |
| Execution time: 0.058 ms |
|
|
| On some databases, flags may cause the query to be executed which could have |
| adverse effects on your database. For example, the ``ANALYZE`` flag supported |
| by MariaDB, MySQL 8.0.18+, and PostgreSQL could result in changes to data if |
| there are triggers or if a function is called, even for a ``SELECT`` query. |
|
|
| .. _field-lookups: |
|
|
| ``Field`` lookups |
| ----------------- |
|
|
| Field lookups are how you specify the meat of an SQL ``WHERE`` clause. They're |
| specified as keyword arguments to the ``QuerySet`` methods :meth:`filter()`, |
| :meth:`exclude()` and :meth:`get()`. |
|
|
| For an introduction, see :ref:`models and database queries documentation |
| <field-lookups-intro>`. |
|
|
| Django's built-in lookups are listed below. It is also possible to write |
| :doc:`custom lookups </howto/custom-lookups>` for model fields. |
|
|
| As a convenience when no lookup type is provided (like in |
| ``Entry.objects.get(id=14)``) the lookup type is assumed to be :lookup:`exact`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: exact |
|
|
| ``exact`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Exact match. If the value provided for comparison is ``None``, it will be |
| interpreted as an SQL ``NULL`` (see :lookup:`isnull` for more details). |
|
|
| Examples:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(id__exact=14) |
| Entry.objects.get(id__exact=None) |
|
|
| SQL equivalents: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE id = 14; |
| SELECT ... WHERE id IS NULL; |
|
|
| .. admonition:: MySQL comparisons |
|
|
| In MySQL, a database table's "collation" setting determines whether |
| ``exact`` comparisons are case-sensitive. This is a database setting, *not* |
| a Django setting. It's possible to configure your MySQL tables to use |
| case-sensitive comparisons, but some trade-offs are involved. For more |
| information about this, see the :ref:`collation section <mysql-collation>` |
| in the :doc:`databases </ref/databases>` documentation. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: iexact |
|
|
| ``iexact`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-insensitive exact match. If the value provided for comparison is ``None``, |
| it will be interpreted as an SQL ``NULL`` (see :lookup:`isnull` for more |
| details). |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Blog.objects.get(name__iexact="beatles blog") |
| Blog.objects.get(name__iexact=None) |
|
|
| SQL equivalents: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE name ILIKE 'beatles blog'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE name IS NULL; |
|
|
| Note the first query will match ``'Beatles Blog'``, ``'beatles blog'``, |
| ``'BeAtLes BLoG'``, etc. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| When using the SQLite backend and non-ASCII strings, bear in mind the |
| :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string comparisons. |
| SQLite does not do case-insensitive matching for non-ASCII strings. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: contains |
|
|
| ``contains`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-sensitive containment test. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(headline__contains="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE '%Lennon%'; |
|
|
| Note this will match the headline ``'Lennon honored today'`` but not ``'lennon |
| honored today'``. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``contains`` |
| acts like ``icontains`` for SQLite. See the :ref:`database note |
| <sqlite-string-matching>` for more information. |
|
|
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: icontains |
|
|
| ``icontains`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-insensitive containment test. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(headline__icontains="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE '%Lennon%'; |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| When using the SQLite backend and non-ASCII strings, bear in mind the |
| :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string comparisons. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: in |
|
|
| ``in`` |
| ~~~~~~ |
|
|
| In a given iterable; often a list, tuple, or queryset. It's not a common use |
| case, but strings (being iterables) are accepted. |
|
|
| Examples:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(id__in=[1, 3, 4]) |
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__in="abc") |
|
|
| SQL equivalents: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE id IN (1, 3, 4); |
| SELECT ... WHERE headline IN ('a', 'b', 'c'); |
|
|
| You can also use a queryset to dynamically evaluate the list of values |
| instead of providing a list of literal values:: |
|
|
| inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains="Cheddar") |
| entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__in=inner_qs) |
|
|
| This queryset will be evaluated as subselect statement: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE blog.id IN (SELECT id FROM ... WHERE NAME LIKE '%Cheddar%') |
|
|
| If you pass in a ``QuerySet`` resulting from ``values()`` or ``values_list()`` |
| as the value to an ``__in`` lookup, you need to ensure you are only extracting |
| one field in the result. For example, this will work (filtering on the blog |
| names):: |
|
|
| inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains="Ch").values("name") |
| entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__name__in=inner_qs) |
|
|
| This example will raise an exception, since the inner query is trying to |
| extract two field values, where only one is expected:: |
|
|
| # Bad code! Will raise a TypeError. |
| inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains="Ch").values("name", "id") |
| entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__name__in=inner_qs) |
|
|
| .. _nested-queries-performance: |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Performance considerations |
|
|
| Be cautious about using nested queries and understand your database |
| server's performance characteristics (if in doubt, benchmark!). Some |
| database backends, most notably MySQL, don't optimize nested queries very |
| well. It is more efficient, in those cases, to extract a list of values |
| and then pass that into the second query. That is, execute two queries |
| instead of one:: |
|
|
| values = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains="Cheddar").values_list("pk", flat=True) |
| entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__in=list(values)) |
|
|
| Note the ``list()`` call around the Blog ``QuerySet`` to force execution of |
| the first query. Without it, a nested query would be executed, because |
| :ref:`querysets-are-lazy`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: gt |
|
|
| ``gt`` |
| ~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Greater than. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(id__gt=4) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE id > 4; |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: gte |
|
|
| ``gte`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Greater than or equal to. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: lt |
|
|
| ``lt`` |
| ~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Less than. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: lte |
|
|
| ``lte`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Less than or equal to. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: startswith |
|
|
| ``startswith`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-sensitive starts-with. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__startswith="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE 'Lennon%'; |
|
|
| SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``startswith`` acts |
| like ``istartswith`` for SQLite. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: istartswith |
|
|
| ``istartswith`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-insensitive starts-with. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__istartswith="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE 'Lennon%'; |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| When using the SQLite backend and non-ASCII strings, bear in mind the |
| :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string comparisons. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: endswith |
|
|
| ``endswith`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-sensitive ends-with. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__endswith="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE '%Lennon'; |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``endswith`` |
| acts like ``iendswith`` for SQLite. Refer to the :ref:`database note |
| <sqlite-string-matching>` documentation for more. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: iendswith |
|
|
| ``iendswith`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-insensitive ends-with. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(headline__iendswith="Lennon") |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE '%Lennon' |
|
|
| .. admonition:: SQLite users |
|
|
| When using the SQLite backend and non-ASCII strings, bear in mind the |
| :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string comparisons. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: range |
|
|
| ``range`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Range test (inclusive). |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| import datetime |
|
|
| start_date = datetime.date(2005, 1, 1) |
| end_date = datetime.date(2005, 3, 31) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__range=(start_date, end_date)) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE pub_date BETWEEN '2005-01-01' and '2005-03-31'; |
|
|
| You can use ``range`` anywhere you can use ``BETWEEN`` in SQL — for dates, |
| numbers and even characters. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| Filtering a ``DateTimeField`` with dates won't include items on the last |
| day, because the bounds are interpreted as "0am on the given date". If |
| ``pub_date`` was a ``DateTimeField``, the above expression would be turned |
| into this SQL: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE pub_date BETWEEN '2005-01-01 00:00:00' and '2005-03-31 00:00:00'; |
|
|
| Generally speaking, you can't mix dates and datetimes. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: date |
|
|
| ``date`` |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For datetime fields, casts the value as date. Allows chaining additional field |
| lookups. Takes a date value. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__date=datetime.date(2005, 1, 1)) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__date__gt=datetime.date(2005, 1, 1)) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, fields are converted to the current time |
| zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions in the |
| database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: year |
|
|
| ``year`` |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, an exact year match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer year. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2005) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year__gte=2005) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE pub_date BETWEEN '2005-01-01' AND '2005-12-31'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE pub_date >= '2005-01-01'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: iso_year |
|
|
| ``iso_year`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, an exact ISO 8601 week-numbering year match. |
| Allows chaining additional field lookups. Takes an integer year. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__iso_year=2005) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__iso_year__gte=2005) |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: month |
|
|
| ``month`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, an exact month match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer 1 (January) through 12 (December). |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__month=12) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__month__gte=6) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('month' FROM pub_date) = '12'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('month' FROM pub_date) >= '6'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: day |
|
|
| ``day`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, an exact day match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer day. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__day=3) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__day__gte=3) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('day' FROM pub_date) = '3'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('day' FROM pub_date) >= '3'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| Note this will match any record with a pub_date on the third day of the month, |
| such as January 3, July 3, etc. |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: week |
|
|
| ``week`` |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, return the week number (1-52 or 53) according |
| to `ISO-8601 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO-8601>`_, i.e., weeks start |
| on a Monday and the first week contains the year's first Thursday. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__week=52) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__week__gte=32, pub_date__week__lte=38) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: week_day |
|
|
| ``week_day`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, a 'day of the week' match. Allows chaining |
| additional field lookups. |
|
|
| Takes an integer value representing the day of week from 1 (Sunday) to 7 |
| (Saturday). |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__week_day=2) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__week_day__gte=2) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| Note this will match any record with a ``pub_date`` that falls on a Monday (day |
| 2 of the week), regardless of the month or year in which it occurs. Week days |
| are indexed with day 1 being Sunday and day 7 being Saturday. |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: iso_week_day |
|
|
| ``iso_week_day`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, an exact ISO 8601 day of the week match. Allows |
| chaining additional field lookups. |
|
|
| Takes an integer value representing the day of the week from 1 (Monday) to 7 |
| (Sunday). |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__iso_week_day=1) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__iso_week_day__gte=1) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| Note this will match any record with a ``pub_date`` that falls on a Monday (day |
| 1 of the week), regardless of the month or year in which it occurs. Week days |
| are indexed with day 1 being Monday and day 7 being Sunday. |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: quarter |
|
|
| ``quarter`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For date and datetime fields, a 'quarter of the year' match. Allows chaining |
| additional field lookups. Takes an integer value between 1 and 4 representing |
| the quarter of the year. |
|
|
| Example to retrieve entries in the second quarter (April 1 to June 30):: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__quarter=2) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: time |
|
|
| ``time`` |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For datetime fields, casts the value as time. Allows chaining additional field |
| lookups. Takes a :class:`datetime.time` value. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__time=datetime.time(14, 30)) |
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__time__range=(datetime.time(8), datetime.time(17))) |
|
|
| (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because |
| implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, fields are converted to the current time |
| zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions in the |
| database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: hour |
|
|
| ``hour`` |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For datetime and time fields, an exact hour match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer between 0 and 23. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__hour=23) |
| Event.objects.filter(time__hour=5) |
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__hour__gte=12) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('hour' FROM timestamp) = '23'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('hour' FROM time) = '5'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('hour' FROM timestamp) >= '12'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: minute |
|
|
| ``minute`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For datetime and time fields, an exact minute match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer between 0 and 59. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__minute=29) |
| Event.objects.filter(time__minute=46) |
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__minute__gte=29) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('minute' FROM timestamp) = '29'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('minute' FROM time) = '46'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('minute' FROM timestamp) >= '29'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: second |
|
|
| ``second`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| For datetime and time fields, an exact second match. Allows chaining additional |
| field lookups. Takes an integer between 0 and 59. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__second=31) |
| Event.objects.filter(time__second=2) |
| Event.objects.filter(timestamp__second__gte=31) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('second' FROM timestamp) = '31'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('second' FROM time) = '2'; |
| SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('second' FROM timestamp) >= '31'; |
|
|
| (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.) |
|
|
| When :setting:`USE_TZ` is ``True``, datetime fields are converted to the |
| current time zone before filtering. This requires :ref:`time zone definitions |
| in the database <database-time-zone-definitions>`. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: isnull |
|
|
| ``isnull`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Takes either ``True`` or ``False``, which correspond to SQL queries of |
| ``IS NULL`` and ``IS NOT NULL``, respectively. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__isnull=True) |
|
|
| SQL equivalent: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE pub_date IS NULL; |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: regex |
|
|
| ``regex`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-sensitive regular expression match. |
|
|
| The regular expression syntax is that of the database backend in use. |
| In the case of SQLite, which has no built in regular expression support, |
| this feature is provided by a (Python) user-defined REGEXP function, and |
| the regular expression syntax is therefore that of Python's ``re`` module. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(title__regex=r"^(An?|The) +") |
|
|
| SQL equivalents: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP BINARY '^(An?|The) +'; -- MySQL |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(title, '^(An?|The) +', 'c'); -- Oracle |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title ~ '^(An?|The) +'; -- PostgreSQL |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '^(An?|The) +'; -- SQLite |
|
|
| Using raw strings (e.g., ``r'foo'`` instead of ``'foo'``) for passing in the |
| regular expression syntax is recommended. |
|
|
| .. fieldlookup:: iregex |
|
|
| ``iregex`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Case-insensitive regular expression match. |
|
|
| Example:: |
|
|
| Entry.objects.get(title__iregex=r"^(an?|the) +") |
|
|
| SQL equivalents: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: sql |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '^(an?|the) +'; -- MySQL |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(title, '^(an?|the) +', 'i'); -- Oracle |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title ~* '^(an?|the) +'; -- PostgreSQL |
|
|
| SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '(?i)^(an?|the) +'; -- SQLite |
|
|
| .. _aggregation-functions: |
|
|
| Aggregation functions |
| --------------------- |
|
|
| .. currentmodule:: django.db.models |
|
|
| Django provides the following aggregation functions in the |
| ``django.db.models`` module. For details on how to use these |
| aggregate functions, see :doc:`the topic guide on aggregation |
| </topics/db/aggregation>`. See the :class:`~django.db.models.Aggregate` |
| documentation to learn how to create your aggregates. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| SQLite can't handle aggregation on date/time fields out of the box. |
| This is because there are no native date/time fields in SQLite and Django |
| currently emulates these features using a text field. Attempts to use |
| aggregation on date/time fields in SQLite will raise ``NotSupportedError``. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Empty queryset |
|
|
| Aggregation functions return ``None`` when used with an empty |
| ``QuerySet``. For example, the ``Sum`` aggregation function returns ``None`` |
| instead of ``0`` if the ``QuerySet`` contains no entries. To return another |
| value instead, pass a value to the ``default`` argument. An exception is |
| ``Count``, which does return ``0`` if the ``QuerySet`` is empty. ``Count`` |
| does not support the ``default`` argument. |
|
|
| All aggregates have the following parameters in common: |
|
|
| ``expressions`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Strings that reference fields on the model, transforms of the field, or |
| :doc:`query expressions </ref/models/expressions>`. |
|
|
| ``output_field`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| An optional argument that represents the :doc:`model field </ref/models/fields>` |
| of the return value |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When combining multiple field types, Django can only determine the |
| ``output_field`` if all fields are of the same type. Otherwise, you |
| must provide the ``output_field`` yourself. |
|
|
| .. _aggregate-filter: |
|
|
| ``filter`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| An optional :class:`Q object <django.db.models.Q>` that's used to filter the |
| rows that are aggregated. |
|
|
| See :ref:`conditional-aggregation` and :ref:`filtering-on-annotations` for |
| example usage. |
|
|
| .. _aggregate-default: |
|
|
| ``default`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| An optional argument that allows specifying a value to use as a default value |
| when the queryset (or grouping) contains no entries. |
|
|
| ``**extra`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| Keyword arguments that can provide extra context for the SQL generated |
| by the aggregate. |
|
|
| ``Avg`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Avg(expression, output_field=None, distinct=False, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the mean value of the given expression, which must be numeric |
| unless you specify a different ``output_field``. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__avg`` |
| * Return type: ``float`` if input is ``int``, otherwise same as input |
| field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| .. attribute:: distinct |
|
|
| Optional. If ``distinct=True``, ``Avg`` returns the mean value of |
| unique values. This is the SQL equivalent of ``AVG(DISTINCT <field>)``. |
| The default value is ``False``. |
|
|
| ``Count`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Count(expression, distinct=False, filter=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the number of objects that are related through the provided |
| expression. ``Count('*')`` is equivalent to the SQL ``COUNT(*)`` |
| expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__count`` |
| * Return type: ``int`` |
|
|
| .. attribute:: distinct |
|
|
| Optional. If ``distinct=True``, the count will only include unique |
| instances. This is the SQL equivalent of ``COUNT(DISTINCT <field>)``. |
| The default value is ``False``. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| The ``default`` argument is not supported. |
|
|
| ``Max`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Max(expression, output_field=None, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the maximum value of the given expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__max`` |
| * Return type: same as input field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| ``Min`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Min(expression, output_field=None, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the minimum value of the given expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__min`` |
| * Return type: same as input field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| ``StdDev`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: StdDev(expression, output_field=None, sample=False, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the standard deviation of the data in the provided expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__stddev`` |
| * Return type: ``float`` if input is ``int``, otherwise same as input |
| field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| .. attribute:: sample |
|
|
| Optional. By default, ``StdDev`` returns the population standard |
| deviation. However, if ``sample=True``, the return value will be the |
| sample standard deviation. |
|
|
| ``Sum`` |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Sum(expression, output_field=None, distinct=False, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Computes the sum of all values of the given expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__sum`` |
| * Return type: same as input field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| .. attribute:: distinct |
|
|
| Optional. If ``distinct=True``, ``Sum`` returns the sum of unique |
| values. This is the SQL equivalent of ``SUM(DISTINCT <field>)``. The |
| default value is ``False``. |
|
|
| ``Variance`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: Variance(expression, output_field=None, sample=False, filter=None, default=None, **extra) |
|
|
| Returns the variance of the data in the provided expression. |
|
|
| * Default alias: ``<field>__variance`` |
| * Return type: ``float`` if input is ``int``, otherwise same as input |
| field, or ``output_field`` if supplied |
|
|
| .. attribute:: sample |
|
|
| Optional. By default, ``Variance`` returns the population variance. |
| However, if ``sample=True``, the return value will be the sample |
| variance. |
|
|
| Query-related tools |
| =================== |
|
|
| This section provides reference material for query-related tools not documented |
| elsewhere. |
|
|
| ``Q()`` objects |
| --------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: Q |
|
|
| A ``Q()`` object represents an SQL condition that can be used in |
| database-related operations. It's similar to how an |
| :class:`F() <django.db.models.F>` object represents the value of a model field |
| or annotation. They make it possible to define and reuse conditions, and |
| combine them using operators such as ``|`` (``OR``), ``&`` (``AND``), and ``^`` |
| (``XOR``). See :ref:`complex-lookups-with-q`. |
|
|
| ``Prefetch()`` objects |
| ---------------------- |
|
|
| .. class:: Prefetch(lookup, queryset=None, to_attr=None) |
|
|
| The ``Prefetch()`` object can be used to control the operation of |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.prefetch_related()`. |
|
|
| The ``lookup`` argument describes the relations to follow and works the same |
| as the string based lookups passed to |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.prefetch_related()`. For example: |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import Prefetch |
| >>> Question.objects.prefetch_related(Prefetch('choice_set')).get().choice_set.all() |
| <QuerySet [<Choice: Not much>, <Choice: The sky>, <Choice: Just hacking again>]> |
| # This will only execute two queries regardless of the number of Question |
| # and Choice objects. |
| >>> Question.objects.prefetch_related(Prefetch('choice_set')) |
| <QuerySet [<Question: What's up?>]> |
|
|
| The ``queryset`` argument supplies a base ``QuerySet`` for the given lookup. |
| This is useful to further filter down the prefetch operation, or to call |
| :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_related()` from the prefetched |
| relation, hence reducing the number of queries even further: |
|
|
| >>> voted_choices = Choice.objects.filter(votes__gt=0) |
| >>> voted_choices |
| <QuerySet [<Choice: The sky>]> |
| >>> prefetch = Prefetch('choice_set', queryset=voted_choices) |
| >>> Question.objects.prefetch_related(prefetch).get().choice_set.all() |
| <QuerySet [<Choice: The sky>]> |
|
|
| The ``to_attr`` argument sets the result of the prefetch operation to a custom |
| attribute: |
|
|
| >>> prefetch = Prefetch('choice_set', queryset=voted_choices, to_attr='voted_choices') |
| >>> Question.objects.prefetch_related(prefetch).get().voted_choices |
| [<Choice: The sky>] |
| >>> Question.objects.prefetch_related(prefetch).get().choice_set.all() |
| <QuerySet [<Choice: Not much>, <Choice: The sky>, <Choice: Just hacking again>]> |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| When using ``to_attr`` the prefetched result is stored in a list. This can |
| provide a significant speed improvement over traditional |
| ``prefetch_related`` calls which store the cached result within a |
| ``QuerySet`` instance. |
|
|
| ``prefetch_related_objects()`` |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| .. function:: prefetch_related_objects(model_instances, *related_lookups) |
|
|
| Prefetches the given lookups on an iterable of model instances. This is useful |
| in code that receives a list of model instances as opposed to a ``QuerySet``; |
| for example, when fetching models from a cache or instantiating them manually. |
|
|
| Pass an iterable of model instances (must all be of the same class) and the |
| lookups or :class:`Prefetch` objects you want to prefetch for. For example: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import prefetch_related_objects |
| >>> restaurants = fetch_top_restaurants_from_cache() # A list of Restaurants |
| >>> prefetch_related_objects(restaurants, "pizzas__toppings") |
|
|
| When using multiple databases with ``prefetch_related_objects``, the prefetch |
| query will use the database associated with the model instance. This can be |
| overridden by using a custom queryset in a related lookup. |
|
|
| ``FilteredRelation()`` objects |
| ------------------------------ |
|
|
| .. class:: FilteredRelation(relation_name, *, condition=Q()) |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilteredRelation.relation_name |
|
|
| The name of the field on which you'd like to filter the relation. |
|
|
| .. attribute:: FilteredRelation.condition |
|
|
| A :class:`~django.db.models.Q` object to control the filtering. |
|
|
| ``FilteredRelation`` is used with :meth:`~.QuerySet.annotate()` to create an |
| ``ON`` clause when a ``JOIN`` is performed. It doesn't act on the default |
| relationship but on the annotation name (``pizzas_vegetarian`` in example |
| below). |
|
|
| For example, to find restaurants that have vegetarian pizzas with |
| ``'mozzarella'`` in the name: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> from django.db.models import FilteredRelation, Q |
| >>> Restaurant.objects.annotate( |
| ... pizzas_vegetarian=FilteredRelation( |
| ... "pizzas", |
| ... condition=Q(pizzas__vegetarian=True), |
| ... ), |
| ... ).filter(pizzas_vegetarian__name__icontains="mozzarella") |
|
|
| If there are a large number of pizzas, this queryset performs better than: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> Restaurant.objects.filter( |
| ... pizzas__vegetarian=True, |
| ... pizzas__name__icontains="mozzarella", |
| ... ) |
|
|
| because the filtering in the ``WHERE`` clause of the first queryset will only |
| operate on vegetarian pizzas. |
|
|
| ``FilteredRelation`` doesn't support: |
|
|
| * :meth:`.QuerySet.only` and :meth:`~.QuerySet.prefetch_related`. |
| * A :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.fields.GenericForeignKey` |
| inherited from a parent model. |
|
|