instances.txt 27 KB

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  1. ========================
  2. Model instance reference
  3. ========================
  4. .. currentmodule:: django.db.models
  5. This document describes the details of the ``Model`` API. It builds on the
  6. material presented in the :doc:`model </topics/db/models>` and :doc:`database
  7. query </topics/db/queries>` guides, so you'll probably want to read and
  8. understand those documents before reading this one.
  9. Throughout this reference we'll use the :ref:`example Weblog models
  10. <queryset-model-example>` presented in the :doc:`database query guide
  11. </topics/db/queries>`.
  12. Creating objects
  13. ================
  14. To create a new instance of a model, just instantiate it like any other Python
  15. class:
  16. .. class:: Model(**kwargs)
  17. The keyword arguments are simply the names of the fields you've defined on your
  18. model. Note that instantiating a model in no way touches your database; for
  19. that, you need to :meth:`~Model.save()`.
  20. .. note::
  21. You may be tempted to customize the model by overriding the ``__init__``
  22. method. If you do so, however, take care not to change the calling
  23. signature as any change may prevent the model instance from being saved.
  24. Rather than overriding ``__init__``, try using one of these approaches:
  25. 1. Add a classmethod on the model class::
  26. class Book(models.Model):
  27. title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  28. @classmethod
  29. def create(cls, title):
  30. book = cls(title=title)
  31. # do something with the book
  32. return book
  33. book = Book.create("Pride and Prejudice")
  34. 2. Add a method on a custom manager (usually preferred)::
  35. class BookManager(models.Manager):
  36. def create_book(self, title):
  37. book = self.create(title=title)
  38. # do something with the book
  39. return book
  40. class Book(models.Model):
  41. title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  42. objects = BookManager()
  43. book = Book.objects.create_book("Pride and Prejudice")
  44. .. _validating-objects:
  45. Validating objects
  46. ==================
  47. There are three steps involved in validating a model:
  48. 1. Validate the model fields - :meth:`Model.clean_fields()`
  49. 2. Validate the model as a whole - :meth:`Model.clean()`
  50. 3. Validate the field uniqueness - :meth:`Model.validate_unique()`
  51. All three steps are performed when you call a model's
  52. :meth:`~Model.full_clean()` method.
  53. When you use a :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm`, the call to
  54. :meth:`~django.forms.Form.is_valid()` will perform these validation steps for
  55. all the fields that are included on the form. See the :doc:`ModelForm
  56. documentation </topics/forms/modelforms>` for more information. You should only
  57. need to call a model's :meth:`~Model.full_clean()` method if you plan to handle
  58. validation errors yourself, or if you have excluded fields from the
  59. :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm` that require validation.
  60. .. method:: Model.full_clean(exclude=None)
  61. This method calls :meth:`Model.clean_fields()`, :meth:`Model.clean()`, and
  62. :meth:`Model.validate_unique()`, in that order and raises a
  63. :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` that has a ``message_dict``
  64. attribute containing errors from all three stages.
  65. The optional ``exclude`` argument can be used to provide a list of field names
  66. that can be excluded from validation and cleaning.
  67. :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm` uses this argument to exclude fields that
  68. aren't present on your form from being validated since any errors raised could
  69. not be corrected by the user.
  70. Note that ``full_clean()`` will *not* be called automatically when you call
  71. your model's :meth:`~Model.save()` method, nor as a result of
  72. :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm` validation. In the case of
  73. :class:`~django.forms.ModelForm` validation, :meth:`Model.clean_fields()`,
  74. :meth:`Model.clean()`, and :meth:`Model.validate_unique()` are all called
  75. individually.
  76. You'll need to call ``full_clean`` manually when you want to run one-step model
  77. validation for your own manually created models. For example::
  78. try:
  79. article.full_clean()
  80. except ValidationError as e:
  81. # Do something based on the errors contained in e.message_dict.
  82. # Display them to a user, or handle them programatically.
  83. pass
  84. The first step ``full_clean()`` performs is to clean each individual field.
  85. .. method:: Model.clean_fields(exclude=None)
  86. This method will validate all fields on your model. The optional ``exclude``
  87. argument lets you provide a list of field names to exclude from validation. It
  88. will raise a :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` if any fields fail
  89. validation.
  90. The second step ``full_clean()`` performs is to call :meth:`Model.clean()`.
  91. This method should be overridden to perform custom validation on your model.
  92. .. method:: Model.clean()
  93. This method should be used to provide custom model validation, and to modify
  94. attributes on your model if desired. For instance, you could use it to
  95. automatically provide a value for a field, or to do validation that requires
  96. access to more than a single field::
  97. def clean(self):
  98. from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
  99. # Don't allow draft entries to have a pub_date.
  100. if self.status == 'draft' and self.pub_date is not None:
  101. raise ValidationError('Draft entries may not have a publication date.')
  102. # Set the pub_date for published items if it hasn't been set already.
  103. if self.status == 'published' and self.pub_date is None:
  104. self.pub_date = datetime.date.today()
  105. Any :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` exceptions raised by
  106. ``Model.clean()`` will be stored in a special key error dictionary key,
  107. ``NON_FIELD_ERRORS``, that is used for errors that are tied to the entire model
  108. instead of to a specific field::
  109. from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError, NON_FIELD_ERRORS
  110. try:
  111. article.full_clean()
  112. except ValidationError as e:
  113. non_field_errors = e.message_dict[NON_FIELD_ERRORS]
  114. Finally, ``full_clean()`` will check any unique constraints on your model.
  115. .. method:: Model.validate_unique(exclude=None)
  116. This method is similar to :meth:`~Model.clean_fields`, but validates all
  117. uniqueness constraints on your model instead of individual field values. The
  118. optional ``exclude`` argument allows you to provide a list of field names to
  119. exclude from validation. It will raise a
  120. :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ValidationError` if any fields fail validation.
  121. Note that if you provide an ``exclude`` argument to ``validate_unique()``, any
  122. :attr:`~django.db.models.Options.unique_together` constraint involving one of
  123. the fields you provided will not be checked.
  124. Saving objects
  125. ==============
  126. To save an object back to the database, call ``save()``:
  127. .. method:: Model.save([force_insert=False, force_update=False, using=DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS, update_fields=None])
  128. If you want customized saving behavior, you can override this ``save()``
  129. method. See :ref:`overriding-model-methods` for more details.
  130. The model save process also has some subtleties; see the sections below.
  131. Auto-incrementing primary keys
  132. ------------------------------
  133. If a model has an :class:`~django.db.models.AutoField` — an auto-incrementing
  134. primary key — then that auto-incremented value will be calculated and saved as
  135. an attribute on your object the first time you call ``save()``::
  136. >>> b2 = Blog(name='Cheddar Talk', tagline='Thoughts on cheese.')
  137. >>> b2.id # Returns None, because b doesn't have an ID yet.
  138. >>> b2.save()
  139. >>> b2.id # Returns the ID of your new object.
  140. There's no way to tell what the value of an ID will be before you call
  141. ``save()``, because that value is calculated by your database, not by Django.
  142. For convenience, each model has an :class:`~django.db.models.AutoField` named
  143. ``id`` by default unless you explicitly specify ``primary_key=True`` on a field
  144. in your model. See the documentation for :class:`~django.db.models.AutoField`
  145. for more details.
  146. The ``pk`` property
  147. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  148. .. attribute:: Model.pk
  149. Regardless of whether you define a primary key field yourself, or let Django
  150. supply one for you, each model will have a property called ``pk``. It behaves
  151. like a normal attribute on the model, but is actually an alias for whichever
  152. attribute is the primary key field for the model. You can read and set this
  153. value, just as you would for any other attribute, and it will update the
  154. correct field in the model.
  155. Explicitly specifying auto-primary-key values
  156. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  157. If a model has an :class:`~django.db.models.AutoField` but you want to define a
  158. new object's ID explicitly when saving, just define it explicitly before
  159. saving, rather than relying on the auto-assignment of the ID::
  160. >>> b3 = Blog(id=3, name='Cheddar Talk', tagline='Thoughts on cheese.')
  161. >>> b3.id # Returns 3.
  162. >>> b3.save()
  163. >>> b3.id # Returns 3.
  164. If you assign auto-primary-key values manually, make sure not to use an
  165. already-existing primary-key value! If you create a new object with an explicit
  166. primary-key value that already exists in the database, Django will assume you're
  167. changing the existing record rather than creating a new one.
  168. Given the above ``'Cheddar Talk'`` blog example, this example would override the
  169. previous record in the database::
  170. b4 = Blog(id=3, name='Not Cheddar', tagline='Anything but cheese.')
  171. b4.save() # Overrides the previous blog with ID=3!
  172. See `How Django knows to UPDATE vs. INSERT`_, below, for the reason this
  173. happens.
  174. Explicitly specifying auto-primary-key values is mostly useful for bulk-saving
  175. objects, when you're confident you won't have primary-key collision.
  176. What happens when you save?
  177. ---------------------------
  178. When you save an object, Django performs the following steps:
  179. 1. **Emit a pre-save signal.** The :doc:`signal </ref/signals>`
  180. :attr:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save` is sent, allowing any
  181. functions listening for that signal to take some customized
  182. action.
  183. 2. **Pre-process the data.** Each field on the object is asked to
  184. perform any automated data modification that the field may need
  185. to perform.
  186. Most fields do *no* pre-processing — the field data is kept as-is.
  187. Pre-processing is only used on fields that have special behavior. For
  188. example, if your model has a :class:`~django.db.models.DateField` with
  189. ``auto_now=True``, the pre-save phase will alter the data in the object
  190. to ensure that the date field contains the current date stamp. (Our
  191. documentation doesn't yet include a list of all the fields with this
  192. "special behavior.")
  193. 3. **Prepare the data for the database.** Each field is asked to provide
  194. its current value in a data type that can be written to the database.
  195. Most fields require *no* data preparation. Simple data types, such as
  196. integers and strings, are 'ready to write' as a Python object. However,
  197. more complex data types often require some modification.
  198. For example, :class:`~django.db.models.DateField` fields use a Python
  199. ``datetime`` object to store data. Databases don't store ``datetime``
  200. objects, so the field value must be converted into an ISO-compliant date
  201. string for insertion into the database.
  202. 4. **Insert the data into the database.** The pre-processed, prepared
  203. data is then composed into an SQL statement for insertion into the
  204. database.
  205. 5. **Emit a post-save signal.** The signal
  206. :attr:`django.db.models.signals.post_save` is sent, allowing
  207. any functions listening for that signal to take some customized
  208. action.
  209. How Django knows to UPDATE vs. INSERT
  210. -------------------------------------
  211. You may have noticed Django database objects use the same ``save()`` method
  212. for creating and changing objects. Django abstracts the need to use ``INSERT``
  213. or ``UPDATE`` SQL statements. Specifically, when you call ``save()``, Django
  214. follows this algorithm:
  215. * If the object's primary key attribute is set to a value that evaluates to
  216. ``True`` (i.e., a value other than ``None`` or the empty string), Django
  217. executes a ``SELECT`` query to determine whether a record with the given
  218. primary key already exists.
  219. * If the record with the given primary key does already exist, Django
  220. executes an ``UPDATE`` query.
  221. * If the object's primary key attribute is *not* set, or if it's set but a
  222. record doesn't exist, Django executes an ``INSERT``.
  223. The one gotcha here is that you should be careful not to specify a primary-key
  224. value explicitly when saving new objects, if you cannot guarantee the
  225. primary-key value is unused. For more on this nuance, see `Explicitly specifying
  226. auto-primary-key values`_ above and `Forcing an INSERT or UPDATE`_ below.
  227. .. _ref-models-force-insert:
  228. Forcing an INSERT or UPDATE
  229. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  230. In some rare circumstances, it's necessary to be able to force the
  231. :meth:`~Model.save()` method to perform an SQL ``INSERT`` and not fall back to
  232. doing an ``UPDATE``. Or vice-versa: update, if possible, but not insert a new
  233. row. In these cases you can pass the ``force_insert=True`` or
  234. ``force_update=True`` parameters to the :meth:`~Model.save()` method.
  235. Obviously, passing both parameters is an error: you cannot both insert *and*
  236. update at the same time!
  237. It should be very rare that you'll need to use these parameters. Django will
  238. almost always do the right thing and trying to override that will lead to
  239. errors that are difficult to track down. This feature is for advanced use
  240. only.
  241. Using ``update_fields`` will force an update similarly to ``force_update``.
  242. Updating attributes based on existing fields
  243. --------------------------------------------
  244. Sometimes you'll need to perform a simple arithmetic task on a field, such
  245. as incrementing or decrementing the current value. The obvious way to
  246. achieve this is to do something like::
  247. >>> product = Product.objects.get(name='Venezuelan Beaver Cheese')
  248. >>> product.number_sold += 1
  249. >>> product.save()
  250. If the old ``number_sold`` value retrieved from the database was 10, then
  251. the value of 11 will be written back to the database.
  252. This sequence has a standard update problem in that it contains a race
  253. condition. If another thread of execution has already saved an updated value
  254. after the current thread retrieved the old value, the current thread will only
  255. save the old value plus one, rather than the new (current) value plus one.
  256. The process can be made robust and slightly faster by expressing the update
  257. relative to the original field value, rather than as an explicit assignment of
  258. a new value. Django provides :ref:`F() expressions <query-expressions>` for
  259. performing this kind of relative update. Using ``F()`` expressions, the
  260. previous example is expressed as::
  261. >>> from django.db.models import F
  262. >>> product = Product.objects.get(name='Venezuelan Beaver Cheese')
  263. >>> product.number_sold = F('number_sold') + 1
  264. >>> product.save()
  265. This approach doesn't use the initial value from the database. Instead, it
  266. makes the database do the update based on whatever value is current at the time
  267. that the :meth:`~Model.save()` is executed.
  268. Once the object has been saved, you must reload the object in order to access
  269. the actual value that was applied to the updated field::
  270. >>> product = Products.objects.get(pk=product.pk)
  271. >>> print(product.number_sold)
  272. 42
  273. For more details, see the documentation on :ref:`F() expressions
  274. <query-expressions>` and their :ref:`use in update queries
  275. <topics-db-queries-update>`.
  276. Specifying which fields to save
  277. -------------------------------
  278. .. versionadded:: 1.5
  279. If ``save()`` is passed a list of field names in keyword argument
  280. ``update_fields``, only the fields named in that list will be updated.
  281. This may be desirable if you want to update just one or a few fields on
  282. an object. There will be a slight performance benefit from preventing
  283. all of the model fields from being updated in the database. For example:
  284. product.name = 'Name changed again'
  285. product.save(update_fields=['name'])
  286. The ``update_fields`` argument can be any iterable containing strings. An
  287. empty ``update_fields`` iterable will skip the save. A value of None will
  288. perform an update on all fields.
  289. Specifying ``update_fields`` will force an update.
  290. When saving a model fetched through deferred model loading
  291. (:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.only()` or
  292. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.defer()`) only the fields loaded
  293. from the DB will get updated. In effect there is an automatic
  294. ``update_fields`` in this case. If you assign or change any deferred field
  295. value, the field will be added to the updated fields.
  296. Deleting objects
  297. ================
  298. .. method:: Model.delete([using=DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS])
  299. Issues a SQL ``DELETE`` for the object. This only deletes the object in the
  300. database; the Python instance will still exist and will still have data in
  301. its fields.
  302. For more details, including how to delete objects in bulk, see
  303. :ref:`topics-db-queries-delete`.
  304. If you want customized deletion behavior, you can override the ``delete()``
  305. method. See :ref:`overriding-model-methods` for more details.
  306. .. _model-instance-methods:
  307. Other model instance methods
  308. ============================
  309. A few object methods have special purposes.
  310. ``__unicode__``
  311. ---------------
  312. .. method:: Model.__unicode__()
  313. The ``__unicode__()`` method is called whenever you call ``unicode()`` on an
  314. object. Django uses ``unicode(obj)`` (or the related function, :meth:`str(obj)
  315. <Model.__str__>`) in a number of places. Most notably, to display an object in
  316. the Django admin site and as the value inserted into a template when it
  317. displays an object. Thus, you should always return a nice, human-readable
  318. representation of the model from the ``__unicode__()`` method.
  319. For example::
  320. class Person(models.Model):
  321. first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
  322. last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
  323. def __unicode__(self):
  324. return u'%s %s' % (self.first_name, self.last_name)
  325. If you define a ``__unicode__()`` method on your model and not a
  326. :meth:`~Model.__str__()` method, Django will automatically provide you with a
  327. :meth:`~Model.__str__()` that calls ``__unicode__()`` and then converts the
  328. result correctly to a UTF-8 encoded string object. This is recommended
  329. development practice: define only ``__unicode__()`` and let Django take care of
  330. the conversion to string objects when required.
  331. ``__str__``
  332. -----------
  333. .. method:: Model.__str__()
  334. The ``__str__()`` method is called whenever you call ``str()`` on an object. The main use for this method directly inside Django is when the ``repr()`` output of a model is displayed anywhere (for example, in debugging output).
  335. Thus, you should return a nice, human-readable string for the object's
  336. ``__str__()``. It isn't required to put ``__str__()`` methods everywhere if you have sensible :meth:`~Model.__unicode__()` methods.
  337. The previous :meth:`~Model.__unicode__()` example could be similarly written
  338. using ``__str__()`` like this::
  339. class Person(models.Model):
  340. first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
  341. last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
  342. def __str__(self):
  343. # Note use of django.utils.encoding.force_bytes() here because
  344. # first_name and last_name will be unicode strings.
  345. return force_bytes('%s %s' % (self.first_name, self.last_name))
  346. ``get_absolute_url``
  347. --------------------
  348. .. method:: Model.get_absolute_url()
  349. Define a ``get_absolute_url()`` method to tell Django how to calculate the
  350. canonical URL for an object. To callers, this method should appear to return a
  351. string that can be used to refer to the object over HTTP.
  352. For example::
  353. def get_absolute_url(self):
  354. return "/people/%i/" % self.id
  355. (Whilst this code is correct and simple, it may not be the most portable way to
  356. write this kind of method. The :func:`~django.core.urlresolvers.reverse`
  357. function is usually the best approach.)
  358. For example::
  359. def get_absolute_url(self):
  360. return reverse('people.views.details', args=[str(self.id)])
  361. One place Django uses ``get_absolute_url()`` is in the admin app. If an object
  362. defines this method, the object-editing page will have a "View on site" link
  363. that will jump you directly to the object's public view, as given by
  364. ``get_absolute_url()``.
  365. Similarly, a couple of other bits of Django, such as the :doc:`syndication feed
  366. framework </ref/contrib/syndication>`, use ``get_absolute_url()`` when it is
  367. defined. If it makes sense for your model's instances to each have a unique
  368. URL, you should define ``get_absolute_url()``.
  369. It's good practice to use ``get_absolute_url()`` in templates, instead of
  370. hard-coding your objects' URLs. For example, this template code is bad:
  371. .. code-block:: html+django
  372. <!-- BAD template code. Avoid! -->
  373. <a href="/people/{{ object.id }}/">{{ object.name }}</a>
  374. This template code is much better:
  375. .. code-block:: html+django
  376. <a href="{{ object.get_absolute_url }}">{{ object.name }}</a>
  377. The logic here is that if you change the URL structure of your objects, even
  378. for something simple such as correcting a spelling error, you don't want to
  379. have to track down every place that the URL might be created. Specify it once,
  380. in ``get_absolute_url()`` and have all your other code call that one place.
  381. .. note::
  382. The string you return from ``get_absolute_url()`` **must** contain only
  383. ASCII characters (required by the URI specfication, :rfc:`2396`) and be
  384. URL-encoded, if necessary.
  385. Code and templates calling ``get_absolute_url()`` should be able to use the
  386. result directly without any further processing. You may wish to use the
  387. ``django.utils.encoding.iri_to_uri()`` function to help with this if you
  388. are using unicode strings containing characters outside the ASCII range at
  389. all.
  390. The ``permalink`` decorator
  391. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  392. .. warning::
  393. The ``permalink`` decorator is no longer recommended. You should use
  394. :func:`~django.core.urlresolvers.reverse` in the body of your
  395. ``get_absolute_url`` method instead.
  396. In early versions of Django, there wasn't an easy way to use URLs defined in
  397. URLconf file inside :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_absolute_url`. That
  398. meant you would need to define the URL both in URLConf and
  399. :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_absolute_url`. The ``permalink`` decorator
  400. was added to overcome this DRY principle violation. However, since the
  401. introduction of :func:`~django.core.urlresolvers.reverse` there is no
  402. reason to use ``permalink`` any more.
  403. .. function:: permalink()
  404. This decorator takes the name of a URL pattern (either a view name or a URL
  405. pattern name) and a list of position or keyword arguments and uses the URLconf
  406. patterns to construct the correct, full URL. It returns a string for the
  407. correct URL, with all parameters substituted in the correct positions.
  408. The ``permalink`` decorator is a Python-level equivalent to the :ttag:`url`
  409. template tag and a high-level wrapper for the
  410. :func:`~django.core.urlresolvers.reverse` function.
  411. An example should make it clear how to use ``permalink()``. Suppose your URLconf
  412. contains a line such as::
  413. (r'^people/(\d+)/$', 'people.views.details'),
  414. ...your model could have a :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_absolute_url`
  415. method that looked like this::
  416. from django.db import models
  417. @models.permalink
  418. def get_absolute_url(self):
  419. return ('people.views.details', [str(self.id)])
  420. Similarly, if you had a URLconf entry that looked like::
  421. (r'/archive/(?P<year>\d{4})/(?P<month>\d{2})/(?P<day>\d{2})/$', archive_view)
  422. ...you could reference this using ``permalink()`` as follows::
  423. @models.permalink
  424. def get_absolute_url(self):
  425. return ('archive_view', (), {
  426. 'year': self.created.year,
  427. 'month': self.created.strftime('%m'),
  428. 'day': self.created.strftime('%d')})
  429. Notice that we specify an empty sequence for the second parameter in this case,
  430. because we only want to pass keyword parameters, not positional ones.
  431. In this way, you're associating the model's absolute path with the view that is
  432. used to display it, without repeating the view's URL information anywhere. You
  433. can still use the :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_absolute_url()` method in
  434. templates, as before.
  435. In some cases, such as the use of generic views or the re-use of custom views
  436. for multiple models, specifying the view function may confuse the reverse URL
  437. matcher (because multiple patterns point to the same view). For that case,
  438. Django has :ref:`named URL patterns <naming-url-patterns>`. Using a named URL
  439. pattern, it's possible to give a name to a pattern, and then reference the name
  440. rather than the view function. A named URL pattern is defined by replacing the
  441. pattern tuple by a call to the ``url`` function)::
  442. from django.conf.urls import patterns, url, include
  443. url(r'^people/(\d+)/$', 'blog_views.generic_detail', name='people_view'),
  444. ...and then using that name to perform the reverse URL resolution instead
  445. of the view name::
  446. from django.db import models
  447. @models.permalink
  448. def get_absolute_url(self):
  449. return ('people_view', [str(self.id)])
  450. More details on named URL patterns are in the :doc:`URL dispatch documentation
  451. </topics/http/urls>`.
  452. Extra instance methods
  453. ======================
  454. In addition to :meth:`~Model.save()`, :meth:`~Model.delete()`, a model object
  455. might have some of the following methods:
  456. .. method:: Model.get_FOO_display()
  457. For every field that has :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.choices` set, the
  458. object will have a ``get_FOO_display()`` method, where ``FOO`` is the name of
  459. the field. This method returns the "human-readable" value of the field.
  460. For example::
  461. from django.db import models
  462. class Person(models.Model):
  463. SHIRT_SIZES = (
  464. (u'S', u'Small'),
  465. (u'M', u'Medium'),
  466. (u'L', u'Large'),
  467. )
  468. name = models.CharField(max_length=60)
  469. shirt_size = models.CharField(max_length=2, choices=SHIRT_SIZES)
  470. ::
  471. >>> p = Person(name="Fred Flintstone", shirt_size="L")
  472. >>> p.save()
  473. >>> p.shirt_size
  474. u'L'
  475. >>> p.get_shirt_size_display()
  476. u'Large'
  477. .. method:: Model.get_next_by_FOO(\**kwargs)
  478. .. method:: Model.get_previous_by_FOO(\**kwargs)
  479. For every :class:`~django.db.models.DateField` and
  480. :class:`~django.db.models.DateTimeField` that does not have :attr:`null=True
  481. <django.db.models.Field.null>`, the object will have ``get_next_by_FOO()`` and
  482. ``get_previous_by_FOO()`` methods, where ``FOO`` is the name of the field. This
  483. returns the next and previous object with respect to the date field, raising
  484. a :exc:`~django.db.DoesNotExist` exception when appropriate.
  485. Both methods accept optional keyword arguments, which should be in the format
  486. described in :ref:`Field lookups <field-lookups>`.
  487. Note that in the case of identical date values, these methods will use the
  488. primary key as a tie-breaker. This guarantees that no records are skipped or
  489. duplicated. That also means you cannot use those methods on unsaved objects.