querysets.txt 61 KB

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  1. ======================
  2. QuerySet API reference
  3. ======================
  4. .. currentmodule:: django.db.models.QuerySet
  5. This document describes the details of the ``QuerySet`` 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. .. _when-querysets-are-evaluated:
  13. When QuerySets are evaluated
  14. ============================
  15. Internally, a ``QuerySet`` can be constructed, filtered, sliced, and generally
  16. passed around without actually hitting the database. No database activity
  17. actually occurs until you do something to evaluate the queryset.
  18. You can evaluate a ``QuerySet`` in the following ways:
  19. * **Iteration.** A ``QuerySet`` is iterable, and it executes its database
  20. query the first time you iterate over it. For example, this will print
  21. the headline of all entries in the database::
  22. for e in Entry.objects.all():
  23. print e.headline
  24. * **Slicing.** As explained in :ref:`limiting-querysets`, a ``QuerySet`` can
  25. be sliced, using Python's array-slicing syntax. Usually slicing a
  26. ``QuerySet`` returns another (unevaluated) ``QuerySet``, but Django will
  27. execute the database query if you use the "step" parameter of slice
  28. syntax.
  29. * **Pickling/Caching.** See the following section for details of what
  30. is involved when `pickling QuerySets`_. The important thing for the
  31. purposes of this section is that the results are read from the database.
  32. * **repr().** A ``QuerySet`` is evaluated when you call ``repr()`` on it.
  33. This is for convenience in the Python interactive interpreter, so you can
  34. immediately see your results when using the API interactively.
  35. * **len().** A ``QuerySet`` is evaluated when you call ``len()`` on it.
  36. This, as you might expect, returns the length of the result list.
  37. Note: *Don't* use ``len()`` on ``QuerySet``\s if all you want to do is
  38. determine the number of records in the set. It's much more efficient to
  39. handle a count at the database level, using SQL's ``SELECT COUNT(*)``,
  40. and Django provides a ``count()`` method for precisely this reason. See
  41. ``count()`` below.
  42. * **list().** Force evaluation of a ``QuerySet`` by calling ``list()`` on
  43. it. For example::
  44. entry_list = list(Entry.objects.all())
  45. Be warned, though, that this could have a large memory overhead, because
  46. Django will load each element of the list into memory. In contrast,
  47. iterating over a ``QuerySet`` will take advantage of your database to
  48. load data and instantiate objects only as you need them.
  49. * **bool().** Testing a ``QuerySet`` in a boolean context, such as using
  50. ``bool()``, ``or``, ``and`` or an ``if`` statement, will cause the query
  51. to be executed. If there is at least one result, the ``QuerySet`` is
  52. ``True``, otherwise ``False``. For example::
  53. if Entry.objects.filter(headline="Test"):
  54. print "There is at least one Entry with the headline Test"
  55. Note: *Don't* use this if all you want to do is determine if at least one
  56. result exists, and don't need the actual objects. It's more efficient to
  57. use ``exists()`` (see below).
  58. .. _pickling QuerySets:
  59. Pickling QuerySets
  60. ------------------
  61. If you pickle_ a ``QuerySet``, this will force all the results to be loaded
  62. into memory prior to pickling. Pickling is usually used as a precursor to
  63. caching and when the cached queryset is reloaded, you want the results to
  64. already be present and ready for use (reading from the database can take some
  65. time, defeating the purpose of caching). This means that when you unpickle a
  66. ``QuerySet``, it contains the results at the moment it was pickled, rather
  67. than the results that are currently in the database.
  68. If you only want to pickle the necessary information to recreate the
  69. ``QuerySet`` from the database at a later time, pickle the ``query`` attribute
  70. of the ``QuerySet``. You can then recreate the original ``QuerySet`` (without
  71. any results loaded) using some code like this::
  72. >>> import pickle
  73. >>> query = pickle.loads(s) # Assuming 's' is the pickled string.
  74. >>> qs = MyModel.objects.all()
  75. >>> qs.query = query # Restore the original 'query'.
  76. The ``query`` attribute is an opaque object. It represents the internals of
  77. the query construction and is not part of the public API. However, it is safe
  78. (and fully supported) to pickle and unpickle the attribute's contents as
  79. described here.
  80. .. admonition:: You can't share pickles between versions
  81. Pickles of QuerySets are only valid for the version of Django that
  82. was used to generate them. If you generate a pickle using Django
  83. version N, there is no guarantee that pickle will be readable with
  84. Django version N+1. Pickles should not be used as part of a long-term
  85. archival strategy.
  86. .. _pickle: http://docs.python.org/library/pickle.html
  87. .. _queryset-api:
  88. QuerySet API
  89. ============
  90. Though you usually won't create one manually -- you'll go through a :class:`Manager` -- here's the formal declaration of a ``QuerySet``:
  91. .. class:: QuerySet([model=None])
  92. Usually when you'll interact with a ``QuerySet`` you'll use it by :ref:`chaining
  93. filters <chaining-filters>`. To make this work, most ``QuerySet`` methods return new querysets.
  94. QuerySet methods that return new QuerySets
  95. ------------------------------------------
  96. Django provides a range of ``QuerySet`` refinement methods that modify either
  97. the types of results returned by the ``QuerySet`` or the way its SQL query is
  98. executed.
  99. ``filter(**kwargs)``
  100. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  101. .. method:: filter(**kwargs)
  102. Returns a new ``QuerySet`` containing objects that match the given lookup
  103. parameters.
  104. The lookup parameters (``**kwargs``) should be in the format described in
  105. `Field lookups`_ below. Multiple parameters are joined via ``AND`` in the
  106. underlying SQL statement.
  107. ``exclude(**kwargs)``
  108. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  109. .. method:: exclude(**kwargs)
  110. Returns a new ``QuerySet`` containing objects that do *not* match the given
  111. lookup parameters.
  112. The lookup parameters (``**kwargs``) should be in the format described in
  113. `Field lookups`_ below. Multiple parameters are joined via ``AND`` in the
  114. underlying SQL statement, and the whole thing is enclosed in a ``NOT()``.
  115. This example excludes all entries whose ``pub_date`` is later than 2005-1-3
  116. AND whose ``headline`` is "Hello"::
  117. Entry.objects.exclude(pub_date__gt=datetime.date(2005, 1, 3), headline='Hello')
  118. In SQL terms, that evaluates to::
  119. SELECT ...
  120. WHERE NOT (pub_date > '2005-1-3' AND headline = 'Hello')
  121. This example excludes all entries whose ``pub_date`` is later than 2005-1-3
  122. OR whose headline is "Hello"::
  123. Entry.objects.exclude(pub_date__gt=datetime.date(2005, 1, 3)).exclude(headline='Hello')
  124. In SQL terms, that evaluates to::
  125. SELECT ...
  126. WHERE NOT pub_date > '2005-1-3'
  127. AND NOT headline = 'Hello'
  128. Note the second example is more restrictive.
  129. ``annotate(*args, **kwargs)``
  130. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  131. .. method:: annotate(*args, **kwargs)
  132. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  133. Annotates each object in the ``QuerySet`` with the provided list of
  134. aggregate values (averages, sums, etc) that have been computed over
  135. the objects that are related to the objects in the ``QuerySet``.
  136. Each argument to ``annotate()`` is an annotation that will be added
  137. to each object in the ``QuerySet`` that is returned.
  138. The aggregation functions that are provided by Django are described
  139. in `Aggregation Functions`_ below.
  140. Annotations specified using keyword arguments will use the keyword as
  141. the alias for the annotation. Anonymous arguments will have an alias
  142. generated for them based upon the name of the aggregate function and
  143. the model field that is being aggregated.
  144. For example, if you were manipulating a list of blogs, you may want
  145. to determine how many entries have been made in each blog::
  146. >>> q = Blog.objects.annotate(Count('entry'))
  147. # The name of the first blog
  148. >>> q[0].name
  149. 'Blogasaurus'
  150. # The number of entries on the first blog
  151. >>> q[0].entry__count
  152. 42
  153. The ``Blog`` model doesn't define an ``entry__count`` attribute by itself,
  154. but by using a keyword argument to specify the aggregate function, you can
  155. control the name of the annotation::
  156. >>> q = Blog.objects.annotate(number_of_entries=Count('entry'))
  157. # The number of entries on the first blog, using the name provided
  158. >>> q[0].number_of_entries
  159. 42
  160. For an in-depth discussion of aggregation, see :doc:`the topic guide on
  161. Aggregation </topics/db/aggregation>`.
  162. ``order_by(*fields)``
  163. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  164. .. method:: order_by(*fields)
  165. By default, results returned by a ``QuerySet`` are ordered by the ordering
  166. tuple given by the ``ordering`` option in the model's ``Meta``. You can
  167. override this on a per-``QuerySet`` basis by using the ``order_by`` method.
  168. Example::
  169. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2005).order_by('-pub_date', 'headline')
  170. The result above will be ordered by ``pub_date`` descending, then by
  171. ``headline`` ascending. The negative sign in front of ``"-pub_date"`` indicates
  172. *descending* order. Ascending order is implied. To order randomly, use ``"?"``,
  173. like so::
  174. Entry.objects.order_by('?')
  175. Note: ``order_by('?')`` queries may be expensive and slow, depending on the
  176. database backend you're using.
  177. To order by a field in a different model, use the same syntax as when you are
  178. querying across model relations. That is, the name of the field, followed by a
  179. double underscore (``__``), followed by the name of the field in the new model,
  180. and so on for as many models as you want to join. For example::
  181. Entry.objects.order_by('blog__name', 'headline')
  182. If you try to order by a field that is a relation to another model, Django will
  183. use the default ordering on the related model (or order by the related model's
  184. primary key if there is no ``Meta.ordering`` specified. For example::
  185. Entry.objects.order_by('blog')
  186. ...is identical to::
  187. Entry.objects.order_by('blog__id')
  188. ...since the ``Blog`` model has no default ordering specified.
  189. Be cautious when ordering by fields in related models if you are also using
  190. ``distinct()``. See the note in the `distinct()`_ section for an explanation
  191. of how related model ordering can change the expected results.
  192. It is permissible to specify a multi-valued field to order the results by (for
  193. example, a ``ManyToMany`` field). Normally this won't be a sensible thing to
  194. do and it's really an advanced usage feature. However, if you know that your
  195. queryset's filtering or available data implies that there will only be one
  196. ordering piece of data for each of the main items you are selecting, the
  197. ordering may well be exactly what you want to do. Use ordering on multi-valued
  198. fields with care and make sure the results are what you expect.
  199. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  200. If you don't want any ordering to be applied to a query, not even the default
  201. ordering, call ``order_by()`` with no parameters.
  202. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  203. The syntax for ordering across related models has changed. See the `Django 0.96
  204. documentation`_ for the old behaviour.
  205. .. _Django 0.96 documentation: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/0.96/model-api/#floatfield
  206. There's no way to specify whether ordering should be case sensitive. With
  207. respect to case-sensitivity, Django will order results however your database
  208. backend normally orders them.
  209. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  210. You can tell if a query is ordered or not by checking the
  211. :attr:`QuerySet.ordered` attribute, which will be ``True`` if the
  212. ``QuerySet`` has been ordered in any way.
  213. ``reverse()``
  214. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  215. .. method:: reverse()
  216. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  217. Use the ``reverse()`` method to reverse the order in which a queryset's
  218. elements are returned. Calling ``reverse()`` a second time restores the
  219. ordering back to the normal direction.
  220. To retrieve the ''last'' five items in a queryset, you could do this::
  221. my_queryset.reverse()[:5]
  222. Note that this is not quite the same as slicing from the end of a sequence in
  223. Python. The above example will return the last item first, then the
  224. penultimate item and so on. If we had a Python sequence and looked at
  225. ``seq[-5:]``, we would see the fifth-last item first. Django doesn't support
  226. that mode of access (slicing from the end), because it's not possible to do it
  227. efficiently in SQL.
  228. Also, note that ``reverse()`` should generally only be called on a
  229. ``QuerySet`` which has a defined ordering (e.g., when querying against
  230. a model which defines a default ordering, or when using
  231. ``order_by()``). If no such ordering is defined for a given
  232. ``QuerySet``, calling ``reverse()`` on it has no real effect (the
  233. ordering was undefined prior to calling ``reverse()``, and will remain
  234. undefined afterward).
  235. ``distinct()``
  236. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  237. .. method:: distinct()
  238. Returns a new ``QuerySet`` that uses ``SELECT DISTINCT`` in its SQL query. This
  239. eliminates duplicate rows from the query results.
  240. By default, a ``QuerySet`` will not eliminate duplicate rows. In practice, this
  241. is rarely a problem, because simple queries such as ``Blog.objects.all()``
  242. don't introduce the possibility of duplicate result rows. However, if your
  243. query spans multiple tables, it's possible to get duplicate results when a
  244. ``QuerySet`` is evaluated. That's when you'd use ``distinct()``.
  245. .. note::
  246. Any fields used in an `order_by(*fields)`_ call are included in the SQL
  247. ``SELECT`` columns. This can sometimes lead to unexpected results when
  248. used in conjunction with ``distinct()``. If you order by fields from a
  249. related model, those fields will be added to the selected columns and they
  250. may make otherwise duplicate rows appear to be distinct. Since the extra
  251. columns don't appear in the returned results (they are only there to
  252. support ordering), it sometimes looks like non-distinct results are being
  253. returned.
  254. Similarly, if you use a ``values()`` query to restrict the columns
  255. selected, the columns used in any ``order_by()`` (or default model
  256. ordering) will still be involved and may affect uniqueness of the results.
  257. The moral here is that if you are using ``distinct()`` be careful about
  258. ordering by related models. Similarly, when using ``distinct()`` and
  259. ``values()`` together, be careful when ordering by fields not in the
  260. ``values()`` call.
  261. ``values(*fields)``
  262. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  263. .. method:: values(*fields)
  264. Returns a ``ValuesQuerySet`` -- a ``QuerySet`` that returns dictionaries when
  265. used as an iterable, rather than model-instance objects.
  266. Each of those dictionaries represents an object, with the keys corresponding to
  267. the attribute names of model objects.
  268. This example compares the dictionaries of ``values()`` with the normal model
  269. objects::
  270. # This list contains a Blog object.
  271. >>> Blog.objects.filter(name__startswith='Beatles')
  272. [<Blog: Beatles Blog>]
  273. # This list contains a dictionary.
  274. >>> Blog.objects.filter(name__startswith='Beatles').values()
  275. [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog', 'tagline': 'All the latest Beatles news.'}]
  276. ``values()`` takes optional positional arguments, ``*fields``, which specify
  277. field names to which the ``SELECT`` should be limited. If you specify the
  278. fields, each dictionary will contain only the field keys/values for the fields
  279. you specify. If you don't specify the fields, each dictionary will contain a
  280. key and value for every field in the database table.
  281. Example::
  282. >>> Blog.objects.values()
  283. [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog', 'tagline': 'All the latest Beatles news.'}],
  284. >>> Blog.objects.values('id', 'name')
  285. [{'id': 1, 'name': 'Beatles Blog'}]
  286. A couple of subtleties that are worth mentioning:
  287. * The ``values()`` method does not return anything for
  288. :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` attributes and will raise an
  289. error if you try to pass in this type of field to it.
  290. * If you have a field called ``foo`` that is a
  291. :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey`, the default ``values()`` call
  292. will return a dictionary key called ``foo_id``, since this is the name
  293. of the hidden model attribute that stores the actual value (the ``foo``
  294. attribute refers to the related model). When you are calling
  295. ``values()`` and passing in field names, you can pass in either ``foo``
  296. or ``foo_id`` and you will get back the same thing (the dictionary key
  297. will match the field name you passed in).
  298. For example::
  299. >>> Entry.objects.values()
  300. [{'blog_id': 1, 'headline': u'First Entry', ...}, ...]
  301. >>> Entry.objects.values('blog')
  302. [{'blog': 1}, ...]
  303. >>> Entry.objects.values('blog_id')
  304. [{'blog_id': 1}, ...]
  305. * When using ``values()`` together with ``distinct()``, be aware that
  306. ordering can affect the results. See the note in the `distinct()`_
  307. section, above, for details.
  308. * If you use a ``values()`` clause after an ``extra()`` clause,
  309. any fields defined by a ``select`` argument in the ``extra()``
  310. must be explicitly included in the ``values()`` clause. However,
  311. if the ``extra()`` clause is used after the ``values()``, the
  312. fields added by the select will be included automatically.
  313. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  314. Previously, it was not possible to pass ``blog_id`` to ``values()`` in the above
  315. example, only ``blog``.
  316. A ``ValuesQuerySet`` is useful when you know you're only going to need values
  317. from a small number of the available fields and you won't need the
  318. functionality of a model instance object. It's more efficient to select only
  319. the fields you need to use.
  320. Finally, note a ``ValuesQuerySet`` is a subclass of ``QuerySet``, so it has all
  321. methods of ``QuerySet``. You can call ``filter()`` on it, or ``order_by()``, or
  322. whatever. Yes, that means these two calls are identical::
  323. Blog.objects.values().order_by('id')
  324. Blog.objects.order_by('id').values()
  325. The people who made Django prefer to put all the SQL-affecting methods first,
  326. followed (optionally) by any output-affecting methods (such as ``values()``),
  327. but it doesn't really matter. This is your chance to really flaunt your
  328. individualism.
  329. ``values_list(*fields)``
  330. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  331. .. method:: values_list(*fields)
  332. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  333. This is similar to ``values()`` except that instead of returning dictionaries,
  334. it returns tuples when iterated over. Each tuple contains the value from the
  335. respective field passed into the ``values_list()`` call -- so the first item is
  336. the first field, etc. For example::
  337. >>> Entry.objects.values_list('id', 'headline')
  338. [(1, u'First entry'), ...]
  339. If you only pass in a single field, you can also pass in the ``flat``
  340. parameter. If ``True``, this will mean the returned results are single values,
  341. rather than one-tuples. An example should make the difference clearer::
  342. >>> Entry.objects.values_list('id').order_by('id')
  343. [(1,), (2,), (3,), ...]
  344. >>> Entry.objects.values_list('id', flat=True).order_by('id')
  345. [1, 2, 3, ...]
  346. It is an error to pass in ``flat`` when there is more than one field.
  347. If you don't pass any values to ``values_list()``, it will return all the
  348. fields in the model, in the order they were declared.
  349. ``dates(field, kind, order='ASC')``
  350. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  351. .. method:: dates(field, kind, order='ASC')
  352. Returns a ``DateQuerySet`` -- a ``QuerySet`` that evaluates to a list of
  353. ``datetime.datetime`` objects representing all available dates of a particular
  354. kind within the contents of the ``QuerySet``.
  355. ``field`` should be the name of a ``DateField`` or ``DateTimeField`` of your
  356. model.
  357. ``kind`` should be either ``"year"``, ``"month"`` or ``"day"``. Each
  358. ``datetime.datetime`` object in the result list is "truncated" to the given
  359. ``type``.
  360. * ``"year"`` returns a list of all distinct year values for the field.
  361. * ``"month"`` returns a list of all distinct year/month values for the field.
  362. * ``"day"`` returns a list of all distinct year/month/day values for the field.
  363. ``order``, which defaults to ``'ASC'``, should be either ``'ASC'`` or
  364. ``'DESC'``. This specifies how to order the results.
  365. Examples::
  366. >>> Entry.objects.dates('pub_date', 'year')
  367. [datetime.datetime(2005, 1, 1)]
  368. >>> Entry.objects.dates('pub_date', 'month')
  369. [datetime.datetime(2005, 2, 1), datetime.datetime(2005, 3, 1)]
  370. >>> Entry.objects.dates('pub_date', 'day')
  371. [datetime.datetime(2005, 2, 20), datetime.datetime(2005, 3, 20)]
  372. >>> Entry.objects.dates('pub_date', 'day', order='DESC')
  373. [datetime.datetime(2005, 3, 20), datetime.datetime(2005, 2, 20)]
  374. >>> Entry.objects.filter(headline__contains='Lennon').dates('pub_date', 'day')
  375. [datetime.datetime(2005, 3, 20)]
  376. ``none()``
  377. ~~~~~~~~~~
  378. .. method:: none()
  379. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  380. Returns an ``EmptyQuerySet`` -- a ``QuerySet`` that always evaluates to
  381. an empty list. This can be used in cases where you know that you should
  382. return an empty result set and your caller is expecting a ``QuerySet``
  383. object (instead of returning an empty list, for example.)
  384. Examples::
  385. >>> Entry.objects.none()
  386. []
  387. ``all()``
  388. ~~~~~~~~~
  389. .. method:: all()
  390. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  391. Returns a ''copy'' of the current ``QuerySet`` (or ``QuerySet`` subclass you
  392. pass in). This can be useful in some situations where you might want to pass
  393. in either a model manager or a ``QuerySet`` and do further filtering on the
  394. result. You can safely call ``all()`` on either object and then you'll
  395. definitely have a ``QuerySet`` to work with.
  396. .. _select-related:
  397. ``select_related()``
  398. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  399. .. method:: select_related()
  400. Returns a ``QuerySet`` that will automatically "follow" foreign-key
  401. relationships, selecting that additional related-object data when it executes
  402. its query. This is a performance booster which results in (sometimes much)
  403. larger queries but means later use of foreign-key relationships won't require
  404. database queries.
  405. The following examples illustrate the difference between plain lookups and
  406. ``select_related()`` lookups. Here's standard lookup::
  407. # Hits the database.
  408. e = Entry.objects.get(id=5)
  409. # Hits the database again to get the related Blog object.
  410. b = e.blog
  411. And here's ``select_related`` lookup::
  412. # Hits the database.
  413. e = Entry.objects.select_related().get(id=5)
  414. # Doesn't hit the database, because e.blog has been prepopulated
  415. # in the previous query.
  416. b = e.blog
  417. ``select_related()`` follows foreign keys as far as possible. If you have the
  418. following models::
  419. class City(models.Model):
  420. # ...
  421. class Person(models.Model):
  422. # ...
  423. hometown = models.ForeignKey(City)
  424. class Book(models.Model):
  425. # ...
  426. author = models.ForeignKey(Person)
  427. ...then a call to ``Book.objects.select_related().get(id=4)`` will cache the
  428. related ``Person`` *and* the related ``City``::
  429. b = Book.objects.select_related().get(id=4)
  430. p = b.author # Doesn't hit the database.
  431. c = p.hometown # Doesn't hit the database.
  432. b = Book.objects.get(id=4) # No select_related() in this example.
  433. p = b.author # Hits the database.
  434. c = p.hometown # Hits the database.
  435. Note that, by default, ``select_related()`` does not follow foreign keys that
  436. have ``null=True``.
  437. Usually, using ``select_related()`` can vastly improve performance because your
  438. app can avoid many database calls. However, in situations with deeply nested
  439. sets of relationships ``select_related()`` can sometimes end up following "too
  440. many" relations, and can generate queries so large that they end up being slow.
  441. In these situations, you can use the ``depth`` argument to ``select_related()``
  442. to control how many "levels" of relations ``select_related()`` will actually
  443. follow::
  444. b = Book.objects.select_related(depth=1).get(id=4)
  445. p = b.author # Doesn't hit the database.
  446. c = p.hometown # Requires a database call.
  447. Sometimes you only want to access specific models that are related to your root
  448. model, not all of the related models. In these cases, you can pass the related
  449. field names to ``select_related()`` and it will only follow those relations.
  450. You can even do this for models that are more than one relation away by
  451. separating the field names with double underscores, just as for filters. For
  452. example, if you have this model::
  453. class Room(models.Model):
  454. # ...
  455. building = models.ForeignKey(...)
  456. class Group(models.Model):
  457. # ...
  458. teacher = models.ForeignKey(...)
  459. room = models.ForeignKey(Room)
  460. subject = models.ForeignKey(...)
  461. ...and you only needed to work with the ``room`` and ``subject`` attributes,
  462. you could write this::
  463. g = Group.objects.select_related('room', 'subject')
  464. This is also valid::
  465. g = Group.objects.select_related('room__building', 'subject')
  466. ...and would also pull in the ``building`` relation.
  467. You can refer to any ``ForeignKey`` or ``OneToOneField`` relation in
  468. the list of fields passed to ``select_related``. Ths includes foreign
  469. keys that have ``null=True`` (unlike the default ``select_related()``
  470. call). It's an error to use both a list of fields and the ``depth``
  471. parameter in the same ``select_related()`` call, since they are
  472. conflicting options.
  473. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  474. Both the ``depth`` argument and the ability to specify field names in the call
  475. to ``select_related()`` are new in Django version 1.0.
  476. .. versionchanged:: 1.2
  477. You can also refer to the reverse direction of a ``OneToOneFields`` in
  478. the list of fields passed to ``select_related`` -- that is, you can traverse
  479. a ``OneToOneField`` back to the object on which the field is defined. Instead
  480. of specifying the field name, use the ``related_name`` for the field on the
  481. related object.
  482. ``OneToOneFields`` will not be traversed in the reverse direction if you
  483. are performing a depth-based ``select_related``.
  484. ``extra(select=None, where=None, params=None, tables=None, order_by=None, select_params=None)``
  485. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  486. .. method:: extra(select=None, where=None, params=None, tables=None, order_by=None, select_params=None)
  487. Sometimes, the Django query syntax by itself can't easily express a complex
  488. ``WHERE`` clause. For these edge cases, Django provides the ``extra()``
  489. ``QuerySet`` modifier -- a hook for injecting specific clauses into the SQL
  490. generated by a ``QuerySet``.
  491. By definition, these extra lookups may not be portable to different database
  492. engines (because you're explicitly writing SQL code) and violate the DRY
  493. principle, so you should avoid them if possible.
  494. Specify one or more of ``params``, ``select``, ``where`` or ``tables``. None
  495. of the arguments is required, but you should use at least one of them.
  496. ``select``
  497. The ``select`` argument lets you put extra fields in the ``SELECT`` clause.
  498. It should be a dictionary mapping attribute names to SQL clauses to use to
  499. calculate that attribute.
  500. Example::
  501. Entry.objects.extra(select={'is_recent': "pub_date > '2006-01-01'"})
  502. As a result, each ``Entry`` object will have an extra attribute,
  503. ``is_recent``, a boolean representing whether the entry's ``pub_date`` is
  504. greater than Jan. 1, 2006.
  505. Django inserts the given SQL snippet directly into the ``SELECT``
  506. statement, so the resulting SQL of the above example would be something
  507. like::
  508. SELECT blog_entry.*, (pub_date > '2006-01-01') AS is_recent
  509. FROM blog_entry;
  510. The next example is more advanced; it does a subquery to give each
  511. resulting ``Blog`` object an ``entry_count`` attribute, an integer count
  512. of associated ``Entry`` objects::
  513. Blog.objects.extra(
  514. select={
  515. 'entry_count': 'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM blog_entry WHERE blog_entry.blog_id = blog_blog.id'
  516. },
  517. )
  518. (In this particular case, we're exploiting the fact that the query will
  519. already contain the ``blog_blog`` table in its ``FROM`` clause.)
  520. The resulting SQL of the above example would be::
  521. SELECT blog_blog.*, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM blog_entry WHERE blog_entry.blog_id = blog_blog.id) AS entry_count
  522. FROM blog_blog;
  523. Note that the parenthesis required by most database engines around
  524. subqueries are not required in Django's ``select`` clauses. Also note that
  525. some database backends, such as some MySQL versions, don't support
  526. subqueries.
  527. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  528. In some rare cases, you might wish to pass parameters to the SQL fragments
  529. in ``extra(select=...)``. For this purpose, use the ``select_params``
  530. parameter. Since ``select_params`` is a sequence and the ``select``
  531. attribute is a dictionary, some care is required so that the parameters
  532. are matched up correctly with the extra select pieces. In this situation,
  533. you should use a ``django.utils.datastructures.SortedDict`` for the
  534. ``select`` value, not just a normal Python dictionary.
  535. This will work, for example::
  536. Blog.objects.extra(
  537. select=SortedDict([('a', '%s'), ('b', '%s')]),
  538. select_params=('one', 'two'))
  539. The only thing to be careful about when using select parameters in
  540. ``extra()`` is to avoid using the substring ``"%%s"`` (that's *two*
  541. percent characters before the ``s``) in the select strings. Django's
  542. tracking of parameters looks for ``%s`` and an escaped ``%`` character
  543. like this isn't detected. That will lead to incorrect results.
  544. ``where`` / ``tables``
  545. You can define explicit SQL ``WHERE`` clauses -- perhaps to perform
  546. non-explicit joins -- by using ``where``. You can manually add tables to
  547. the SQL ``FROM`` clause by using ``tables``.
  548. ``where`` and ``tables`` both take a list of strings. All ``where``
  549. parameters are "AND"ed to any other search criteria.
  550. Example::
  551. Entry.objects.extra(where=['id IN (3, 4, 5, 20)'])
  552. ...translates (roughly) into the following SQL::
  553. SELECT * FROM blog_entry WHERE id IN (3, 4, 5, 20);
  554. Be careful when using the ``tables`` parameter if you're specifying
  555. tables that are already used in the query. When you add extra tables
  556. via the ``tables`` parameter, Django assumes you want that table included
  557. an extra time, if it is already included. That creates a problem,
  558. since the table name will then be given an alias. If a table appears
  559. multiple times in an SQL statement, the second and subsequent occurrences
  560. must use aliases so the database can tell them apart. If you're
  561. referring to the extra table you added in the extra ``where`` parameter
  562. this is going to cause errors.
  563. Normally you'll only be adding extra tables that don't already appear in
  564. the query. However, if the case outlined above does occur, there are a few
  565. solutions. First, see if you can get by without including the extra table
  566. and use the one already in the query. If that isn't possible, put your
  567. ``extra()`` call at the front of the queryset construction so that your
  568. table is the first use of that table. Finally, if all else fails, look at
  569. the query produced and rewrite your ``where`` addition to use the alias
  570. given to your extra table. The alias will be the same each time you
  571. construct the queryset in the same way, so you can rely upon the alias
  572. name to not change.
  573. ``order_by``
  574. If you need to order the resulting queryset using some of the new fields
  575. or tables you have included via ``extra()`` use the ``order_by`` parameter
  576. to ``extra()`` and pass in a sequence of strings. These strings should
  577. either be model fields (as in the normal ``order_by()`` method on
  578. querysets), of the form ``table_name.column_name`` or an alias for a column
  579. that you specified in the ``select`` parameter to ``extra()``.
  580. For example::
  581. q = Entry.objects.extra(select={'is_recent': "pub_date > '2006-01-01'"})
  582. q = q.extra(order_by = ['-is_recent'])
  583. This would sort all the items for which ``is_recent`` is true to the front
  584. of the result set (``True`` sorts before ``False`` in a descending
  585. ordering).
  586. This shows, by the way, that you can make multiple calls to
  587. ``extra()`` and it will behave as you expect (adding new constraints each
  588. time).
  589. ``params``
  590. The ``where`` parameter described above may use standard Python database
  591. string placeholders -- ``'%s'`` to indicate parameters the database engine
  592. should automatically quote. The ``params`` argument is a list of any extra
  593. parameters to be substituted.
  594. Example::
  595. Entry.objects.extra(where=['headline=%s'], params=['Lennon'])
  596. Always use ``params`` instead of embedding values directly into ``where``
  597. because ``params`` will ensure values are quoted correctly according to
  598. your particular backend. (For example, quotes will be escaped correctly.)
  599. Bad::
  600. Entry.objects.extra(where=["headline='Lennon'"])
  601. Good::
  602. Entry.objects.extra(where=['headline=%s'], params=['Lennon'])
  603. ``defer(*fields)``
  604. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  605. .. method:: defer(*fields)
  606. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  607. In some complex data-modeling situations, your models might contain a lot of
  608. fields, some of which could contain a lot of data (for example, text fields),
  609. or require expensive processing to convert them to Python objects. If you are
  610. using the results of a queryset in some situation where you know you don't
  611. need those particular fields, you can tell Django not to retrieve them from
  612. the database.
  613. This is done by passing the names of the fields to not load to ``defer()``::
  614. Entry.objects.defer("headline", "body")
  615. A queryset that has deferred fields will still return model instances. Each
  616. deferred field will be retrieved from the database if you access that field
  617. (one at a time, not all the deferred fields at once).
  618. You can make multiple calls to ``defer()``. Each call adds new fields to the
  619. deferred set::
  620. # Defers both the body and headline fields.
  621. Entry.objects.defer("body").filter(rating=5).defer("headline")
  622. 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).
  623. You can defer loading of fields in related models (if the related models are
  624. loading via ``select_related()``) by using the standard double-underscore
  625. notation to separate related fields::
  626. Blog.objects.select_related().defer("entry__headline", "entry__body")
  627. If you want to clear the set of deferred fields, pass ``None`` as a parameter
  628. to ``defer()``::
  629. # Load all fields immediately.
  630. my_queryset.defer(None)
  631. Some fields in a model won't be deferred, even if you ask for them. You can
  632. never defer the loading of the primary key. If you are using
  633. ``select_related()`` to retrieve other models at the same time you shouldn't
  634. defer the loading of the field that connects from the primary model to the
  635. related one (at the moment, that doesn't raise an error, but it will
  636. eventually).
  637. .. note::
  638. The ``defer()`` method (and its cousin, ``only()``, below) are only for
  639. advanced use-cases. They provide an optimization for when you have
  640. analyzed your queries closely and understand *exactly* what information
  641. you need and have measured that the difference between returning the
  642. fields you need and the full set of fields for the model will be
  643. significant. When you are initially developing your applications, don't
  644. bother using ``defer()``; leave it until your query construction has
  645. settled down and you understand where the hot-points are.
  646. ``only(*fields)``
  647. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  648. .. method:: only(*fields)
  649. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  650. The ``only()`` method is more or less the opposite of ``defer()``. You
  651. call it with the fields that should *not* be deferred when retrieving a model.
  652. If you have a model where almost all the fields need to be deferred, using
  653. ``only()`` to specify the complementary set of fields could result in simpler
  654. code.
  655. If you have a model with fields ``name``, ``age`` and ``biography``, the
  656. following two querysets are the same, in terms of deferred fields::
  657. Person.objects.defer("age", "biography")
  658. Person.objects.only("name")
  659. Whenever you call ``only()`` it *replaces* the set of fields to load
  660. immediately. The method's name is mnemonic: **only** those fields are loaded
  661. immediately; the remainder are deferred. Thus, successive calls to ``only()``
  662. result in only the final fields being considered::
  663. # This will defer all fields except the headline.
  664. Entry.objects.only("body", "rating").only("headline")
  665. Since ``defer()`` acts incrementally (adding fields to the deferred list), you
  666. can combine calls to ``only()`` and ``defer()`` and things will behave
  667. logically::
  668. # Final result is that everything except "headline" is deferred.
  669. Entry.objects.only("headline", "body").defer("body")
  670. # Final result loads headline and body immediately (only() replaces any
  671. # existing set of fields).
  672. Entry.objects.defer("body").only("headline", "body")
  673. ``using(alias)``
  674. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  675. .. method:: using(alias)
  676. .. versionadded:: 1.2
  677. This method is for controlling which database the ``QuerySet`` will be
  678. evaluated against if you are using more than one database. The only argument
  679. this method takes is the alias of a database, as defined in
  680. :setting:`DATABASES`.
  681. For example::
  682. # queries the database with the 'default' alias.
  683. >>> Entry.objects.all()
  684. # queries the database with the 'backup' alias
  685. >>> Entry.objects.using('backup')
  686. QuerySet methods that do not return QuerySets
  687. ---------------------------------------------
  688. The following ``QuerySet`` methods evaluate the ``QuerySet`` and return
  689. something *other than* a ``QuerySet``.
  690. These methods do not use a cache (see :ref:`caching-and-querysets`). Rather,
  691. they query the database each time they're called.
  692. ``get(**kwargs)``
  693. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  694. .. method:: get(**kwargs)
  695. Returns the object matching the given lookup parameters, which should be in
  696. the format described in `Field lookups`_.
  697. ``get()`` raises ``MultipleObjectsReturned`` if more than one object was
  698. found. The ``MultipleObjectsReturned`` exception is an attribute of the model
  699. class.
  700. ``get()`` raises a ``DoesNotExist`` exception if an object wasn't found for
  701. the given parameters. This exception is also an attribute of the model class.
  702. Example::
  703. Entry.objects.get(id='foo') # raises Entry.DoesNotExist
  704. The ``DoesNotExist`` exception inherits from
  705. ``django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist``, so you can target multiple
  706. ``DoesNotExist`` exceptions. Example::
  707. from django.core.exceptions import ObjectDoesNotExist
  708. try:
  709. e = Entry.objects.get(id=3)
  710. b = Blog.objects.get(id=1)
  711. except ObjectDoesNotExist:
  712. print "Either the entry or blog doesn't exist."
  713. ``create(**kwargs)``
  714. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  715. .. method:: create(**kwargs)
  716. A convenience method for creating an object and saving it all in one step. Thus::
  717. p = Person.objects.create(first_name="Bruce", last_name="Springsteen")
  718. and::
  719. p = Person(first_name="Bruce", last_name="Springsteen")
  720. p.save(force_insert=True)
  721. are equivalent.
  722. The :ref:`force_insert <ref-models-force-insert>` parameter is documented
  723. elsewhere, but all it means is that a new object will always be created.
  724. Normally you won't need to worry about this. However, if your model contains a
  725. manual primary key value that you set and if that value already exists in the
  726. database, a call to ``create()`` will fail with an ``IntegrityError`` since
  727. primary keys must be unique. So remember to be prepared to handle the
  728. exception if you are using manual primary keys.
  729. ``get_or_create(**kwargs)``
  730. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  731. .. method:: get_or_create(**kwargs)
  732. A convenience method for looking up an object with the given kwargs, creating
  733. one if necessary.
  734. Returns a tuple of ``(object, created)``, where ``object`` is the retrieved or
  735. created object and ``created`` is a boolean specifying whether a new object was
  736. created.
  737. This is meant as a shortcut to boilerplatish code and is mostly useful for
  738. data-import scripts. For example::
  739. try:
  740. obj = Person.objects.get(first_name='John', last_name='Lennon')
  741. except Person.DoesNotExist:
  742. obj = Person(first_name='John', last_name='Lennon', birthday=date(1940, 10, 9))
  743. obj.save()
  744. This pattern gets quite unwieldy as the number of fields in a model goes up.
  745. The above example can be rewritten using ``get_or_create()`` like so::
  746. obj, created = Person.objects.get_or_create(first_name='John', last_name='Lennon',
  747. defaults={'birthday': date(1940, 10, 9)})
  748. Any keyword arguments passed to ``get_or_create()`` -- *except* an optional one
  749. called ``defaults`` -- will be used in a ``get()`` call. If an object is found,
  750. ``get_or_create()`` returns a tuple of that object and ``False``. If an object
  751. is *not* found, ``get_or_create()`` will instantiate and save a new object,
  752. returning a tuple of the new object and ``True``. The new object will be
  753. created roughly according to this algorithm::
  754. defaults = kwargs.pop('defaults', {})
  755. params = dict([(k, v) for k, v in kwargs.items() if '__' not in k])
  756. params.update(defaults)
  757. obj = self.model(**params)
  758. obj.save()
  759. In English, that means start with any non-``'defaults'`` keyword argument that
  760. doesn't contain a double underscore (which would indicate a non-exact lookup).
  761. Then add the contents of ``defaults``, overriding any keys if necessary, and
  762. use the result as the keyword arguments to the model class. As hinted at
  763. above, this is a simplification of the algorithm that is used, but it contains
  764. all the pertinent details. The internal implementation has some more
  765. error-checking than this and handles some extra edge-conditions; if you're
  766. interested, read the code.
  767. If you have a field named ``defaults`` and want to use it as an exact lookup in
  768. ``get_or_create()``, just use ``'defaults__exact'``, like so::
  769. Foo.objects.get_or_create(defaults__exact='bar', defaults={'defaults': 'baz'})
  770. The ``get_or_create()`` method has similar error behaviour to ``create()``
  771. when you are using manually specified primary keys. If an object needs to be
  772. created and the key already exists in the database, an ``IntegrityError`` will
  773. be raised.
  774. Finally, a word on using ``get_or_create()`` in Django views. As mentioned
  775. earlier, ``get_or_create()`` is mostly useful in scripts that need to parse
  776. data and create new records if existing ones aren't available. But if you need
  777. to use ``get_or_create()`` in a view, please make sure to use it only in
  778. ``POST`` requests unless you have a good reason not to. ``GET`` requests
  779. shouldn't have any effect on data; use ``POST`` whenever a request to a page
  780. has a side effect on your data. For more, see `Safe methods`_ in the HTTP spec.
  781. .. _Safe methods: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec9.html#sec9.1.1
  782. ``count()``
  783. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  784. .. method:: count()
  785. Returns an integer representing the number of objects in the database matching
  786. the ``QuerySet``. ``count()`` never raises exceptions.
  787. Example::
  788. # Returns the total number of entries in the database.
  789. Entry.objects.count()
  790. # Returns the number of entries whose headline contains 'Lennon'
  791. Entry.objects.filter(headline__contains='Lennon').count()
  792. ``count()`` performs a ``SELECT COUNT(*)`` behind the scenes, so you should
  793. always use ``count()`` rather than loading all of the record into Python
  794. objects and calling ``len()`` on the result (unless you need to load the
  795. objects into memory anyway, in which case ``len()`` will be faster).
  796. Depending on which database you're using (e.g. PostgreSQL vs. MySQL),
  797. ``count()`` may return a long integer instead of a normal Python integer. This
  798. is an underlying implementation quirk that shouldn't pose any real-world
  799. problems.
  800. ``in_bulk(id_list)``
  801. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  802. .. method:: in_bulk(id_list)
  803. Takes a list of primary-key values and returns a dictionary mapping each
  804. primary-key value to an instance of the object with the given ID.
  805. Example::
  806. >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([1])
  807. {1: <Blog: Beatles Blog>}
  808. >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([1, 2])
  809. {1: <Blog: Beatles Blog>, 2: <Blog: Cheddar Talk>}
  810. >>> Blog.objects.in_bulk([])
  811. {}
  812. If you pass ``in_bulk()`` an empty list, you'll get an empty dictionary.
  813. ``iterator()``
  814. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  815. .. method:: iterator()
  816. Evaluates the ``QuerySet`` (by performing the query) and returns an
  817. `iterator`_ over the results. A ``QuerySet`` typically caches its
  818. results internally so that repeated evaluations do not result in
  819. additional queries; ``iterator()`` will instead read results directly,
  820. without doing any caching at the ``QuerySet`` level. For a
  821. ``QuerySet`` which returns a large number of objects, this often
  822. results in better performance and a significant reduction in memory
  823. Note that using ``iterator()`` on a ``QuerySet`` which has already
  824. been evaluated will force it to evaluate again, repeating the query.
  825. .. _iterator: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0234/
  826. ``latest(field_name=None)``
  827. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  828. .. method:: latest(field_name=None)
  829. Returns the latest object in the table, by date, using the ``field_name``
  830. provided as the date field.
  831. This example returns the latest ``Entry`` in the table, according to the
  832. ``pub_date`` field::
  833. Entry.objects.latest('pub_date')
  834. If your model's ``Meta`` specifies ``get_latest_by``, you can leave off the
  835. ``field_name`` argument to ``latest()``. Django will use the field specified in
  836. ``get_latest_by`` by default.
  837. Like ``get()``, ``latest()`` raises ``DoesNotExist`` if an object doesn't
  838. exist with the given parameters.
  839. Note ``latest()`` exists purely for convenience and readability.
  840. ``aggregate(*args, **kwargs)``
  841. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  842. .. method:: aggregate(*args, **kwargs)
  843. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  844. Returns a dictionary of aggregate values (averages, sums, etc) calculated
  845. over the ``QuerySet``. Each argument to ``aggregate()`` specifies
  846. a value that will be included in the dictionary that is returned.
  847. The aggregation functions that are provided by Django are described
  848. in `Aggregation Functions`_ below.
  849. Aggregates specified using keyword arguments will use the keyword as
  850. the name for the annotation. Anonymous arguments will have an name
  851. generated for them based upon the name of the aggregate function and
  852. the model field that is being aggregated.
  853. For example, if you were manipulating blog entries, you may want to know
  854. the number of authors that have contributed blog entries::
  855. >>> q = Blog.objects.aggregate(Count('entry'))
  856. {'entry__count': 16}
  857. By using a keyword argument to specify the aggregate function, you can
  858. control the name of the aggregation value that is returned::
  859. >>> q = Blog.objects.aggregate(number_of_entries=Count('entry'))
  860. {'number_of_entries': 16}
  861. For an in-depth discussion of aggregation, see :doc:`the topic guide on
  862. Aggregation </topics/db/aggregation>`.
  863. ``exists()``
  864. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  865. .. method:: exists()
  866. .. versionadded:: 1.2
  867. Returns ``True`` if the :class:`QuerySet` contains any results, and ``False``
  868. if not. This tries to perform the query in the simplest and fastest way
  869. possible, but it *does* execute nearly the same query. This means that calling
  870. :meth:`QuerySet.exists()` is faster than ``bool(some_query_set)``, but not by
  871. a large degree. If ``some_query_set`` has not yet been evaluated, but you know
  872. that it will be at some point, then using ``some_query_set.exists()`` will do
  873. more overall work (an additional query) than simply using
  874. ``bool(some_query_set)``.
  875. .. _field-lookups:
  876. Field lookups
  877. -------------
  878. Field lookups are how you specify the meat of an SQL ``WHERE`` clause. They're
  879. specified as keyword arguments to the ``QuerySet`` methods ``filter()``,
  880. ``exclude()`` and ``get()``.
  881. For an introduction, see :ref:`field-lookups-intro`.
  882. .. fieldlookup:: exact
  883. exact
  884. ~~~~~
  885. Exact match. If the value provided for comparison is ``None``, it will
  886. be interpreted as an SQL ``NULL`` (See isnull_ for more details).
  887. Examples::
  888. Entry.objects.get(id__exact=14)
  889. Entry.objects.get(id__exact=None)
  890. SQL equivalents::
  891. SELECT ... WHERE id = 14;
  892. SELECT ... WHERE id IS NULL;
  893. .. versionchanged:: 1.0
  894. The semantics of ``id__exact=None`` have changed in Django 1.0. Previously,
  895. it was (intentionally) converted to ``WHERE id = NULL`` at the SQL level,
  896. which would never match anything. It has now been changed to behave the
  897. same as ``id__isnull=True``.
  898. .. admonition:: MySQL comparisons
  899. In MySQL, a database table's "collation" setting determines whether
  900. ``exact`` comparisons are case-sensitive. This is a database setting, *not*
  901. a Django setting. It's possible to configure your MySQL tables to use
  902. case-sensitive comparisons, but some trade-offs are involved. For more
  903. information about this, see the :ref:`collation section <mysql-collation>`
  904. in the :doc:`databases </ref/databases>` documentation.
  905. .. fieldlookup:: iexact
  906. iexact
  907. ~~~~~~
  908. Case-insensitive exact match.
  909. Example::
  910. Blog.objects.get(name__iexact='beatles blog')
  911. SQL equivalent::
  912. SELECT ... WHERE name ILIKE 'beatles blog';
  913. Note this will match ``'Beatles Blog'``, ``'beatles blog'``, ``'BeAtLes
  914. BLoG'``, etc.
  915. .. admonition:: SQLite users
  916. When using the SQLite backend and Unicode (non-ASCII) strings, bear in
  917. mind the :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string
  918. comparisons. SQLite does not do case-insensitive matching for Unicode
  919. strings.
  920. .. fieldlookup:: contains
  921. contains
  922. ~~~~~~~~
  923. Case-sensitive containment test.
  924. Example::
  925. Entry.objects.get(headline__contains='Lennon')
  926. SQL equivalent::
  927. SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE '%Lennon%';
  928. Note this will match the headline ``'Today Lennon honored'`` but not
  929. ``'today lennon honored'``.
  930. SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``contains`` acts
  931. like ``icontains`` for SQLite.
  932. .. fieldlookup:: icontains
  933. icontains
  934. ~~~~~~~~~
  935. Case-insensitive containment test.
  936. Example::
  937. Entry.objects.get(headline__icontains='Lennon')
  938. SQL equivalent::
  939. SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE '%Lennon%';
  940. .. admonition:: SQLite users
  941. When using the SQLite backend and Unicode (non-ASCII) strings, bear in
  942. mind the :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string
  943. comparisons.
  944. .. fieldlookup:: in
  945. in
  946. ~~
  947. In a given list.
  948. Example::
  949. Entry.objects.filter(id__in=[1, 3, 4])
  950. SQL equivalent::
  951. SELECT ... WHERE id IN (1, 3, 4);
  952. You can also use a queryset to dynamically evaluate the list of values
  953. instead of providing a list of literal values::
  954. inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains='Cheddar')
  955. entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__in=inner_qs)
  956. This queryset will be evaluated as subselect statement::
  957. SELECT ... WHERE blog.id IN (SELECT id FROM ... WHERE NAME LIKE '%Cheddar%')
  958. The above code fragment could also be written as follows::
  959. inner_q = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains='Cheddar').values('pk').query
  960. entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__in=inner_q)
  961. .. versionchanged:: 1.1
  962. In Django 1.0, only the latter piece of code is valid.
  963. This second form is a bit less readable and unnatural to write, since it
  964. accesses the internal ``query`` attribute and requires a ``ValuesQuerySet``.
  965. If your code doesn't require compatibility with Django 1.0, use the first
  966. form, passing in a queryset directly.
  967. If you pass in a ``ValuesQuerySet`` or ``ValuesListQuerySet`` (the result of
  968. calling ``values()`` or ``values_list()`` on a queryset) as the value to an
  969. ``__in`` lookup, you need to ensure you are only extracting one field in the
  970. result. For example, this will work (filtering on the blog names)::
  971. inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains='Ch').values('name')
  972. entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__name__in=inner_qs)
  973. This example will raise an exception, since the inner query is trying to
  974. extract two field values, where only one is expected::
  975. # Bad code! Will raise a TypeError.
  976. inner_qs = Blog.objects.filter(name__contains='Ch').values('name', 'id')
  977. entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__name__in=inner_qs)
  978. .. warning::
  979. This ``query`` attribute should be considered an opaque internal attribute.
  980. It's fine to use it like above, but its API may change between Django
  981. versions.
  982. .. admonition:: Performance considerations
  983. Be cautious about using nested queries and understand your database
  984. server's performance characteristics (if in doubt, benchmark!). Some
  985. database backends, most notably MySQL, don't optimize nested queries very
  986. well. It is more efficient, in those cases, to extract a list of values
  987. and then pass that into the second query. That is, execute two queries
  988. instead of one::
  989. values = Blog.objects.filter(
  990. name__contains='Cheddar').values_list('pk', flat=True)
  991. entries = Entry.objects.filter(blog__in=list(values))
  992. Note the ``list()`` call around the Blog ``QuerySet`` to force execution of
  993. the first query. Without it, a nested query would be executed, because
  994. :ref:`querysets-are-lazy`.
  995. .. fieldlookup:: gt
  996. gt
  997. ~~
  998. Greater than.
  999. Example::
  1000. Entry.objects.filter(id__gt=4)
  1001. SQL equivalent::
  1002. SELECT ... WHERE id > 4;
  1003. .. fieldlookup:: gte
  1004. gte
  1005. ~~~
  1006. Greater than or equal to.
  1007. .. fieldlookup:: lt
  1008. lt
  1009. ~~
  1010. Less than.
  1011. .. fieldlookup:: lte
  1012. lte
  1013. ~~~
  1014. Less than or equal to.
  1015. .. fieldlookup:: startswith
  1016. startswith
  1017. ~~~~~~~~~~
  1018. Case-sensitive starts-with.
  1019. Example::
  1020. Entry.objects.filter(headline__startswith='Will')
  1021. SQL equivalent::
  1022. SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE 'Will%';
  1023. SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``startswith`` acts
  1024. like ``istartswith`` for SQLite.
  1025. .. fieldlookup:: istartswith
  1026. istartswith
  1027. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  1028. Case-insensitive starts-with.
  1029. Example::
  1030. Entry.objects.filter(headline__istartswith='will')
  1031. SQL equivalent::
  1032. SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE 'Will%';
  1033. .. admonition:: SQLite users
  1034. When using the SQLite backend and Unicode (non-ASCII) strings, bear in
  1035. mind the :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string
  1036. comparisons.
  1037. .. fieldlookup:: endswith
  1038. endswith
  1039. ~~~~~~~~
  1040. Case-sensitive ends-with.
  1041. Example::
  1042. Entry.objects.filter(headline__endswith='cats')
  1043. SQL equivalent::
  1044. SELECT ... WHERE headline LIKE '%cats';
  1045. SQLite doesn't support case-sensitive ``LIKE`` statements; ``endswith`` acts
  1046. like ``iendswith`` for SQLite.
  1047. .. fieldlookup:: iendswith
  1048. iendswith
  1049. ~~~~~~~~~
  1050. Case-insensitive ends-with.
  1051. Example::
  1052. Entry.objects.filter(headline__iendswith='will')
  1053. SQL equivalent::
  1054. SELECT ... WHERE headline ILIKE '%will'
  1055. .. admonition:: SQLite users
  1056. When using the SQLite backend and Unicode (non-ASCII) strings, bear in
  1057. mind the :ref:`database note <sqlite-string-matching>` about string
  1058. comparisons.
  1059. .. fieldlookup:: range
  1060. range
  1061. ~~~~~
  1062. Range test (inclusive).
  1063. Example::
  1064. start_date = datetime.date(2005, 1, 1)
  1065. end_date = datetime.date(2005, 3, 31)
  1066. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__range=(start_date, end_date))
  1067. SQL equivalent::
  1068. SELECT ... WHERE pub_date BETWEEN '2005-01-01' and '2005-03-31';
  1069. You can use ``range`` anywhere you can use ``BETWEEN`` in SQL -- for dates,
  1070. numbers and even characters.
  1071. .. fieldlookup:: year
  1072. year
  1073. ~~~~
  1074. For date/datetime fields, exact year match. Takes a four-digit year.
  1075. Example::
  1076. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2005)
  1077. SQL equivalent::
  1078. SELECT ... WHERE pub_date BETWEEN '2005-01-01' AND '2005-12-31 23:59:59.999999';
  1079. (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.)
  1080. .. fieldlookup:: month
  1081. month
  1082. ~~~~~
  1083. For date/datetime fields, exact month match. Takes an integer 1 (January)
  1084. through 12 (December).
  1085. Example::
  1086. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__month=12)
  1087. SQL equivalent::
  1088. SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('month' FROM pub_date) = '12';
  1089. (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.)
  1090. .. fieldlookup:: day
  1091. day
  1092. ~~~
  1093. For date/datetime fields, exact day match.
  1094. Example::
  1095. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__day=3)
  1096. SQL equivalent::
  1097. SELECT ... WHERE EXTRACT('day' FROM pub_date) = '3';
  1098. (The exact SQL syntax varies for each database engine.)
  1099. Note this will match any record with a pub_date on the third day of the month,
  1100. such as January 3, July 3, etc.
  1101. .. fieldlookup:: week_day
  1102. week_day
  1103. ~~~~~~~~
  1104. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  1105. For date/datetime fields, a 'day of the week' match.
  1106. Takes an integer value representing the day of week from 1 (Sunday) to 7
  1107. (Saturday).
  1108. Example::
  1109. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__week_day=2)
  1110. (No equivalent SQL code fragment is included for this lookup because
  1111. implementation of the relevant query varies among different database engines.)
  1112. Note this will match any record with a pub_date that falls on a Monday (day 2
  1113. of the week), regardless of the month or year in which it occurs. Week days
  1114. are indexed with day 1 being Sunday and day 7 being Saturday.
  1115. .. fieldlookup:: isnull
  1116. isnull
  1117. ~~~~~~
  1118. Takes either ``True`` or ``False``, which correspond to SQL queries of
  1119. ``IS NULL`` and ``IS NOT NULL``, respectively.
  1120. Example::
  1121. Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__isnull=True)
  1122. SQL equivalent::
  1123. SELECT ... WHERE pub_date IS NULL;
  1124. .. fieldlookup:: search
  1125. search
  1126. ~~~~~~
  1127. A boolean full-text search, taking advantage of full-text indexing. This is
  1128. like ``contains`` but is significantly faster due to full-text indexing.
  1129. Example::
  1130. Entry.objects.filter(headline__search="+Django -jazz Python")
  1131. SQL equivalent::
  1132. SELECT ... WHERE MATCH(tablename, headline) AGAINST (+Django -jazz Python IN BOOLEAN MODE);
  1133. Note this is only available in MySQL and requires direct manipulation of the
  1134. database to add the full-text index. By default Django uses BOOLEAN MODE for
  1135. full text searches. `Please check MySQL documentation for additional details. <http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/fulltext-boolean.html>`_
  1136. .. fieldlookup:: regex
  1137. regex
  1138. ~~~~~
  1139. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  1140. Case-sensitive regular expression match.
  1141. The regular expression syntax is that of the database backend in use.
  1142. In the case of SQLite, which has no built in regular expression support,
  1143. this feature is provided by a (Python) user-defined REGEXP function, and
  1144. the regular expression syntax is therefore that of Python's ``re`` module.
  1145. Example::
  1146. Entry.objects.get(title__regex=r'^(An?|The) +')
  1147. SQL equivalents::
  1148. SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP BINARY '^(An?|The) +'; -- MySQL
  1149. SELECT ... WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(title, '^(an?|the) +', 'c'); -- Oracle
  1150. SELECT ... WHERE title ~ '^(An?|The) +'; -- PostgreSQL
  1151. SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '^(An?|The) +'; -- SQLite
  1152. Using raw strings (e.g., ``r'foo'`` instead of ``'foo'``) for passing in the
  1153. regular expression syntax is recommended.
  1154. .. fieldlookup:: iregex
  1155. iregex
  1156. ~~~~~~
  1157. .. versionadded:: 1.0
  1158. Case-insensitive regular expression match.
  1159. Example::
  1160. Entry.objects.get(title__iregex=r'^(an?|the) +')
  1161. SQL equivalents::
  1162. SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '^(an?|the) +'; -- MySQL
  1163. SELECT ... WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(title, '^(an?|the) +', 'i'); -- Oracle
  1164. SELECT ... WHERE title ~* '^(an?|the) +'; -- PostgreSQL
  1165. SELECT ... WHERE title REGEXP '(?i)^(an?|the) +'; -- SQLite
  1166. .. _aggregation-functions:
  1167. Aggregation Functions
  1168. ---------------------
  1169. .. versionadded:: 1.1
  1170. Django provides the following aggregation functions in the
  1171. ``django.db.models`` module. For details on how to use these
  1172. aggregate functions, see
  1173. :doc:`the topic guide on aggregation </topics/db/aggregation>`.
  1174. ``Avg``
  1175. ~~~~~~~
  1176. .. class:: Avg(field)
  1177. Returns the mean value of the given field.
  1178. * Default alias: ``<field>__avg``
  1179. * Return type: float
  1180. ``Count``
  1181. ~~~~~~~~~
  1182. .. class:: Count(field, distinct=False)
  1183. Returns the number of objects that are related through the provided field.
  1184. * Default alias: ``<field>__count``
  1185. * Return type: integer
  1186. Has one optional argument:
  1187. .. attribute:: distinct
  1188. If distinct=True, the count will only include unique instances. This has
  1189. the SQL equivalent of ``COUNT(DISTINCT field)``. Default value is ``False``.
  1190. ``Max``
  1191. ~~~~~~~
  1192. .. class:: Max(field)
  1193. Returns the maximum value of the given field.
  1194. * Default alias: ``<field>__max``
  1195. * Return type: same as input field
  1196. ``Min``
  1197. ~~~~~~~
  1198. .. class:: Min(field)
  1199. Returns the minimum value of the given field.
  1200. * Default alias: ``<field>__min``
  1201. * Return type: same as input field
  1202. ``StdDev``
  1203. ~~~~~~~~~~
  1204. .. class:: StdDev(field, sample=False)
  1205. Returns the standard deviation of the data in the provided field.
  1206. * Default alias: ``<field>__stddev``
  1207. * Return type: float
  1208. Has one optional argument:
  1209. .. attribute:: sample
  1210. By default, ``StdDev`` returns the population standard deviation. However,
  1211. if ``sample=True``, the return value will be the sample standard deviation.
  1212. .. admonition:: SQLite
  1213. SQLite doesn't provide ``StdDev`` out of the box. An implementation is
  1214. available as an extension module for SQLite. Consult the SQlite
  1215. documentation for instructions on obtaining and installing this extension.
  1216. ``Sum``
  1217. ~~~~~~~
  1218. .. class:: Sum(field)
  1219. Computes the sum of all values of the given field.
  1220. * Default alias: ``<field>__sum``
  1221. * Return type: same as input field
  1222. ``Variance``
  1223. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1224. .. class:: Variance(field, sample=False)
  1225. Returns the variance of the data in the provided field.
  1226. * Default alias: ``<field>__variance``
  1227. * Return type: float
  1228. Has one optional argument:
  1229. .. attribute:: sample
  1230. By default, ``Variance`` returns the population variance. However,
  1231. if ``sample=True``, the return value will be the sample variance.
  1232. .. admonition:: SQLite
  1233. SQLite doesn't provide ``Variance`` out of the box. An implementation is
  1234. available as an extension module for SQLite. Consult the SQlite
  1235. documentation for instructions on obtaining and installing this extension.