aggregation.txt 19 KB

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  1. ===========
  2. Aggregation
  3. ===========
  4. .. currentmodule:: django.db.models
  5. The topic guide on :doc:`Django's database-abstraction API </topics/db/queries>`
  6. described the way that you can use Django queries that create,
  7. retrieve, update and delete individual objects. However, sometimes you will
  8. need to retrieve values that are derived by summarizing or *aggregating* a
  9. collection of objects. This topic guide describes the ways that aggregate values
  10. can be generated and returned using Django queries.
  11. Throughout this guide, we'll refer to the following models. These models are
  12. used to track the inventory for a series of online bookstores:
  13. .. _queryset-model-example:
  14. .. code-block:: python
  15. from django.db import models
  16. class Author(models.Model):
  17. name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
  18. age = models.IntegerField()
  19. class Publisher(models.Model):
  20. name = models.CharField(max_length=300)
  21. num_awards = models.IntegerField()
  22. class Book(models.Model):
  23. name = models.CharField(max_length=300)
  24. pages = models.IntegerField()
  25. price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=10, decimal_places=2)
  26. rating = models.FloatField()
  27. authors = models.ManyToManyField(Author)
  28. publisher = models.ForeignKey(Publisher)
  29. pubdate = models.DateField()
  30. class Store(models.Model):
  31. name = models.CharField(max_length=300)
  32. books = models.ManyToManyField(Book)
  33. registered_users = models.PositiveIntegerField()
  34. Cheat sheet
  35. ===========
  36. In a hurry? Here's how to do common aggregate queries, assuming the models above:
  37. .. code-block:: python
  38. # Total number of books.
  39. >>> Book.objects.count()
  40. 2452
  41. # Total number of books with publisher=BaloneyPress
  42. >>> Book.objects.filter(publisher__name='BaloneyPress').count()
  43. 73
  44. # Average price across all books.
  45. >>> from django.db.models import Avg
  46. >>> Book.objects.all().aggregate(Avg('price'))
  47. {'price__avg': 34.35}
  48. # Max price across all books.
  49. >>> from django.db.models import Max
  50. >>> Book.objects.all().aggregate(Max('price'))
  51. {'price__max': Decimal('81.20')}
  52. # Cost per page
  53. >>> Book.objects.all().aggregate(
  54. ... price_per_page=Sum(F('price')/F('pages'), output_field=FloatField()))
  55. {'price_per_page': 0.4470664529184653}
  56. # All the following queries involve traversing the Book<->Publisher
  57. # many-to-many relationship backward
  58. # Each publisher, each with a count of books as a "num_books" attribute.
  59. >>> from django.db.models import Count
  60. >>> pubs = Publisher.objects.annotate(num_books=Count('book'))
  61. >>> pubs
  62. [<Publisher BaloneyPress>, <Publisher SalamiPress>, ...]
  63. >>> pubs[0].num_books
  64. 73
  65. # The top 5 publishers, in order by number of books.
  66. >>> pubs = Publisher.objects.annotate(num_books=Count('book')).order_by('-num_books')[:5]
  67. >>> pubs[0].num_books
  68. 1323
  69. Generating aggregates over a QuerySet
  70. =====================================
  71. Django provides two ways to generate aggregates. The first way is to generate
  72. summary values over an entire ``QuerySet``. For example, say you wanted to
  73. calculate the average price of all books available for sale. Django's query
  74. syntax provides a means for describing the set of all books::
  75. >>> Book.objects.all()
  76. What we need is a way to calculate summary values over the objects that
  77. belong to this ``QuerySet``. This is done by appending an ``aggregate()``
  78. clause onto the ``QuerySet``::
  79. >>> from django.db.models import Avg
  80. >>> Book.objects.all().aggregate(Avg('price'))
  81. {'price__avg': 34.35}
  82. The ``all()`` is redundant in this example, so this could be simplified to::
  83. >>> Book.objects.aggregate(Avg('price'))
  84. {'price__avg': 34.35}
  85. The argument to the ``aggregate()`` clause describes the aggregate value that
  86. we want to compute - in this case, the average of the ``price`` field on the
  87. ``Book`` model. A list of the aggregate functions that are available can be
  88. found in the :ref:`QuerySet reference <aggregation-functions>`.
  89. ``aggregate()`` is a terminal clause for a ``QuerySet`` that, when invoked,
  90. returns a dictionary of name-value pairs. The name is an identifier for the
  91. aggregate value; the value is the computed aggregate. The name is
  92. automatically generated from the name of the field and the aggregate function.
  93. If you want to manually specify a name for the aggregate value, you can do so
  94. by providing that name when you specify the aggregate clause::
  95. >>> Book.objects.aggregate(average_price=Avg('price'))
  96. {'average_price': 34.35}
  97. If you want to generate more than one aggregate, you just add another
  98. argument to the ``aggregate()`` clause. So, if we also wanted to know
  99. the maximum and minimum price of all books, we would issue the query::
  100. >>> from django.db.models import Avg, Max, Min
  101. >>> Book.objects.aggregate(Avg('price'), Max('price'), Min('price'))
  102. {'price__avg': 34.35, 'price__max': Decimal('81.20'), 'price__min': Decimal('12.99')}
  103. Generating aggregates for each item in a QuerySet
  104. =================================================
  105. The second way to generate summary values is to generate an independent
  106. summary for each object in a ``QuerySet``. For example, if you are retrieving
  107. a list of books, you may want to know how many authors contributed to
  108. each book. Each Book has a many-to-many relationship with the Author; we
  109. want to summarize this relationship for each book in the ``QuerySet``.
  110. Per-object summaries can be generated using the ``annotate()`` clause.
  111. When an ``annotate()`` clause is specified, each object in the ``QuerySet``
  112. will be annotated with the specified values.
  113. The syntax for these annotations is identical to that used for the
  114. ``aggregate()`` clause. Each argument to ``annotate()`` describes an
  115. aggregate that is to be calculated. For example, to annotate books with
  116. the number of authors:
  117. .. code-block:: python
  118. # Build an annotated queryset
  119. >>> from django.db.models import Count
  120. >>> q = Book.objects.annotate(Count('authors'))
  121. # Interrogate the first object in the queryset
  122. >>> q[0]
  123. <Book: The Definitive Guide to Django>
  124. >>> q[0].authors__count
  125. 2
  126. # Interrogate the second object in the queryset
  127. >>> q[1]
  128. <Book: Practical Django Projects>
  129. >>> q[1].authors__count
  130. 1
  131. As with ``aggregate()``, the name for the annotation is automatically derived
  132. from the name of the aggregate function and the name of the field being
  133. aggregated. You can override this default name by providing an alias when you
  134. specify the annotation::
  135. >>> q = Book.objects.annotate(num_authors=Count('authors'))
  136. >>> q[0].num_authors
  137. 2
  138. >>> q[1].num_authors
  139. 1
  140. Unlike ``aggregate()``, ``annotate()`` is *not* a terminal clause. The output
  141. of the ``annotate()`` clause is a ``QuerySet``; this ``QuerySet`` can be
  142. modified using any other ``QuerySet`` operation, including ``filter()``,
  143. ``order_by()``, or even additional calls to ``annotate()``.
  144. Joins and aggregates
  145. ====================
  146. So far, we have dealt with aggregates over fields that belong to the
  147. model being queried. However, sometimes the value you want to aggregate
  148. will belong to a model that is related to the model you are querying.
  149. When specifying the field to be aggregated in an aggregate function, Django
  150. will allow you to use the same :ref:`double underscore notation
  151. <field-lookups-intro>` that is used when referring to related fields in
  152. filters. Django will then handle any table joins that are required to retrieve
  153. and aggregate the related value.
  154. For example, to find the price range of books offered in each store,
  155. you could use the annotation::
  156. >>> from django.db.models import Max, Min
  157. >>> Store.objects.annotate(min_price=Min('books__price'), max_price=Max('books__price'))
  158. This tells Django to retrieve the ``Store`` model, join (through the
  159. many-to-many relationship) with the ``Book`` model, and aggregate on the
  160. price field of the book model to produce a minimum and maximum value.
  161. The same rules apply to the ``aggregate()`` clause. If you wanted to
  162. know the lowest and highest price of any book that is available for sale
  163. in a store, you could use the aggregate::
  164. >>> Store.objects.aggregate(min_price=Min('books__price'), max_price=Max('books__price'))
  165. Join chains can be as deep as you require. For example, to extract the
  166. age of the youngest author of any book available for sale, you could
  167. issue the query::
  168. >>> Store.objects.aggregate(youngest_age=Min('books__authors__age'))
  169. Following relationships backwards
  170. ---------------------------------
  171. In a way similar to :ref:`lookups-that-span-relationships`, aggregations and
  172. annotations on fields of models or models that are related to the one you are
  173. querying can include traversing "reverse" relationships. The lowercase name
  174. of related models and double-underscores are used here too.
  175. For example, we can ask for all publishers, annotated with their respective
  176. total book stock counters (note how we use ``'book'`` to specify the
  177. ``Publisher`` -> ``Book`` reverse foreign key hop)::
  178. >>> from django.db.models import Count, Min, Sum, Avg
  179. >>> Publisher.objects.annotate(Count('book'))
  180. (Every ``Publisher`` in the resulting ``QuerySet`` will have an extra attribute
  181. called ``book__count``.)
  182. We can also ask for the oldest book of any of those managed by every publisher::
  183. >>> Publisher.objects.aggregate(oldest_pubdate=Min('book__pubdate'))
  184. (The resulting dictionary will have a key called ``'oldest_pubdate'``. If no
  185. such alias were specified, it would be the rather long ``'book__pubdate__min'``.)
  186. This doesn't apply just to foreign keys. It also works with many-to-many
  187. relations. For example, we can ask for every author, annotated with the total
  188. number of pages considering all the books the author has (co-)authored (note how we
  189. use ``'book'`` to specify the ``Author`` -> ``Book`` reverse many-to-many hop)::
  190. >>> Author.objects.annotate(total_pages=Sum('book__pages'))
  191. (Every ``Author`` in the resulting ``QuerySet`` will have an extra attribute
  192. called ``total_pages``. If no such alias were specified, it would be the rather
  193. long ``book__pages__sum``.)
  194. Or ask for the average rating of all the books written by author(s) we have on
  195. file::
  196. >>> Author.objects.aggregate(average_rating=Avg('book__rating'))
  197. (The resulting dictionary will have a key called ``'average__rating'``. If no
  198. such alias were specified, it would be the rather long ``'book__rating__avg'``.)
  199. Aggregations and other QuerySet clauses
  200. =======================================
  201. ``filter()`` and ``exclude()``
  202. ------------------------------
  203. Aggregates can also participate in filters. Any ``filter()`` (or
  204. ``exclude()``) applied to normal model fields will have the effect of
  205. constraining the objects that are considered for aggregation.
  206. When used with an ``annotate()`` clause, a filter has the effect of
  207. constraining the objects for which an annotation is calculated. For example,
  208. you can generate an annotated list of all books that have a title starting
  209. with "Django" using the query::
  210. >>> from django.db.models import Count, Avg
  211. >>> Book.objects.filter(name__startswith="Django").annotate(num_authors=Count('authors'))
  212. When used with an ``aggregate()`` clause, a filter has the effect of
  213. constraining the objects over which the aggregate is calculated.
  214. For example, you can generate the average price of all books with a
  215. title that starts with "Django" using the query::
  216. >>> Book.objects.filter(name__startswith="Django").aggregate(Avg('price'))
  217. Filtering on annotations
  218. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  219. Annotated values can also be filtered. The alias for the annotation can be
  220. used in ``filter()`` and ``exclude()`` clauses in the same way as any other
  221. model field.
  222. For example, to generate a list of books that have more than one author,
  223. you can issue the query::
  224. >>> Book.objects.annotate(num_authors=Count('authors')).filter(num_authors__gt=1)
  225. This query generates an annotated result set, and then generates a filter
  226. based upon that annotation.
  227. Order of ``annotate()`` and ``filter()`` clauses
  228. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  229. When developing a complex query that involves both ``annotate()`` and
  230. ``filter()`` clauses, particular attention should be paid to the order
  231. in which the clauses are applied to the ``QuerySet``.
  232. When an ``annotate()`` clause is applied to a query, the annotation is
  233. computed over the state of the query up to the point where the annotation
  234. is requested. The practical implication of this is that ``filter()`` and
  235. ``annotate()`` are not commutative operations -- that is, there is a
  236. difference between the query::
  237. >>> Publisher.objects.annotate(num_books=Count('book')).filter(book__rating__gt=3.0)
  238. and the query::
  239. >>> Publisher.objects.filter(book__rating__gt=3.0).annotate(num_books=Count('book'))
  240. Both queries will return a list of publishers that have at least one good
  241. book (i.e., a book with a rating exceeding 3.0). However, the annotation in
  242. the first query will provide the total number of all books published by the
  243. publisher; the second query will only include good books in the annotated
  244. count. In the first query, the annotation precedes the filter, so the
  245. filter has no effect on the annotation. In the second query, the filter
  246. precedes the annotation, and as a result, the filter constrains the objects
  247. considered when calculating the annotation.
  248. ``order_by()``
  249. --------------
  250. Annotations can be used as a basis for ordering. When you
  251. define an ``order_by()`` clause, the aggregates you provide can reference
  252. any alias defined as part of an ``annotate()`` clause in the query.
  253. For example, to order a ``QuerySet`` of books by the number of authors
  254. that have contributed to the book, you could use the following query::
  255. >>> Book.objects.annotate(num_authors=Count('authors')).order_by('num_authors')
  256. ``values()``
  257. ------------
  258. Ordinarily, annotations are generated on a per-object basis - an annotated
  259. ``QuerySet`` will return one result for each object in the original
  260. ``QuerySet``. However, when a ``values()`` clause is used to constrain the
  261. columns that are returned in the result set, the method for evaluating
  262. annotations is slightly different. Instead of returning an annotated result
  263. for each result in the original ``QuerySet``, the original results are
  264. grouped according to the unique combinations of the fields specified in the
  265. ``values()`` clause. An annotation is then provided for each unique group;
  266. the annotation is computed over all members of the group.
  267. For example, consider an author query that attempts to find out the average
  268. rating of books written by each author:
  269. >>> Author.objects.annotate(average_rating=Avg('book__rating'))
  270. This will return one result for each author in the database, annotated with
  271. their average book rating.
  272. However, the result will be slightly different if you use a ``values()`` clause::
  273. >>> Author.objects.values('name').annotate(average_rating=Avg('book__rating'))
  274. In this example, the authors will be grouped by name, so you will only get
  275. an annotated result for each *unique* author name. This means if you have
  276. two authors with the same name, their results will be merged into a single
  277. result in the output of the query; the average will be computed as the
  278. average over the books written by both authors.
  279. Order of ``annotate()`` and ``values()`` clauses
  280. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  281. As with the ``filter()`` clause, the order in which ``annotate()`` and
  282. ``values()`` clauses are applied to a query is significant. If the
  283. ``values()`` clause precedes the ``annotate()``, the annotation will be
  284. computed using the grouping described by the ``values()`` clause.
  285. However, if the ``annotate()`` clause precedes the ``values()`` clause,
  286. the annotations will be generated over the entire query set. In this case,
  287. the ``values()`` clause only constrains the fields that are generated on
  288. output.
  289. For example, if we reverse the order of the ``values()`` and ``annotate()``
  290. clause from our previous example::
  291. >>> Author.objects.annotate(average_rating=Avg('book__rating')).values('name', 'average_rating')
  292. This will now yield one unique result for each author; however, only
  293. the author's name and the ``average_rating`` annotation will be returned
  294. in the output data.
  295. You should also note that ``average_rating`` has been explicitly included
  296. in the list of values to be returned. This is required because of the
  297. ordering of the ``values()`` and ``annotate()`` clause.
  298. If the ``values()`` clause precedes the ``annotate()`` clause, any annotations
  299. will be automatically added to the result set. However, if the ``values()``
  300. clause is applied after the ``annotate()`` clause, you need to explicitly
  301. include the aggregate column.
  302. Interaction with default ordering or ``order_by()``
  303. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  304. Fields that are mentioned in the ``order_by()`` part of a queryset (or which
  305. are used in the default ordering on a model) are used when selecting the
  306. output data, even if they are not otherwise specified in the ``values()``
  307. call. These extra fields are used to group "like" results together and they
  308. can make otherwise identical result rows appear to be separate. This shows up,
  309. particularly, when counting things.
  310. By way of example, suppose you have a model like this::
  311. from django.db import models
  312. class Item(models.Model):
  313. name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
  314. data = models.IntegerField()
  315. class Meta:
  316. ordering = ["name"]
  317. The important part here is the default ordering on the ``name`` field. If you
  318. want to count how many times each distinct ``data`` value appears, you might
  319. try this::
  320. # Warning: not quite correct!
  321. Item.objects.values("data").annotate(Count("id"))
  322. ...which will group the ``Item`` objects by their common ``data`` values and
  323. then count the number of ``id`` values in each group. Except that it won't
  324. quite work. The default ordering by ``name`` will also play a part in the
  325. grouping, so this query will group by distinct ``(data, name)`` pairs, which
  326. isn't what you want. Instead, you should construct this queryset::
  327. Item.objects.values("data").annotate(Count("id")).order_by()
  328. ...clearing any ordering in the query. You could also order by, say, ``data``
  329. without any harmful effects, since that is already playing a role in the
  330. query.
  331. This behavior is the same as that noted in the queryset documentation for
  332. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.distinct` and the general rule is the
  333. same: normally you won't want extra columns playing a part in the result, so
  334. clear out the ordering, or at least make sure it's restricted only to those
  335. fields you also select in a ``values()`` call.
  336. .. note::
  337. You might reasonably ask why Django doesn't remove the extraneous columns
  338. for you. The main reason is consistency with ``distinct()`` and other
  339. places: Django **never** removes ordering constraints that you have
  340. specified (and we can't change those other methods' behavior, as that
  341. would violate our :doc:`/misc/api-stability` policy).
  342. Aggregating annotations
  343. -----------------------
  344. You can also generate an aggregate on the result of an annotation. When you
  345. define an ``aggregate()`` clause, the aggregates you provide can reference
  346. any alias defined as part of an ``annotate()`` clause in the query.
  347. For example, if you wanted to calculate the average number of authors per
  348. book you first annotate the set of books with the author count, then
  349. aggregate that author count, referencing the annotation field::
  350. >>> from django.db.models import Count, Avg
  351. >>> Book.objects.annotate(num_authors=Count('authors')).aggregate(Avg('num_authors'))
  352. {'num_authors__avg': 1.66}