Fixed #10574 -- Documented interaction between annotations and order_by.
In the future, I'd like to fix this properly, but the current behavior has the advantage of being consistent across the board (and changing it everywhere is backwards-incompatible with documented functionality). git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@10172 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
parent
68288219cd
commit
6fa30faa79
|
@ -296,6 +296,8 @@ a model which defines a default ordering, or when using
|
|||
ordering was undefined prior to calling ``reverse()``, and will remain
|
||||
undefined afterward).
|
||||
|
||||
.. _querysets-distinct:
|
||||
|
||||
``distinct()``
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -315,6 +315,57 @@ will be automatically added to the result set. However, if the ``values()``
|
|||
clause is applied after the ``annotate()`` clause, you need to explicitly
|
||||
include the aggregate column.
|
||||
|
||||
Interaction with default ordering or ``order_by()``
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Fields that are mentioned in the ``order_by()`` part of a queryset (or which
|
||||
are used in the default ordering on a model) are used when selecting the
|
||||
output data, even if they are not otherwise specified in the ``values()``
|
||||
call. These extra fields are used to group "like" results together and they
|
||||
can make otherwise identical result rows appear to be separate. This shows up,
|
||||
particularly, when counting things.
|
||||
|
||||
By way of example, suppose you have a model like this::
|
||||
|
||||
class Item(models.Model):
|
||||
name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
|
||||
data = models.IntegerField()
|
||||
|
||||
class Meta:
|
||||
ordering = ["name"]
|
||||
|
||||
The important part here is the default ordering on the ``name`` field. If you
|
||||
want to count how many times each distinct ``data`` value appears, you might
|
||||
try this::
|
||||
|
||||
# Warning: not quite correct!
|
||||
Item.objects.values("data").annotate(Count("id"))
|
||||
|
||||
...which will group the ``Item`` objects by their common ``data`` values and
|
||||
then count the number of ``id`` values in each group. Except that it won't
|
||||
quite work. The default ordering by ``name`` will also play a part in the
|
||||
grouping, so this query will group by distinct ``(data, name)`` pairs, which
|
||||
isn't what you want. Instead, you should construct this queryset::
|
||||
|
||||
Item.objects.values("data").annotate(Count("id")).order_by()
|
||||
|
||||
...clearing any ordering in the query. You could also order by, say, ``data``
|
||||
without any harmful effects, since that is already playing a role in the
|
||||
query.
|
||||
|
||||
This behavior is the same as that noted in the queryset documentation for
|
||||
:ref:`distinct() <querysets-distinct>` and the general rule is the same:
|
||||
normally you won't want extra columns playing a part in the result, so clear
|
||||
out the ordering, or at least make sure it's restricted only to those fields
|
||||
you also select in a ``values()`` call.
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
You might reasonably ask why Django doesn't remove the extraneous columns
|
||||
for you. The main reason is consistency with ``distinct()`` and other
|
||||
places: Django **never** removes ordering constraints that you have
|
||||
specified (and we can't change those other methods' behavior, as that
|
||||
would violate our :ref:`misc-api-stability` policy).
|
||||
|
||||
Aggregating annotations
|
||||
-----------------------
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue