django1/tests/testapp/models/ordering.py

64 lines
2.1 KiB
Python

"""
6. Specifying ordering
Specify default ordering for a model using the ``ordering`` attribute, which
should be a list or tuple of field names. This tells Django how to order the
results of ``get_list()`` and other similar functions.
If a field name in ``ordering`` starts with a hyphen, that field will be
ordered in descending order. Otherwise, it'll be ordered in ascending order.
The special-case field name ``"?"`` specifies random order.
The ordering attribute is not required. If you leave it off, ordering will be
undefined -- not random, just undefined.
"""
from django.core import meta
class Article(meta.Model):
headline = meta.CharField(maxlength=100)
pub_date = meta.DateTimeField()
class META:
ordering = ('-pub_date', 'headline')
def __repr__(self):
return self.headline
API_TESTS = """
# Create a couple of Articles.
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> a1 = articles.Article(headline='Article 1', pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 26))
>>> a1.save()
>>> a2 = articles.Article(headline='Article 2', pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27))
>>> a2.save()
>>> a3 = articles.Article(headline='Article 3', pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27))
>>> a3.save()
>>> a4 = articles.Article(headline='Article 4', pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 28))
>>> a4.save()
# By default, articles.get_list() orders by pub_date descending, then
# headline ascending.
>>> articles.get_list()
[Article 4, Article 2, Article 3, Article 1]
# Override ordering with order_by, which is in the same format as the ordering
# attribute in models.
>>> articles.get_list(order_by=['headline'])
[Article 1, Article 2, Article 3, Article 4]
>>> articles.get_list(order_by=['pub_date', '-headline'])
[Article 1, Article 3, Article 2, Article 4]
# Use the "limit" parameter to limit the results.
>>> articles.get_list(order_by=['headline'], limit=2)
[Article 1, Article 2]
# Use the "offset" parameter with "limit" to offset the result list.
>>> articles.get_list(order_by=['headline'], offset=1, limit=2)
[Article 2, Article 3]
# Use '?' to order randomly. (We're using [...] in the output to indicate we
# don't know what order the output will be in.
>>> articles.get_list(order_by=['?'])
[...]
"""