Corrected GenericRelation's related_query_name manual lookup example.
And changed related_query_name to a singular noun.
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@ -394,21 +394,21 @@ be used to retrieve their associated ``TaggedItems``::
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Defining :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.fields.GenericRelation` with
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``related_query_name`` set allows querying from the related object::
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tags = GenericRelation(TaggedItem, related_query_name='bookmarks')
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tags = GenericRelation(TaggedItem, related_query_name='bookmark')
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This enables filtering, ordering, and other query operations on ``Bookmark``
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from ``TaggedItem``::
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>>> # Get all tags belonging to bookmarks containing `django` in the url
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>>> TaggedItem.objects.filter(bookmarks__url__contains='django')
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>>> TaggedItem.objects.filter(bookmark__url__contains='django')
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<QuerySet [<TaggedItem: django>, <TaggedItem: python>]>
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Of course, if you don't add the reverse relationship, you can do the
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Of course, if you don't add the ``related_query_name``, you can do the
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same types of lookups manually::
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>>> b = Bookmark.objects.get(url='https://www.djangoproject.com/')
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>>> bookmark_type = ContentType.objects.get_for_model(b)
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>>> TaggedItem.objects.filter(content_type__pk=bookmark_type.id, object_id=b.id)
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>>> bookmarks = Bookmark.objects.filter(url__contains='django')
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>>> bookmark_type = ContentType.objects.get_for_model(Bookmark)
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>>> TaggedItem.objects.filter(content_type__pk=bookmark_type.id, object_id__in=bookmarks)
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<QuerySet [<TaggedItem: django>, <TaggedItem: python>]>
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Just as :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.fields.GenericForeignKey`
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