mirror of https://github.com/django/django.git
Migrated many-to-one doctests. Thanks to George Sakkis for the patch.
git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@14281 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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@ -24,290 +24,3 @@ class Article(models.Model):
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class Meta:
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ordering = ('headline',)
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__test__ = {'API_TESTS':"""
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# Create a few Reporters.
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>>> r = Reporter(first_name='John', last_name='Smith', email='john@example.com')
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>>> r.save()
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>>> r2 = Reporter(first_name='Paul', last_name='Jones', email='paul@example.com')
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>>> r2.save()
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# Create an Article.
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>>> from datetime import datetime
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>>> a = Article(id=None, headline="This is a test", pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter=r)
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>>> a.save()
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>>> a.reporter.id
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1
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>>> a.reporter
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<Reporter: John Smith>
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# Article objects have access to their related Reporter objects.
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>>> r = a.reporter
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# These are strings instead of unicode strings because that's what was used in
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# the creation of this reporter (and we haven't refreshed the data from the
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# database, which always returns unicode strings).
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>>> r.first_name, r.last_name
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('John', 'Smith')
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# Create an Article via the Reporter object.
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>>> new_article = r.article_set.create(headline="John's second story", pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
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>>> new_article
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<Article: John's second story>
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>>> new_article.reporter.id
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1
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# Create a new article, and add it to the article set.
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>>> new_article2 = Article(headline="Paul's story", pub_date=datetime(2006, 1, 17))
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>>> r.article_set.add(new_article2)
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>>> new_article2.reporter.id
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1
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# Add the same article to a different article set - check that it moves.
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>>> r2.article_set.add(new_article2)
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>>> new_article2.reporter.id
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2
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# Adding an object of the wrong type raises TypeError
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>>> r.article_set.add(r2)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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...
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TypeError: 'Article' instance expected
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r2.article_set.all()
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[<Article: Paul's story>]
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# Assign the article to the reporter directly using the descriptor
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>>> new_article2.reporter = r
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>>> new_article2.save()
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>>> new_article2.reporter
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<Reporter: John Smith>
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>>> new_article2.reporter.id
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1
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r2.article_set.all()
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[]
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# Set the article back again using set descriptor.
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>>> r2.article_set = [new_article, new_article2]
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r2.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>]
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# Funny case - assignment notation can only go so far; because the
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# ForeignKey cannot be null, existing members of the set must remain
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>>> r.article_set = [new_article]
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r2.article_set.all()
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[<Article: Paul's story>]
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# Reporter cannot be null - there should not be a clear or remove method
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>>> hasattr(r2.article_set, 'remove')
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False
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>>> hasattr(r2.article_set, 'clear')
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False
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# Reporter objects have access to their related Article objects.
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>>> r.article_set.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r.article_set.filter(headline__startswith='This')
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[<Article: This is a test>]
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>>> r.article_set.count()
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2
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>>> r2.article_set.count()
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1
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# Get articles by id
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>>> Article.objects.filter(id__exact=1)
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[<Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(pk=1)
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[<Article: This is a test>]
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# Query on an article property
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>>> Article.objects.filter(headline__startswith='This')
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[<Article: This is a test>]
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# The API automatically follows relationships as far as you need.
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# Use double underscores to separate relationships.
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# This works as many levels deep as you want. There's no limit.
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# Find all Articles for any Reporter whose first name is "John".
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John')
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# Check that implied __exact also works
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name='John')
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# Query twice over the related field.
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John', reporter__last_name__exact='Smith')
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# The underlying query only makes one join when a related table is referenced twice.
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>>> queryset = Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John', reporter__last_name__exact='Smith')
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>>> sql = queryset.query.get_compiler(queryset.db).as_sql()[0]
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>>> sql.count('INNER JOIN')
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1
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# The automatically joined table has a predictable name.
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John').extra(where=["many_to_one_reporter.last_name='Smith'"])
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# And should work fine with the unicode that comes out of
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# forms.Form.cleaned_data
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John').extra(where=["many_to_one_reporter.last_name='%s'" % u'Smith'])
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# Find all Articles for the Reporter whose ID is 1.
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# Use direct ID check, pk check, and object comparison
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__id__exact=1)
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__pk=1)
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter=1)
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter=r)
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__in=[1,2]).distinct()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__in=[r,r2]).distinct()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# You can also use a queryset instead of a literal list of instances.
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# The queryset must be reduced to a list of values using values(),
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# then converted into a query
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter__in=Reporter.objects.filter(first_name='John').values('pk').query).distinct()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>]
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# You need two underscores between "reporter" and "id" -- not one.
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter_id__exact=1)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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...
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FieldError: Cannot resolve keyword 'reporter_id' into field. Choices are: headline, id, pub_date, reporter
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# You need to specify a comparison clause
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>>> Article.objects.filter(reporter_id=1)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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...
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FieldError: Cannot resolve keyword 'reporter_id' into field. Choices are: headline, id, pub_date, reporter
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# You can also instantiate an Article by passing
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# the Reporter's ID instead of a Reporter object.
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>>> a3 = Article(id=None, headline="This is a test", pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=r.id)
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>>> a3.save()
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>>> a3.reporter.id
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1
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>>> a3.reporter
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<Reporter: John Smith>
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# Similarly, the reporter ID can be a string.
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>>> a4 = Article(id=None, headline="This is a test", pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id="1")
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>>> a4.save()
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>>> a4.reporter
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<Reporter: John Smith>
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# Reporters can be queried
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(id__exact=1)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(pk=1)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(first_name__startswith='John')
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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# Reporters can query in opposite direction of ForeignKey definition
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__id__exact=1)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__pk=1)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article=1)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article=a)
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[1,4]).distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[1,a3]).distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[a,a3]).distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This')
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[<Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This').distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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# Counting in the opposite direction works in conjunction with distinct()
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This').count()
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3
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This').distinct().count()
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1
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# Queries can go round in circles.
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__first_name__startswith='John')
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[<Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__first_name__startswith='John').distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__exact=r).distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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# Regression for #12876 -- Model methods that include queries that
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# recursive don't cause recursion depth problems under deepcopy.
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>>> r.cached_query = Article.objects.filter(reporter=r)
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>>> from copy import deepcopy
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>>> deepcopy(r)
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<Reporter: John Smith>
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# Check that implied __exact also works.
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter=r).distinct()
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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# It's possible to use values() calls across many-to-one relations. (Note, too, that we clear the ordering here so as not to drag the 'headline' field into the columns being used to determine uniqueness.)
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>>> d = {'reporter__first_name': u'John', 'reporter__last_name': u'Smith'}
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>>> list(Article.objects.filter(reporter=r).distinct().order_by().values('reporter__first_name', 'reporter__last_name')) == [d]
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True
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# If you delete a reporter, his articles will be deleted.
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>>> Article.objects.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: Paul's story>, <Article: This is a test>, <Article: This is a test>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.order_by('first_name')
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[<Reporter: John Smith>, <Reporter: Paul Jones>]
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>>> r2.delete()
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>>> Article.objects.all()
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[<Article: John's second story>, <Article: This is a test>, <Article: This is a test>, <Article: This is a test>]
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>>> Reporter.objects.order_by('first_name')
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[<Reporter: John Smith>]
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# You can delete using a JOIN in the query.
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>>> Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This').delete()
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>>> Reporter.objects.all()
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[]
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>>> Article.objects.all()
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[]
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# Check that Article.objects.select_related().dates() works properly when
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# there are multiple Articles with the same date but different foreign-key
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# objects (Reporters).
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>>> r1 = Reporter.objects.create(first_name='Mike', last_name='Royko', email='royko@suntimes.com')
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>>> r2 = Reporter.objects.create(first_name='John', last_name='Kass', email='jkass@tribune.com')
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>>> a1 = Article.objects.create(headline='First', pub_date=datetime(1980, 4, 23), reporter=r1)
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>>> a2 = Article.objects.create(headline='Second', pub_date=datetime(1980, 4, 23), reporter=r2)
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>>> Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'day')
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[datetime.datetime(1980, 4, 23, 0, 0)]
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>>> Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'month')
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[datetime.datetime(1980, 4, 1, 0, 0)]
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>>> Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'year')
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[datetime.datetime(1980, 1, 1, 0, 0)]
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"""}
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@ -0,0 +1,372 @@
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from datetime import datetime
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from django.test import TestCase
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from django.core.exceptions import FieldError
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from models import Article, Reporter
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class ManyToOneTests(TestCase):
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def setUp(self):
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# Create a few Reporters.
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self.r = Reporter(first_name='John', last_name='Smith', email='john@example.com')
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self.r.save()
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self.r2 = Reporter(first_name='Paul', last_name='Jones', email='paul@example.com')
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self.r2.save()
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# Create an Article.
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self.a = Article(id=None, headline="This is a test",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter=self.r)
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self.a.save()
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def test_get(self):
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# Article objects have access to their related Reporter objects.
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r = self.a.reporter
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self.assertEqual(r.id, self.r.id)
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# These are strings instead of unicode strings because that's what was used in
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# the creation of this reporter (and we haven't refreshed the data from the
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# database, which always returns unicode strings).
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self.assertEqual((r.first_name, self.r.last_name), ('John', 'Smith'))
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def test_create(self):
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# You can also instantiate an Article by passing the Reporter's ID
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# instead of a Reporter object.
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a3 = Article(id=None, headline="Third article",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=self.r.id)
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a3.save()
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self.assertEqual(a3.reporter.id, self.r.id)
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# Similarly, the reporter ID can be a string.
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a4 = Article(id=None, headline="Fourth article",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=str(self.r.id))
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a4.save()
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self.assertEqual(repr(a4.reporter), "<Reporter: John Smith>")
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def test_add(self):
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# Create an Article via the Reporter object.
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new_article = self.r.article_set.create(headline="John's second story",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
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self.assertEqual(repr(new_article), "<Article: John's second story>")
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self.assertEqual(new_article.reporter.id, self.r.id)
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# Create a new article, and add it to the article set.
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new_article2 = Article(headline="Paul's story", pub_date=datetime(2006, 1, 17))
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self.r.article_set.add(new_article2)
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self.assertEqual(new_article2.reporter.id, self.r.id)
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(),
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[
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"<Article: John's second story>",
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"<Article: Paul's story>",
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"<Article: This is a test>",
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])
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# Add the same article to a different article set - check that it moves.
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self.r2.article_set.add(new_article2)
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self.assertEqual(new_article2.reporter.id, self.r2.id)
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r2.article_set.all(), ["<Article: Paul's story>"])
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# Adding an object of the wrong type raises TypeError.
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self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.r.article_set.add, self.r2)
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(),
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[
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"<Article: John's second story>",
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"<Article: This is a test>",
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])
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def test_assign(self):
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new_article = self.r.article_set.create(headline="John's second story",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
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new_article2 = self.r2.article_set.create(headline="Paul's story",
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pub_date=datetime(2006, 1, 17))
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# Assign the article to the reporter directly using the descriptor.
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new_article2.reporter = self.r
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new_article2.save()
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self.assertEqual(repr(new_article2.reporter), "<Reporter: John Smith>")
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self.assertEqual(new_article2.reporter.id, self.r.id)
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(), [
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"<Article: John's second story>",
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"<Article: Paul's story>",
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"<Article: This is a test>",
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])
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r2.article_set.all(), [])
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# Set the article back again using set descriptor.
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self.r2.article_set = [new_article, new_article2]
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(), ["<Article: This is a test>"])
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r2.article_set.all(),
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[
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"<Article: John's second story>",
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"<Article: Paul's story>",
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])
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# Funny case - assignment notation can only go so far; because the
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# ForeignKey cannot be null, existing members of the set must remain.
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self.r.article_set = [new_article]
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(),
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[
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"<Article: John's second story>",
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"<Article: This is a test>",
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])
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self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r2.article_set.all(), ["<Article: Paul's story>"])
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# Reporter cannot be null - there should not be a clear or remove method
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self.assertFalse(hasattr(self.r2.article_set, 'remove'))
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self.assertFalse(hasattr(self.r2.article_set, 'clear'))
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def test_selects(self):
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new_article = self.r.article_set.create(headline="John's second story",
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pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
|
||||
new_article2 = self.r2.article_set.create(headline="Paul's story",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2006, 1, 17))
|
||||
# Reporter objects have access to their related Article objects.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.all(), [
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(self.r.article_set.filter(headline__startswith='This'),
|
||||
["<Article: This is a test>"])
|
||||
self.assertEqual(self.r.article_set.count(), 2)
|
||||
self.assertEqual(self.r2.article_set.count(), 1)
|
||||
# Get articles by id
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.filter(id__exact=self.a.id),
|
||||
["<Article: This is a test>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.filter(pk=self.a.id),
|
||||
["<Article: This is a test>"])
|
||||
# Query on an article property
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.filter(headline__startswith='This'),
|
||||
["<Article: This is a test>"])
|
||||
# The API automatically follows relationships as far as you need.
|
||||
# Use double underscores to separate relationships.
|
||||
# This works as many levels deep as you want. There's no limit.
|
||||
# Find all Articles for any Reporter whose first name is "John".
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John'),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# Check that implied __exact also works
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name='John'),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# Query twice over the related field.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John',
|
||||
reporter__last_name__exact='Smith'),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# The underlying query only makes one join when a related table is referenced twice.
|
||||
queryset = Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John',
|
||||
reporter__last_name__exact='Smith')
|
||||
self.assertNumQueries(1, list, queryset)
|
||||
self.assertEqual(queryset.query.get_compiler(queryset.db).as_sql()[0].count('INNER JOIN'), 1)
|
||||
|
||||
# The automatically joined table has a predictable name.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John').extra(
|
||||
where=["many_to_one_reporter.last_name='Smith'"]),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# ... and should work fine with the unicode that comes out of forms.Form.cleaned_data
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__first_name__exact='John'
|
||||
).extra(where=["many_to_one_reporter.last_name='%s'" % u'Smith']),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# Find all Articles for a Reporter.
|
||||
# Use direct ID check, pk check, and object comparison
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__id__exact=self.r.id),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__pk=self.r.id),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter=self.r.id),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter=self.r),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__in=[self.r.id,self.r2.id]).distinct(),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: Paul's story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(reporter__in=[self.r,self.r2]).distinct(),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: Paul's story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# You can also use a queryset instead of a literal list of instances.
|
||||
# The queryset must be reduced to a list of values using values(),
|
||||
# then converted into a query
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Article.objects.filter(
|
||||
reporter__in=Reporter.objects.filter(first_name='John').values('pk').query
|
||||
).distinct(),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
# You need two underscores between "reporter" and "id" -- not one.
|
||||
self.assertRaises(FieldError, Article.objects.filter, reporter_id__exact=self.r.id)
|
||||
# You need to specify a comparison clause
|
||||
self.assertRaises(FieldError, Article.objects.filter, reporter_id=self.r.id)
|
||||
|
||||
def test_reverse_selects(self):
|
||||
a3 = Article.objects.create(id=None, headline="Third article",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=self.r.id)
|
||||
a4 = Article.objects.create(id=None, headline="Fourth article",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=str(self.r.id))
|
||||
# Reporters can be queried
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(id__exact=self.r.id),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(pk=self.r.id),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(first_name__startswith='John'),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
# Reporters can query in opposite direction of ForeignKey definition
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(article__id__exact=self.a.id),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(article__pk=self.a.id),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(article=self.a.id),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.filter(article=self.a),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[self.a.id,a3.id]).distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[self.a.id,a3]).distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__in=[self.a,a3]).distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='T'),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>", "<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='T').distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
|
||||
# Counting in the opposite direction works in conjunction with distinct()
|
||||
self.assertEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='T').count(), 2)
|
||||
self.assertEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='T').distinct().count(), 1)
|
||||
|
||||
# Queries can go round in circles.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__first_name__startswith='John'),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Reporter: John Smith>",
|
||||
"<Reporter: John Smith>",
|
||||
"<Reporter: John Smith>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__first_name__startswith='John').distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter__exact=self.r).distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
|
||||
# Check that implied __exact also works.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__reporter=self.r).distinct(),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
|
||||
# It's possible to use values() calls across many-to-one relations.
|
||||
# (Note, too, that we clear the ordering here so as not to drag the
|
||||
# 'headline' field into the columns being used to determine uniqueness)
|
||||
d = {'reporter__first_name': u'John', 'reporter__last_name': u'Smith'}
|
||||
self.assertEqual([d],
|
||||
list(Article.objects.filter(reporter=self.r).distinct().order_by()
|
||||
.values('reporter__first_name', 'reporter__last_name')))
|
||||
|
||||
def test_select_related(self):
|
||||
# Check that Article.objects.select_related().dates() works properly when
|
||||
# there are multiple Articles with the same date but different foreign-key
|
||||
# objects (Reporters).
|
||||
r1 = Reporter.objects.create(first_name='Mike', last_name='Royko', email='royko@suntimes.com')
|
||||
r2 = Reporter.objects.create(first_name='John', last_name='Kass', email='jkass@tribune.com')
|
||||
a1 = Article.objects.create(headline='First', pub_date=datetime(1980, 4, 23), reporter=r1)
|
||||
a2 = Article.objects.create(headline='Second', pub_date=datetime(1980, 4, 23), reporter=r2)
|
||||
self.assertEqual(list(Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'day')),
|
||||
[
|
||||
datetime(1980, 4, 23, 0, 0),
|
||||
datetime(2005, 7, 27, 0, 0),
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertEqual(list(Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'month')),
|
||||
[
|
||||
datetime(1980, 4, 1, 0, 0),
|
||||
datetime(2005, 7, 1, 0, 0),
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertEqual(list(Article.objects.select_related().dates('pub_date', 'year')),
|
||||
[
|
||||
datetime(1980, 1, 1, 0, 0),
|
||||
datetime(2005, 1, 1, 0, 0),
|
||||
])
|
||||
|
||||
def test_delete(self):
|
||||
new_article = self.r.article_set.create(headline="John's second story",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 29))
|
||||
new_article2 = self.r2.article_set.create(headline="Paul's story",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2006, 1, 17))
|
||||
a3 = Article.objects.create(id=None, headline="Third article",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=self.r.id)
|
||||
a4 = Article.objects.create(id=None, headline="Fourth article",
|
||||
pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27), reporter_id=str(self.r.id))
|
||||
# If you delete a reporter, his articles will be deleted.
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.all(),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: Fourth article>",
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: Paul's story>",
|
||||
"<Article: Third article>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.order_by('first_name'),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Reporter: John Smith>",
|
||||
"<Reporter: Paul Jones>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.r2.delete()
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.all(),
|
||||
[
|
||||
"<Article: Fourth article>",
|
||||
"<Article: John's second story>",
|
||||
"<Article: Third article>",
|
||||
"<Article: This is a test>",
|
||||
])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.order_by('first_name'),
|
||||
["<Reporter: John Smith>"])
|
||||
# You can delete using a JOIN in the query.
|
||||
Reporter.objects.filter(article__headline__startswith='This').delete()
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Reporter.objects.all(), [])
|
||||
self.assertQuerysetEqual(Article.objects.all(), [])
|
||||
|
||||
def test_regression_12876(self):
|
||||
# Regression for #12876 -- Model methods that include queries that
|
||||
# recursive don't cause recursion depth problems under deepcopy.
|
||||
self.r.cached_query = Article.objects.filter(reporter=self.r)
|
||||
from copy import deepcopy
|
||||
self.assertEqual(repr(deepcopy(self.r)), "<Reporter: John Smith>")
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue