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Fixed #2473 -- Added special case for '__in=[]' (empty set) queries, because 'WHERE attr IN ()' is invalid SQL on many backends. Thanks, Gary Wilson.
git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@4283 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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@ -641,7 +641,15 @@ def get_where_clause(lookup_type, table_prefix, field_name, value):
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except KeyError:
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pass
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if lookup_type == 'in':
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return '%s%s IN (%s)' % (table_prefix, field_name, ','.join(['%s' for v in value]))
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in_string = ','.join(['%s' for id in value])
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if in_string:
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return '%s%s IN (%s)' % (table_prefix, field_name, in_string)
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else:
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# Most backends do not accept an empty string inside the IN
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# expression, i.e. cannot do "WHERE ... IN ()". Since there are
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# also some backends that do not accept "WHERE false", we instead
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# use an expression that always evaluates to False.
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return '0=1'
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elif lookup_type == 'range':
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return '%s%s BETWEEN %%s AND %%s' % (table_prefix, field_name)
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elif lookup_type in ('year', 'month', 'day'):
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@ -69,6 +69,21 @@ __test__ = {'API_TESTS':"""
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>>> Article.objects.filter(Q(pk=1) | Q(pk=2) | Q(pk=3))
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[<Article: Hello>, <Article: Goodbye>, <Article: Hello and goodbye>]
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# You could also use "in" to accomplish the same as above.
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>>> Article.objects.filter(pk__in=[1,2,3])
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[<Article: Hello>, <Article: Goodbye>, <Article: Hello and goodbye>]
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>>> Article.objects.filter(pk__in=[1,2,3,4])
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[<Article: Hello>, <Article: Goodbye>, <Article: Hello and goodbye>]
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# Passing "in" an empty list returns no results ...
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>>> Article.objects.filter(pk__in=[])
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[]
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# ... but can return results if we OR it with another query.
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>>> Article.objects.filter(Q(pk__in=[]) | Q(headline__icontains='goodbye'))
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[<Article: Goodbye>, <Article: Hello and goodbye>]
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# Q arg objects are ANDed
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>>> Article.objects.filter(Q(headline__startswith='Hello'), Q(headline__contains='bye'))
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[<Article: Hello and goodbye>]
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