5๐
โ
I got it!
print('qset1:', len(qset1), qset1[0].__dict__.keys())
print('qset2:', len(qset2), qset2[0].__dict__.keys())
print('qset3:', len(qset2), qset3[0].__dict__.keys())
...
qset[0]
gives the first row of the queryset qset
(This only work if the queryset has at least one row)
.__dict__
converts that row to a dictionary โ a dictionary with keys being column names and values are the row elements
.keys()
gives the list of keys of the dictionary, thus, the columns
This prints the list of the columns for all the querysets.
๐คGranny Aching
Source:stackexchange.com