2👍
By using raw SQL, I have managed to obtain the result.
select array_to_json(array_agg(students_array))
FROM
course_table,
json_array_elements(CAST(course_table.infos->>'students' as json)) students_array
WHERE
CAST(students_array->>'result' as integer) >= 10
;
Result
sample_db=# SELECT version();
PostgreSQL 10.12 (Ubuntu 10.12-0ubuntu0.18.04.1) on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (Ubuntu 7.4.0-1ubuntu1~18.04.1) 7.4.0, 64-bit
sample_db=# select infos from course_table;
{"category": "Maths", "students": [{"name": "Alice", "result": 8}, {"name": "Bob", "result": 12}]}
{"category": "Science", "students": [{"name": "Jerin", "result": 8}, {"name": "George", "result": 12}]}
{"category": "Physics", "students": [{"name": "Vivek", "result": 17}, {"name": "Osama", "result": 6}]}
sample_db=# select array_to_json(array_agg(students_array))
sample_db-# FROM
sample_db-# course_table,
sample_db-# json_array_elements(CAST(course_table.infos->>'students' as json)) students_array
sample_db-# WHERE
sample_db-# CAST(students_array->>'result' as integer) >= 10
sample_db-# ;
[{"name": "Bob", "result": 12},{"name": "George", "result": 12},{"name": "Vivek", "result": 17}]
This raw SQL can be executed by Django as,
raw_sql = """
select 1 as id, array_to_json(array_agg(students_array)) as result
FROM
course_table,
json_array_elements(CAST(course_table.infos->>'students' as json)) students_array
WHERE
CAST(students_array->>'result' as integer) >= 10
;
"""
qs = Course.objects.raw(raw_sql)
for i in qs:
print(i.result)
2👍
In case you’re using a PostgreSQL database, you can switch to an HStoreField ([docs here][1]). The HStoreField will allow you to use exactly the lookup you mention (students__result__gte
). Otherwise the most Django-esque way would be to create a Student model like Arakkal suggests in the comments under your question.
EDIT: This is the simplest way to be able to filter given all the maps/dicts are the same (if you really want the same structure as your JSON):
class Course(models.Model):
pass
class Info(models.Model):
course = models.ForeignKey(Course, related_name='infos')
category = models.CharField(max_length=128)
# students = models.HStoreField() # available in postgresql
class Student(models.Model):
"""If not using PostgreSQL, also more Django-esque."""
info = models.ForeignKey(Info, related_name='students')
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
result = models.IntegerField()
I’m trying to get a list of all students that got at least 10 on any course (result >= 10)
This would be my prefered structure given your goal and my intuition about the logical relationships:
class Course(models.Model):
students = models.ManyToManyField(Student, through=Result)
category = models.CharField(max_length=128)
class Student(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
class Result(models.Model):
course = models.ForeignKey(Course, on_delete=models.deletion.CASCADE)
student = models.ForeignKey(Student, on_delete=models.deletion.CASCADE)
grade = models.IntegerField()
That allows for: Result.objects.filter(grade__gte=10).values_list('student__name', flat=True)
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0👍
You could try defining a custom manager for your Course Class. This would enable you to make the query you want in the Django-ORM style without using raw SQL.
PS:- I”ll edit this answer with more code and details if this suits your needs.