18đź‘Ť
âś…
The difference is about the resulting SQL Query to be executed on the database… I personally prefer “__icontains” because is supported for all databases, and “__search” only for mysql (as django docs) (also supporting PostgreSQL in Django ≥ 1.10 — see documentation).
Look at the query for each method:
Using __search
>>> str(Contact.objects.filter(first_name__search='john').query)
'SELECT `contact_contact`.`id`, `contact_contact`.`title`, `contact_contact`.`first_name`, `contact_contact`.`last_name`, `contact_contact`.`user_id`, `contact_contact`.`role_id`, `contact_contact`.`organization_id`, `contact_contact`.`dob`, `contact_contact`.`email`, `contact_contact`.`notes`, `contact_contact`.`create_date` FROM `contact_contact` WHERE MATCH (`contact_contact`.`first_name`) AGAINST (john IN BOOLEAN MODE)'
Using __icontains
>>> str(Contact.objects.filter(first_name__icontains='john').query)
'SELECT `contact_contact`.`id`, `contact_contact`.`title`, `contact_contact`.`first_name`, `contact_contact`.`last_name`, `contact_contact`.`user_id`, `contact_contact`.`role_id`, `contact_contact`.`organization_id`, `contact_contact`.`dob`, `contact_contact`.`email`, `contact_contact`.`notes`, `contact_contact`.`create_date` FROM `contact_contact` WHERE `contact_contact`.`first_name` LIKE %john% '
👤Darwin
1đź‘Ť
as I tried, __search
works just for whole word within multiple words (Incredible!), for example when my Book
model contains an object with title='The little prance'
, while
Country.objects.filter(name__contais=’itt’)
returns one object,
Country.objects.filter(name__search=’itt’)
return nothing!
👤hadi ahadi
1đź‘Ť
Search has the advantage of allowing search for multiple fields:
>>> Entry.objects.annotate(
... search=SearchVector('blog__tagline', 'body_text'),
... ).filter(search='cheese')
[
<Entry: Cheese on Toast recipes>,
<Entry: Pizza Recipes>,
<Entry: Dairy farming in Argentina>,
]
👤hehe
Source:stackexchange.com