7đź‘Ť
This old Django Snippet, worked for me, until Django 1.11. As @Jaberwocky commented virtual_only
gets removed in Django 2.0
However, the deprecation warning reads that this field is deprecated in favor of private_only
, although this is not mentioned in the features removed of the above link.
class AliasField(models.Field):
# def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name, virtual_only=False):
# '''
# virtual_only is deprecated in favor of private_only
# '''
# super(AliasField, self).contribute_to_class(cls, name, virtual_only=True)
# setattr(cls, name, self)
def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name, private_only=False):
'''
virtual_only is deprecated in favor of private_only
'''
super(AliasField, self).contribute_to_class(cls, name, private_only=True)
setattr(cls, name, self)
def __get__(self, instance, instance_type=None):
return getattr(instance, self.db_column)
class Order(models.Model):
"""
The main order model
"""
number = AliasField(db_column='id')
6đź‘Ť
I haven’t looked into this very deeply, but intuitively, some of the following ways might get you started.
Custom manager
A custom manager with a modified get_queryset
method to look for updatedOn
when filtering for time
.
Custom field type
It might be possible to create a custom field type which only acts as a reference to another field.
Hacking the model._meta.fields
The model object’s _meta.fields
seems to contain the list of fields in that object. Maybe you could try adding some kind of dummy field called time
, which refers to the updatedOn
field.
3đź‘Ť
Create a property for the field in your model:
class MyModel(moels.Model):
updated_on = models.DateTimeField()
def _get_time(self):
return self.updated_on
time = property(_get_time)
- Adding a "through" table to django field and migrating with South?
- How to construct django Q object matching none
- Where do I import the `DoesNotExist` exception in Django 1.10 from?
- Commit manually in Django data migration
2đź‘Ť
following miikkas’s suggestion re model.Manager, I came up with the following that works for the much simpler case of retrieving the id field by querying uuid. the database was created with the ID being a varchar field used for a hexadecimal string, and I’m retrofitting a sequential integer ID field so I can use Django’s auth module which requires it. and I want to do this in steps, hence the hack.
if DEVELOPMENT['merging_to_sequential_ids_incomplete']:
class ModelManager(models.Manager):
def get(self, *args, **kwargs):
if 'uuid' in kwargs:
kwargs['id'] = kwargs.pop('uuid')
return super(ModelManager, self).get(*args, **kwargs)
class Model(models.Model):
if DEVELOPMENT['merging_to_sequential_ids_incomplete']:
print >>sys.stderr, 'WARNING: uuid now a synonym to id'
id = models.CharField(max_length = 32,
primary_key = True, default = uuid_string)
objects = ModelManager() # for Client.objects.get(uuid=...)
uuid = property(lambda self: self.id) # for client.uuid
else:
id = models.AutoField(primary_key = True)
uuid = models.CharField(max_length = 32, ...
now I can:
cd myapp && ../djangopython manage.py shell
WARNING: uuid now a synonym to id
setting up special admin settings
Python 2.7.8 (default, Nov 18 2014, 16:29:10)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
(InteractiveConsole)
>>> from myapp.models import *
>>> Client.objects.get(uuid=u'18b86bd7b58e4c0186f7654045ce81d9')
<Client: jc@example.net>
>>> _.uuid
u'18b86bd7b58e4c0186f7654045ce81d9'
filter
could be done the same way.
maybe this can help guide someone else looking for a way to use an “alias” or “synonym” for a Django model field. I don’t believe it will help the OP though. the custom field type might be the better general approach.
- How do I setup messaging and session middleware in a Django RequestFactory during unit testing
- Will Django be a good choice for a permissions based web-app?