=============== Model reference =============== A model is the single, definitive source of data about your data. It contains the essential fields and behaviors of the data you're storing. Generally, each model maps to a single database table. The basics: * Each model is a Python class that subclasses ``django.core.meta.Model``. * Each attribute of the model represents a database field. * Model metadata (non-field information) goes in an inner class named ``META``. A companion to this document is the `official repository of model examples`_. .. _`official repository of model examples`: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/models/ Field objects ============= The most important part of a model is the list of database fields it defines. Fields are defined by class attributes. Each class attribute in a model, aside from the optional inner ``class META``, should be an instance of a ``meta.Field`` subclass. In this example, there are two fields, ``first_name`` and ``last_name`` :: class Person(meta.Model): first_name = meta.CharField(maxlength=30) last_name = meta.CharField(maxlength=30) Django will use ``first_name`` and ``last_name`` as the database column names. Each field type, except for ``ForeignKey``, ``ManyToManyField`` and ``OneToOneField``, takes an optional first positional argument -- a human-readable name. If the human-readable name isn't given, Django will automatically create the human-readable name by using the machine-readable name, converting underscores to spaces. In this example, the human-readable name is ``"Person's first name"``:: first_name = meta.CharField("Person's first name", maxlength=30) In this example, the human-readable name is ``"first name"``:: first_name = meta.CharField(maxlength=30) ``ForeignKey``, ``ManyToManyField`` and ``OneToOneField`` require the first argument to be a model class, so use the ``verbose_name`` keyword argument to specify the human-readable name:: poll = meta.ForeignKey(Poll, verbose_name="the related poll") sites = meta.ManyToManyField(Site, verbose_name="list of sites") place = meta.OneToOneField(Place, verbose_name="related place") Convention is not to capitalize the first letter of the ``verbose_name``. Django will automatically capitalize the first letter where it needs to. General field options --------------------- The following arguments are available to all field types. All are optional. ``null`` If ``True``, Django will store empty values as ``NULL`` in the database. Default is ``False``. Note that empty string values will always get stored as empty strings, not as ``NULL`` -- so use ``null=True`` for non-string fields such as integers, booleans and dates. Avoid using ``null`` on string-based fields such as ``CharField`` and ``TextField`` unless you have an excellent reason. If a string-based field has ``null=True``, that means it has two possible values for "no data": ``NULL``, and the empty string. In most cases, it's redundant to have two possible values for "no data;" Django convention is to use the empty string, not ``NULL``. ``blank`` If ``True``, the field is allowed to be blank. Note that this is different than ``null``. ``null`` is purely database-related, whereas ``blank`` is validation-related. If a field has ``blank=True``, validation on Django's admin site will allow entry of an empty value. If a field has ``blank=False``, the field will be required. ``choices`` A list of 2-tuples to use as choices for this field. If this is given, Django's admin will use a select box instead of the standard text field and will limit choices to the choices given. A choices list looks like this:: YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES = ( ('FR', 'Freshman'), ('SO', 'Sophomore'), ('JR', 'Junior'), ('SR', 'Senior'), ('GR', 'Graduate'), ) The first element in each tuple is the actual value to be stored. The second element is the human-readable name for the option. Define the choices list **outside** of your model class, not inside it. For example, this is not valid:: class Foo(meta.Model): GENDER_CHOICES = ( ('M', 'Male'), ('F', 'Female'), ) gender = meta.CharField(maxlength=1, choices=GENDER_CHOICES) But this is valid:: GENDER_CHOICES = ( ('M', 'Male'), ('F', 'Female'), ) class Foo(meta.Model): gender = meta.CharField(maxlength=1, choices=GENDER_CHOICES) ``core`` For objects that are edited inline to a related object. In the Django admin, if all "core" fields in an inline-edited object are cleared, the object will be deleted. It is an error to have an inline-editable relation without at least one ``core=True`` field. ``db_column`` The name of the database column to use for this field. If this isn't given, Django will use the field's name. If your database column name is an SQL reserved word, or contains characters that aren't allowed in Python variable names -- notably, the hyphen -- that's OK. Django quotes column and table names behind the scenes. ``db_index`` If ``True``, ``django-admin.py sqlindexes`` will output a ``CREATE INDEX`` statement for this field. ``default`` The default value for the field. ``editable`` If ``False``, the field will not be editable in the admin. Default is ``True``. ``help_text`` Extra "help" text to be displayed under the field on the object's admin form. It's useful for documentation even if your object doesn't have an admin form. ``primary_key`` If ``True``, this field is the primary key for the model. If you don't specify ``primary_key=True`` for any fields in your model, Django will automatically add this field:: id = meta.AutoField('ID', primary_key=True) Thus, you don't need to set ``primary_key=True`` on any of your fields unless you want to override the default primary-key behavior. ``primary_key=True`` implies ``blank=False``, ``null=False`` and ``unique=True``. Only one primary key is allowed on an object. ``radio_admin`` By default, Django's admin uses a select-box interface (``, ```` (a single-line input). ``CharField`` has an extra required argument, ``maxlength``, the maximum length (in characters) of the field. The maxlength is enforced at the database level and in Django's validation. ``CommaSeparatedIntegerField`` A field of integers separated by commas. As in ``CharField``, the ``maxlength`` argument is required. ``DateField`` A date field. Has a few extra optional arguments: ====================== =================================================== Argument Description ====================== =================================================== ``auto_now`` Automatically set the field to now every time the object is saved. Useful for "last-modified" timestamps. ``auto_now_add`` Automatically set the field to now when the object is first created. Useful for creation of timestamps. ====================== =================================================== The admin represents this as an ```` with a JavaScript calendar and a shortcut for "Today." ``DateTimeField`` A date and time field. Takes the same extra options as ``DateField``. The admin represents this as two ```` fields, with JavaScript shortcuts. ``EmailField`` A ``CharField`` that checks that the value is a valid e-mail address. This doesn't accept ``maxlength``. ``FileField`` A file-upload field. Has an extra required argument, ``upload_to``, a local filesystem path to which files should be upload. This path may contain `strftime formatting`_, which will be replaced by the date/time of the file upload (so that uploaded files don't fill up the given directory). The admin represents this as an ```` (a file-upload widget). Using a ``FileField` or an ``ImageField`` (see below) in a model takes a few steps: 1. In your settings file, you'll need to define ``MEDIA_ROOT`` as the full path to a directory where you'd like Django to store uploaded files. (For performance, these files are not stored in the database.) Define ``MEDIA_URL`` as the base public URL of that directory. Make sure that this directory is writable by the Web server's user account. 2. Add the ``FileField`` or ``ImageField`` to your model, making sure to define the ``upload_to`` option to tell Django to which subdirectory of ``MEDIA_ROOT`` it should upload files. 3. All that will be stored in your database is a path to the file (relative to ``MEDIA_ROOT``). You'll must likely want to use the convenience ``get__url`` function provided by Django. For example, if your ``ImageField`` is called ``mug_shot``, you can get the absolute URL to your image in a template with ``{{ object.get_mug_shot_url }}``. .. _`strftime formatting`: http://docs.python.org/lib/module-time.html#l2h-1941 ``FilePathField`` A field whose choices are limited to the filenames in a certain directory on the filesystem. Has three special arguments, of which the first is required: ====================== =================================================== Argument Description ====================== =================================================== ``path`` Required. The absolute filesystem path to a directory from which this ``FilePathField`` should get its choices. Example: ``"/home/images"``. ``match`` Optional. A regular expression, as a string, that ``FilePathField`` will use to filter filenames. Note that the regex will be applied to the base filename, not the full path. Example: ``"foo.*\.txt^"``, which will match a file called ``foo23.txt`` but not ``bar.txt`` or ``foo23.gif``. ``recursive`` Optional. Either ``True`` or ``False``. Default is ``False``. Specifies whether all subdirectories of ``path`` should be included. ====================== =================================================== Of course, these arguments can be used together. The one potential gotcha is that ``match`` applies to the base filename, not the full path. So, this example:: FilePathField(path="/home/images", match="foo.*", recursive=True) ...will match ``/home/images/foo.gif`` but not ``/home/images/foo/bar.gif`` because the ``match`` applies to the base filename (``foo.gif`` and ``bar.gif``). ``FloatField`` A floating-point number. Has two **required** arguments: ====================== =================================================== Argument Description ====================== =================================================== ``max_digits`` The maximum number of digits allowed in the number. ``decimal_places`` The number of decimal places to store with the number. ====================== =================================================== For example, to store numbers up to 999 with a resolution of 2 decimal places, you'd use:: meta.FloatField(..., max_digits=5, decimal_places=2) And to store numbers up to approximately one billion with a resolution of 10 decimal places:: meta.FloatField(..., max_digits=19, decimal_places=10) The admin represents this as an ```` (a single-line input). ``ImageField`` Like ``FileField``, but validates that the uploaded object is a valid image. Has two extra optional arguments, ``height_field`` and ``width_field``, which, if set, will be auto-populated with the height and width of the image each time a model instance is saved. Requires the `Python Imaging Library`_. .. _Python Imaging Library: http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/ ``IntegerField`` An integer. The admin represents this as an ```` (a single-line input). ``IPAddressField`` An IP address, in string format (i.e. "24.124.1.30"). The admin represents this as an ```` (a single-line input). ``NullBooleanField`` Like a ``BooleanField``, but allows ``NULL`` as one of the options. Use this instead of a ``BooleanField`` with ``null=True``. The admin represents this as a ```` (a single-line input). ``SmallIntegerField`` Like an ``IntegerField``, but only allows values under a certain (database-dependent) point. ``TextField`` A large text field. The admin represents this as a ``