""" 9. Many-to-many relationships via an intermediary table For many-to-many relationships that need extra fields on the intermediary table, use an intermediary model. In this example, an ``Article`` can have multiple ``Reporter``s, and each ``Article``-``Reporter`` combination (a ``Writer``) has a ``position`` field, which specifies the ``Reporter``'s position for the given article (e.g. "Staff writer"). """ from django.core import meta class Reporter(meta.Model): first_name = meta.CharField(maxlength=30) last_name = meta.CharField(maxlength=30) def __repr__(self): return "%s %s" % (self.first_name, self.last_name) class Article(meta.Model): headline = meta.CharField(maxlength=100) pub_date = meta.DateField() def __repr__(self): return self.headline class Writer(meta.Model): reporter = meta.ForeignKey(Reporter) article = meta.ForeignKey(Article) position = meta.CharField(maxlength=100) def __repr__(self): return '%r (%s)' % (self.get_reporter(), self.position) API_TESTS = """ # Create a few Reporters. >>> r1 = reporters.Reporter(first_name='John', last_name='Smith') >>> r1.save() >>> r2 = reporters.Reporter(first_name='Jane', last_name='Doe') >>> r2.save() # Create an Article. >>> from datetime import datetime >>> a = articles.Article(headline='This is a test', pub_date=datetime(2005, 7, 27)) >>> a.save() # Create a few Writers. >>> w1 = writers.Writer(reporter=r1, article=a, position='Main writer') >>> w1.save() >>> w2 = writers.Writer(reporter=r2, article=a, position='Contributor') >>> w2.save() # Play around with the API. >>> a.get_writer_list(order_by=['-position'], select_related=True) [John Smith (Main writer), Jane Doe (Contributor)] >>> w1.get_reporter() John Smith >>> w2.get_reporter() Jane Doe >>> w1.get_article() This is a test >>> w2.get_article() This is a test >>> r1.get_writer_list() [John Smith (Main writer)] """