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			706 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			706 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
| """
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| Various complex queries that have been problematic in the past.
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| """
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| 
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| import datetime
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| 
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| from django.db import models
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| from django.db.models.query import Q
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| 
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| class Tag(models.Model):
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|     name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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|     parent = models.ForeignKey('self', blank=True, null=True)
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.name
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| 
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| class Note(models.Model):
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|     note = models.CharField(max_length=100)
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|     misc = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['note']
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.note
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| 
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| class ExtraInfo(models.Model):
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|     info = models.CharField(max_length=100)
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|     note = models.ForeignKey(Note)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['info']
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.info
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| 
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| class Author(models.Model):
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|     name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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|     num = models.IntegerField(unique=True)
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|     extra = models.ForeignKey(ExtraInfo)
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.name
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| 
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| class Item(models.Model):
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|     name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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|     created = models.DateTimeField()
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|     tags = models.ManyToManyField(Tag, blank=True, null=True)
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|     creator = models.ForeignKey(Author)
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|     note = models.ForeignKey(Note)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['-note', 'name']
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.name
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| 
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| class Report(models.Model):
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|     name = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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|     creator = models.ForeignKey(Author, to_field='num')
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.name
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| 
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| class Ranking(models.Model):
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|     rank = models.IntegerField()
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|     author = models.ForeignKey(Author)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         # A complex ordering specification. Should stress the system a bit.
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|         ordering = ('author__extra__note', 'author__name', 'rank')
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return '%d: %s' % (self.rank, self.author.name)
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| 
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| class Cover(models.Model):
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|     title = models.CharField(max_length=50)
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|     item = models.ForeignKey(Item)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['item']
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.title
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| 
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| class Number(models.Model):
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|     num = models.IntegerField()
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return unicode(self.num)
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| 
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| # Some funky cross-linked models for testing a couple of infinite recursion
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| # cases.
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| class X(models.Model):
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|     y = models.ForeignKey('Y')
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| 
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| class Y(models.Model):
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|     x1 = models.ForeignKey(X, related_name='y1')
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| 
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| # Some models with a cycle in the default ordering. This would be bad if we
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| # didn't catch the infinite loop.
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| class LoopX(models.Model):
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|     y = models.ForeignKey('LoopY')
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['y']
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| 
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| class LoopY(models.Model):
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|     x = models.ForeignKey(LoopX)
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['x']
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| 
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| class LoopZ(models.Model):
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|     z = models.ForeignKey('self')
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| 
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|     class Meta:
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|         ordering = ['z']
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| 
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| # A model and custom default manager combination.
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| class CustomManager(models.Manager):
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|     def get_query_set(self):
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|         qs = super(CustomManager, self).get_query_set()
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|         return qs.filter(is_public=True, tag__name='t1')
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| 
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| class ManagedModel(models.Model):
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|     data = models.CharField(max_length=10)
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|     tag = models.ForeignKey(Tag)
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|     is_public = models.BooleanField(default=True)
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| 
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|     objects = CustomManager()
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|     normal_manager = models.Manager()
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| 
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|     def __unicode__(self):
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|         return self.data
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| 
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| 
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| __test__ = {'API_TESTS':"""
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| >>> t1 = Tag(name='t1')
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| >>> t1.save()
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| >>> t2 = Tag(name='t2', parent=t1)
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| >>> t2.save()
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| >>> t3 = Tag(name='t3', parent=t1)
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| >>> t3.save()
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| >>> t4 = Tag(name='t4', parent=t3)
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| >>> t4.save()
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| >>> t5 = Tag(name='t5', parent=t3)
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| >>> t5.save()
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| 
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| >>> n1 = Note(note='n1', misc='foo')
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| >>> n1.save()
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| >>> n2 = Note(note='n2', misc='bar')
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| >>> n2.save()
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| >>> n3 = Note(note='n3', misc='foo')
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| >>> n3.save()
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| 
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| Create these out of order so that sorting by 'id' will be different to sorting
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| by 'info'. Helps detect some problems later.
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| >>> e2 = ExtraInfo(info='e2', note=n2)
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| >>> e2.save()
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| >>> e1 = ExtraInfo(info='e1', note=n1)
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| >>> e1.save()
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| 
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| >>> a1 = Author(name='a1', num=1001, extra=e1)
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| >>> a1.save()
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| >>> a2 = Author(name='a2', num=2002, extra=e1)
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| >>> a2.save()
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| >>> a3 = Author(name='a3', num=3003, extra=e2)
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| >>> a3.save()
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| >>> a4 = Author(name='a4', num=4004, extra=e2)
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| >>> a4.save()
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| 
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| >>> time1 = datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 19, 22, 25, 0)
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| >>> time2 = datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 19, 21, 0, 0)
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| >>> time3 = datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 20, 22, 25, 0)
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| >>> time4 = datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 20, 21, 0, 0)
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| >>> i1 = Item(name='one', created=time1, creator=a1, note=n3)
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| >>> i1.save()
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| >>> i1.tags = [t1, t2]
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| >>> i2 = Item(name='two', created=time2, creator=a2, note=n2)
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| >>> i2.save()
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| >>> i2.tags = [t1, t3]
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| >>> i3 = Item(name='three', created=time3, creator=a2, note=n3)
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| >>> i3.save()
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| >>> i4 = Item(name='four', created=time4, creator=a4, note=n3)
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| >>> i4.save()
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| >>> i4.tags = [t4]
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| 
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| >>> r1 = Report(name='r1', creator=a1)
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| >>> r1.save()
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| >>> r2 = Report(name='r2', creator=a3)
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| >>> r2.save()
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| 
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| Ordering by 'rank' gives us rank2, rank1, rank3. Ordering by the Meta.ordering
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| will be rank3, rank2, rank1.
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| >>> rank1 = Ranking(rank=2, author=a2)
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| >>> rank1.save()
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| >>> rank2 = Ranking(rank=1, author=a3)
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| >>> rank2.save()
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| >>> rank3 = Ranking(rank=3, author=a1)
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| >>> rank3.save()
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| 
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| >>> c1 = Cover(title="first", item=i4)
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| >>> c1.save()
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| >>> c2 = Cover(title="second", item=i2)
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| >>> c2.save()
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| 
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| >>> n1 = Number(num=4)
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| >>> n1.save()
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| >>> n2 = Number(num=8)
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| >>> n2.save()
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| >>> n3 = Number(num=12)
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| >>> n3.save()
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| 
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| Bug #1050
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__isnull=True)
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| [<Item: three>]
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__id__isnull=True)
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| [<Item: three>]
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| 
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| Bug #1801
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(item=i2)
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| [<Author: a2>]
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(item=i3)
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| [<Author: a2>]
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(item=i2) & Author.objects.filter(item=i3)
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| [<Author: a2>]
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| 
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| Bug #2306
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| Checking that no join types are "left outer" joins.
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| >>> query = Item.objects.filter(tags=t2).query
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| >>> query.LOUTER not in [x[2] for x in query.alias_map.values()]
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| True
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| 
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(tags=t1)).order_by('name')
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| [<Item: one>, <Item: two>]
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(tags=t1)).filter(Q(tags=t2))
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| [<Item: one>]
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(tags=t1)).filter(Q(creator__name='fred')|Q(tags=t2))
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| [<Item: one>]
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| 
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| Each filter call is processed "at once" against a single table, so this is
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| different from the previous example as it tries to find tags that are two
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| things at once (rather than two tags).
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(tags=t1) & Q(tags=t2))
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| []
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(tags=t1), Q(creator__name='fred')|Q(tags=t2))
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| []
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| 
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| >>> qs = Author.objects.filter(ranking__rank=2, ranking__id=rank1.id)
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| >>> list(qs)
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| [<Author: a2>]
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| >>> qs.query.count_active_tables()
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| 2
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| >>> qs = Author.objects.filter(ranking__rank=2).filter(ranking__id=rank1.id)
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| >>> qs.query.count_active_tables()
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| 3
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| 
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| Bug #4464
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags=t1).filter(tags=t2)
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| [<Item: one>]
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__in=[t1, t2]).distinct().order_by('name')
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| [<Item: one>, <Item: two>]
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__in=[t1, t2]).filter(tags=t3)
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| [<Item: two>]
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| 
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| Bug #2080, #3592
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(item__name='one') | Author.objects.filter(name='a3')
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| [<Author: a1>, <Author: a3>]
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(item__name='one') | Q(name='a3'))
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| [<Author: a1>, <Author: a3>]
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(name='a3') | Q(item__name='one'))
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| [<Author: a1>, <Author: a3>]
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(item__name='three') | Q(report__name='r3'))
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| [<Author: a2>]
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| 
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| Bug #4289
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| A slight variation on the above theme: restricting the choices by the lookup
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| constraints.
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(num__lt=4)
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| []
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(num__gt=8, num__lt=12)
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| []
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(num__gt=8, num__lt=13)
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| [<Number: 12>]
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(Q(num__lt=4) | Q(num__gt=8, num__lt=12))
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| []
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(Q(num__gt=8, num__lt=12) | Q(num__lt=4))
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| []
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(Q(num__gt=8) & Q(num__lt=12) | Q(num__lt=4))
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| []
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| >>> Number.objects.filter(Q(num__gt=7) & Q(num__lt=12) | Q(num__lt=4))
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| [<Number: 8>]
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| 
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| Bug #6074
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| Merging two empty result sets shouldn't leave a queryset with no constraints
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| (which would match everything).
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(id__in=[]))
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| []
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(id__in=[])|Q(id__in=[]))
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| []
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| 
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| Bug #1878, #2939
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| >>> Item.objects.values('creator').distinct().count()
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| 3
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| 
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| # Create something with a duplicate 'name' so that we can test multi-column
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| # cases (which require some tricky SQL transformations under the covers).
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| >>> xx = Item(name='four', created=time1, creator=a2, note=n1)
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| >>> xx.save()
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(name='two').values('creator', 'name').distinct().count()
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| 4
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(name='two').extra(select={'foo': '%s'}, select_params=(1,)).values('creator', 'name', 'foo').distinct().count()
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| 4
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(name='two').extra(select={'foo': '%s'}, select_params=(1,)).values('creator', 'name').distinct().count()
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| 4
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| >>> xx.delete()
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| 
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| Bug #2253
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| >>> q1 = Item.objects.order_by('name')
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| >>> q2 = Item.objects.filter(id=i1.id)
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| >>> q1
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| [<Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>]
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| >>> q2
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| [<Item: one>]
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| >>> (q1 | q2).order_by('name')
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| [<Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>]
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| >>> (q1 & q2).order_by('name')
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| [<Item: one>]
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| 
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| # FIXME: This is difficult to fix and very much an edge case, so punt for now.
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| # # This is related to the order_by() tests, below, but the old bug exhibited
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| # # itself here (q2 was pulling too many tables into the combined query with the
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| # # new ordering, but only because we have evaluated q2 already).
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| # >>> len((q1 & q2).order_by('name').query.tables)
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| # 1
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| 
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| >>> q1 = Item.objects.filter(tags=t1)
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| >>> q2 = Item.objects.filter(note=n3, tags=t2)
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| >>> q3 = Item.objects.filter(creator=a4)
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| >>> ((q1 & q2) | q3).order_by('name')
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| [<Item: four>, <Item: one>]
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| 
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| Bugs #4088, #4306
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| >>> Report.objects.filter(creator=1001)
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| [<Report: r1>]
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| >>> Report.objects.filter(creator__num=1001)
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| [<Report: r1>]
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| >>> Report.objects.filter(creator__id=1001)
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| []
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| >>> Report.objects.filter(creator__id=a1.id)
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| [<Report: r1>]
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| >>> Report.objects.filter(creator__name='a1')
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| [<Report: r1>]
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| 
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| Bug #4510
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(report__name='r1')
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| [<Author: a1>]
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| 
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| Bug #5324, #6704
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__name='t4')
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| [<Item: four>]
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(tags__name='t4').order_by('name').distinct()
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| [<Item: one>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>]
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(tags__name='t4').order_by('name').distinct().reverse()
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| [<Item: two>, <Item: three>, <Item: one>]
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| >>> Author.objects.exclude(item__name='one').distinct().order_by('name')
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| [<Author: a2>, <Author: a3>, <Author: a4>]
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| 
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| 
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| # Excluding across a m2m relation when there is more than one related object
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| # associated was problematic.
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(tags__name='t1').order_by('name')
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| [<Item: four>, <Item: three>]
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| >>> Item.objects.exclude(tags__name='t1').exclude(tags__name='t4')
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| [<Item: three>]
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| 
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| # Excluding from a relation that cannot be NULL should not use outer joins.
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| >>> query = Item.objects.exclude(creator__in=[a1, a2]).query
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| >>> query.LOUTER not in [x[2] for x in query.alias_map.values()]
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| True
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| 
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| Similarly, when one of the joins cannot possibly, ever, involve NULL values (Author -> ExtraInfo, in the following), it should never be promoted to a left outer join. So hte following query should only involve one "left outer" join (Author -> Item is 0-to-many).
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| >>> qs = Author.objects.filter(id=a1.id).filter(Q(extra__note=n1)|Q(item__note=n3))
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| >>> len([x[2] for x in qs.query.alias_map.values() if x[2] == query.LOUTER])
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| 1
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| 
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| The previous changes shouldn't affect nullable foreign key joins.
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| >>> Tag.objects.filter(parent__isnull=True).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t1>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.exclude(parent__isnull=True).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t2>, <Tag: t3>, <Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.exclude(Q(parent__name='t1') | Q(parent__isnull=True)).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.exclude(Q(parent__isnull=True) | Q(parent__name='t1')).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.exclude(Q(parent__parent__isnull=True)).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.filter(~Q(parent__parent__isnull=True)).order_by('name')
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| [<Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
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| 
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| Bug #2091
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| >>> t = Tag.objects.get(name='t4')
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| >>> Item.objects.filter(tags__in=[t])
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| [<Item: four>]
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| 
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| Combining querysets built on different models should behave in a well-defined
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| fashion. We raise an error.
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| >>> Author.objects.all() & Tag.objects.all()
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| Traceback (most recent call last):
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| ...
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| AssertionError: Cannot combine queries on two different base models.
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| >>> Author.objects.all() | Tag.objects.all()
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| Traceback (most recent call last):
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| ...
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| AssertionError: Cannot combine queries on two different base models.
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| 
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| Bug #3141
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| >>> Author.objects.extra(select={'foo': '1'}).count()
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| 4
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| >>> Author.objects.extra(select={'foo': '%s'}, select_params=(1,)).count()
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| 4
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| 
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| Bug #2400
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| >>> Author.objects.filter(item__isnull=True)
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| [<Author: a3>]
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| >>> Tag.objects.filter(item__isnull=True)
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| [<Tag: t5>]
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| 
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| Bug #2496
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| >>> Item.objects.extra(tables=['queries_author']).select_related().order_by('name')[:1]
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| [<Item: four>]
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| 
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| Bug #2076
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| # Ordering on related tables should be possible, even if the table is not
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| # otherwise involved.
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| >>> Item.objects.order_by('note__note', 'name')
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| [<Item: two>, <Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>]
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| 
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| # Ordering on a related field should use the remote model's default ordering as
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| # a final step.
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| >>> Author.objects.order_by('extra', '-name')
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| [<Author: a2>, <Author: a1>, <Author: a4>, <Author: a3>]
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| 
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| # Using remote model default ordering can span multiple models (in this case,
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| # Cover is ordered by Item's default, which uses Note's default).
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| >>> Cover.objects.all()
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| [<Cover: first>, <Cover: second>]
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| 
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| # If you're not careful, it's possible to introduce infinite loops via default
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| # ordering on foreign keys in a cycle. We detect that.
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| >>> LoopX.objects.all()
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| Traceback (most recent call last):
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| ...
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| FieldError: Infinite loop caused by ordering.
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| 
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| >>> LoopZ.objects.all()
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| Traceback (most recent call last):
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| ...
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| FieldError: Infinite loop caused by ordering.
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| 
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| # ... but you can still order in a non-recursive fashion amongst linked fields
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| # (the previous test failed because the default ordering was recursive).
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| >>> LoopX.objects.all().order_by('y__x__y__x__id')
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| []
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| 
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| # If the remote model does not have a default ordering, we order by its 'id'
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| # field.
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| >>> Item.objects.order_by('creator', 'name')
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| [<Item: one>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>, <Item: four>]
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| 
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| # Cross model ordering is possible in Meta, too.
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| >>> Ranking.objects.all()
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| [<Ranking: 3: a1>, <Ranking: 2: a2>, <Ranking: 1: a3>]
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| >>> Ranking.objects.all().order_by('rank')
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| [<Ranking: 1: a3>, <Ranking: 2: a2>, <Ranking: 3: a1>]
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| 
 | |
| # Ordering by a many-valued attribute (e.g. a many-to-many or reverse
 | |
| # ForeignKey) is legal, but the results might not make sense. That isn't
 | |
| # Django's problem. Garbage in, garbage out.
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.all().order_by('tags', 'id')
 | |
| [<Item: one>, <Item: two>, <Item: one>, <Item: two>, <Item: four>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| # If we replace the default ordering, Django adjusts the required tables
 | |
| # automatically. Item normally requires a join with Note to do the default
 | |
| # ordering, but that isn't needed here.
 | |
| >>> qs = Item.objects.order_by('name')
 | |
| >>> qs
 | |
| [<Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>]
 | |
| >>> len(qs.query.tables)
 | |
| 1
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Ordering of extra() pieces is possible, too and you can mix extra fields and
 | |
| # model fields in the ordering.
 | |
| >>> Ranking.objects.extra(tables=['django_site'], order_by=['-django_site.id', 'rank'])
 | |
| [<Ranking: 1: a3>, <Ranking: 2: a2>, <Ranking: 3: a1>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| >>> qs = Ranking.objects.extra(select={'good': 'case when rank > 2 then 1 else 0 end'})
 | |
| >>> [o.good for o in qs.extra(order_by=('-good',))] == [True, False, False]
 | |
| True
 | |
| >>> qs.extra(order_by=('-good', 'id'))
 | |
| [<Ranking: 3: a1>, <Ranking: 2: a2>, <Ranking: 1: a3>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Despite having some extra aliases in the query, we can still omit them in a
 | |
| # values() query.
 | |
| >>> qs.values('id', 'rank').order_by('id')
 | |
| [{'id': 1, 'rank': 2}, {'id': 2, 'rank': 1}, {'id': 3, 'rank': 3}]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bugs #2874, #3002
 | |
| >>> qs = Item.objects.select_related().order_by('note__note', 'name')
 | |
| >>> list(qs)
 | |
| [<Item: two>, <Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| # This is also a good select_related() test because there are multiple Note
 | |
| # entries in the SQL. The two Note items should be different.
 | |
| >>> qs[0].note, qs[0].creator.extra.note
 | |
| (<Note: n2>, <Note: n1>)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #3037
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.filter(Q(creator__name='a3', name='two')|Q(creator__name='a4', name='four'))
 | |
| [<Item: four>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #5321, #7070
 | |
| 
 | |
| Ordering columns must be included in the output columns. Note that this means
 | |
| results that might otherwise be distinct are not (if there are multiple values
 | |
| in the ordering cols), as in this example. This isn't a bug; it's a warning to
 | |
| be careful with the selection of ordering columns.
 | |
| 
 | |
| >>> Note.objects.values('misc').distinct().order_by('note', '-misc')
 | |
| [{'misc': u'foo'}, {'misc': u'bar'}, {'misc': u'foo'}]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #4358
 | |
| If you don't pass any fields to values(), relation fields are returned as
 | |
| "foo_id" keys, not "foo". For consistency, you should be able to pass "foo_id"
 | |
| in the fields list and have it work, too. We actually allow both "foo" and
 | |
| "foo_id".
 | |
| 
 | |
| # The *_id version is returned by default.
 | |
| >>> 'note_id' in ExtraInfo.objects.values()[0]
 | |
| True
 | |
| 
 | |
| # You can also pass it in explicitly.
 | |
| >>> ExtraInfo.objects.values('note_id')
 | |
| [{'note_id': 1}, {'note_id': 2}]
 | |
| 
 | |
| # ...or use the field name.
 | |
| >>> ExtraInfo.objects.values('note')
 | |
| [{'note': 1}, {'note': 2}]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #5261
 | |
| >>> Note.objects.exclude(Q())
 | |
| [<Note: n1>, <Note: n2>, <Note: n3>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #3045, #3288
 | |
| Once upon a time, select_related() with circular relations would loop
 | |
| infinitely if you forgot to specify "depth". Now we set an arbitrary default
 | |
| upper bound.
 | |
| >>> X.objects.all()
 | |
| []
 | |
| >>> X.objects.select_related()
 | |
| []
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #3739
 | |
| The all() method on querysets returns a copy of the queryset.
 | |
| >>> q1 = Item.objects.order_by('name')
 | |
| >>> id(q1) == id(q1.all())
 | |
| False
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #2902
 | |
| Parameters can be given to extra_select, *if* you use a SortedDict.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (First we need to know which order the keys fall in "naturally" on your system,
 | |
| so we can put things in the wrong way around from normal. A normal dict would
 | |
| thus fail.)
 | |
| >>> from django.utils.datastructures import SortedDict
 | |
| >>> s = [('a', '%s'), ('b', '%s')]
 | |
| >>> params = ['one', 'two']
 | |
| >>> if {'a': 1, 'b': 2}.keys() == ['a', 'b']:
 | |
| ...     s.reverse()
 | |
| ...     params.reverse()
 | |
| 
 | |
| # This slightly odd comparison works aorund the fact that PostgreSQL will
 | |
| # return 'one' and 'two' as strings, not Unicode objects. It's a side-effect of
 | |
| # using constants here and not a real concern.
 | |
| >>> d = Item.objects.extra(select=SortedDict(s), select_params=params).values('a', 'b')[0]
 | |
| >>> d == {'a': u'one', 'b': u'two'}
 | |
| True
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Order by the number of tags attached to an item.
 | |
| >>> l = Item.objects.extra(select={'count': 'select count(*) from queries_item_tags where queries_item_tags.item_id = queries_item.id'}).order_by('-count')
 | |
| >>> [o.count for o in l]
 | |
| [2, 2, 1, 0]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #6154
 | |
| Multiple filter statements are joined using "AND" all the time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| >>> Author.objects.filter(id=a1.id).filter(Q(extra__note=n1)|Q(item__note=n3))
 | |
| [<Author: a1>]
 | |
| >>> Author.objects.filter(Q(extra__note=n1)|Q(item__note=n3)).filter(id=a1.id)
 | |
| [<Author: a1>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #6981
 | |
| >>> Tag.objects.select_related('parent').order_by('name')
 | |
| [<Tag: t1>, <Tag: t2>, <Tag: t3>, <Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #6180, #6203 -- dates with limits and/or counts
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.count()
 | |
| 4
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.dates('created', 'month').count()
 | |
| 1
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.dates('created', 'day').count()
 | |
| 2
 | |
| >>> len(Item.objects.dates('created', 'day'))
 | |
| 2
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.dates('created', 'day')[0]
 | |
| datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 19, 0, 0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #7087 -- dates with extra select columns
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.dates('created', 'day').extra(select={'a': 1})
 | |
| [datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 19, 0, 0), datetime.datetime(2007, 12, 20, 0, 0)]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Test that parallel iterators work.
 | |
| 
 | |
| >>> qs = Tag.objects.all()
 | |
| >>> i1, i2 = iter(qs), iter(qs)
 | |
| >>> i1.next(), i1.next()
 | |
| (<Tag: t1>, <Tag: t2>)
 | |
| >>> i2.next(), i2.next(), i2.next()
 | |
| (<Tag: t1>, <Tag: t2>, <Tag: t3>)
 | |
| >>> i1.next()
 | |
| <Tag: t3>
 | |
| 
 | |
| >>> qs = X.objects.all()
 | |
| >>> bool(qs)
 | |
| False
 | |
| >>> bool(qs)
 | |
| False
 | |
| 
 | |
| We can do slicing beyond what is currently in the result cache, too.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ## FIXME!! This next test causes really weird PostgreSQL behaviour, but it's
 | |
| ## only apparent much later when the full test suite runs. I don't understand
 | |
| ## what's going on here yet.
 | |
| ##
 | |
| ## # We need to mess with the implemenation internals a bit here to decrease the
 | |
| ## # cache fill size so that we don't read all the results at once.
 | |
| ## >>> from django.db.models import query
 | |
| ## >>> query.ITER_CHUNK_SIZE = 2
 | |
| ## >>> qs = Tag.objects.all()
 | |
| ##
 | |
| ## # Fill the cache with the first chunk.
 | |
| ## >>> bool(qs)
 | |
| ## True
 | |
| ## >>> len(qs._result_cache)
 | |
| ## 2
 | |
| ##
 | |
| ## # Query beyond the end of the cache and check that it is filled out as required.
 | |
| ## >>> qs[4]
 | |
| ## <Tag: t5>
 | |
| ## >>> len(qs._result_cache)
 | |
| ## 5
 | |
| ##
 | |
| ## # But querying beyond the end of the result set will fail.
 | |
| ## >>> qs[100]
 | |
| ## Traceback (most recent call last):
 | |
| ## ...
 | |
| ## IndexError: ...
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #7045 -- extra tables used to crash SQL construction on the second use.
 | |
| >>> qs = Ranking.objects.extra(tables=['django_site'])
 | |
| >>> s = qs.query.as_sql()
 | |
| >>> s = qs.query.as_sql()   # test passes if this doesn't raise an exception.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #7098 -- Make sure semi-deprecated ordering by related models syntax still
 | |
| works.
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.values('note__note').order_by('queries_note.note', 'id')
 | |
| [{'note__note': u'n2'}, {'note__note': u'n3'}, {'note__note': u'n3'}, {'note__note': u'n3'}]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #7096 -- Make sure exclude() with multiple conditions continues to work.
 | |
| >>> Tag.objects.filter(parent=t1, name='t3').order_by('name')
 | |
| [<Tag: t3>]
 | |
| >>> Tag.objects.exclude(parent=t1, name='t3').order_by('name')
 | |
| [<Tag: t1>, <Tag: t2>, <Tag: t4>, <Tag: t5>]
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.exclude(tags__name='t1', name='one').order_by('name').distinct()
 | |
| [<Item: four>, <Item: three>, <Item: two>]
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.filter(name__in=['three', 'four']).exclude(tags__name='t1').order_by('name')
 | |
| [<Item: four>, <Item: three>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| More twisted cases, involving nested negations.
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.exclude(~Q(tags__name='t1', name='one'))
 | |
| [<Item: one>]
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.filter(~Q(tags__name='t1', name='one'), name='two')
 | |
| [<Item: two>]
 | |
| >>> Item.objects.exclude(~Q(tags__name='t1', name='one'), name='two')
 | |
| [<Item: four>, <Item: one>, <Item: three>]
 | |
| 
 | |
| Bug #7095
 | |
| Updates that are filtered on the model being updated are somewhat tricky to get
 | |
| in MySQL. This exercises that case.
 | |
| >>> mm = ManagedModel.objects.create(data='mm1', tag=t1, is_public=True)
 | |
| >>> ManagedModel.objects.update(data='mm')
 | |
| 
 | |
| """}
 | |
| 
 |