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django/tests/regressiontests/extra_regress/models.py
Malcolm Tredinnick baa960209f Fixed Queryset.dates() in the presence of extra-select columns.
Any extra(select=...) columns can be ignored in the SQL for dates, since we are
only interested in extracting distinct date values. We were previously
including them by accident and it was generating incorrect SQL.


git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@9091 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
2008-09-28 04:36:10 +00:00

119 lines
4.6 KiB
Python

import copy
import datetime
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from django.db import models
from django.db.models.query import Q
from django.utils.datastructures import SortedDict
class RevisionableModel(models.Model):
base = models.ForeignKey('self', null=True)
title = models.CharField(blank=True, max_length=255)
when = models.DateTimeField(default=datetime.datetime.now)
def __unicode__(self):
return u"%s (%s, %s)" % (self.title, self.id, self.base.id)
def save(self, force_insert=False, force_update=False):
super(RevisionableModel, self).save(force_insert, force_update)
if not self.base:
self.base = self
super(RevisionableModel, self).save()
def new_revision(self):
new_revision = copy.copy(self)
new_revision.pk = None
return new_revision
class Order(models.Model):
created_by = models.ForeignKey(User)
text = models.TextField()
__test__ = {"API_TESTS": """
# Regression tests for #7314 and #7372
>>> rm = RevisionableModel.objects.create(title='First Revision', when=datetime.datetime(2008, 9, 28, 10, 30, 0))
>>> rm.pk, rm.base.pk
(1, 1)
>>> rm2 = rm.new_revision()
>>> rm2.title = "Second Revision"
>>> rm.when = datetime.datetime(2008, 9, 28, 14, 25, 0)
>>> rm2.save()
>>> print u"%s of %s" % (rm2.title, rm2.base.title)
Second Revision of First Revision
>>> rm2.pk, rm2.base.pk
(2, 1)
Queryset to match most recent revision:
>>> qs = RevisionableModel.objects.extra(where=["%(table)s.id IN (SELECT MAX(rev.id) FROM %(table)s rev GROUP BY rev.base_id)" % {'table': RevisionableModel._meta.db_table,}],)
>>> qs
[<RevisionableModel: Second Revision (2, 1)>]
Queryset to search for string in title:
>>> qs2 = RevisionableModel.objects.filter(title__contains="Revision")
>>> qs2
[<RevisionableModel: First Revision (1, 1)>, <RevisionableModel: Second Revision (2, 1)>]
Following queryset should return the most recent revision:
>>> qs & qs2
[<RevisionableModel: Second Revision (2, 1)>]
>>> u = User.objects.create_user(username="fred", password="secret", email="fred@example.com")
# General regression tests: extra select parameters should stay tied to their
# corresponding select portions. Applies when portions are updated or otherwise
# moved around.
>>> qs = User.objects.extra(select=SortedDict((("alpha", "%s"), ("beta", "2"), ("gamma", "%s"))), select_params=(1, 3))
>>> qs = qs.extra(select={"beta": 4})
>>> qs = qs.extra(select={"alpha": "%s"}, select_params=[5])
>>> result = {'alpha': 5, 'beta': 4, 'gamma': 3}
>>> list(qs.filter(id=u.id).values('alpha', 'beta', 'gamma')) == [result]
True
# Regression test for #7957: Combining extra() calls should leave the
# corresponding parameters associated with the right extra() bit. I.e. internal
# dictionary must remain sorted.
>>> User.objects.extra(select={"alpha": "%s"}, select_params=(1,)).extra(select={"beta": "%s"}, select_params=(2,))[0].alpha
1
>>> User.objects.extra(select={"beta": "%s"}, select_params=(1,)).extra(select={"alpha": "%s"}, select_params=(2,))[0].alpha
2
# Regression test for #7961: When not using a portion of an extra(...) in a
# query, remove any corresponding parameters from the query as well.
>>> list(User.objects.extra(select={"alpha": "%s"}, select_params=(-6,)).filter(id=u.id).values_list('id', flat=True)) == [u.id]
True
# Regression test for #8063: limiting a query shouldn't discard any extra()
# bits.
>>> qs = User.objects.all().extra(where=['id=%s'], params=[u.id])
>>> qs
[<User: fred>]
>>> qs[:1]
[<User: fred>]
# Regression test for #8039: Ordering sometimes removed relevant tables from
# extra(). This test is the critical case: ordering uses a table, but then
# removes the reference because of an optimisation. The table should still be
# present because of the extra() call.
>>> Order.objects.extra(where=["username=%s"], params=["fred"], tables=["auth_user"]).order_by('created_by')
[]
# Regression test for #8819: Fields in the extra(select=...) list should be
# available to extra(order_by=...).
>>> User.objects.filter(pk=u.id).extra(select={'extra_field': 1}).distinct()
[<User: fred>]
>>> User.objects.filter(pk=u.id).extra(select={'extra_field': 1}, order_by=['extra_field'])
[<User: fred>]
>>> User.objects.filter(pk=u.id).extra(select={'extra_field': 1}, order_by=['extra_field']).distinct()
[<User: fred>]
# When calling the dates() method on a queryset with extra selection columns,
# we can (and should) ignore those columns. They don't change the result and
# cause incorrect SQL to be produced otherwise.
>>> RevisionableModel.objects.extra(select={"the_answer": 'id'}).dates('when', 'month')
[datetime.datetime(2008, 9, 1, 0, 0)]
"""}