I need to create a queryset and to add manually some objects that i've got from different queries results in order to display it in a table. I uses xx=set() but it doesn't do the job.
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2can you show the relevant code ?– karthikrAug 15, 2013 at 14:52
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2How to create an empty queryset: docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/querysets/#none– Brandon TaylorAug 15, 2013 at 14:54
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and how to add objects to it?– user2137817Aug 15, 2013 at 14:57
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You say "some objects" are they evaluated members of previous querysets or do you simply mean "various querysets" that you'd like to chain together?– OgreAug 15, 2013 at 15:05
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1I don't understand why this question has so many upvotes - it is not even clear what the person is asking about.– Burhan KhalidJul 10, 2016 at 5:45
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Show 3 more comments
3 Answers
You can do it in one of the following ways:
from itertools import chain
#compute the list dynamically here:
my_obj_list = list(obj1, obj2, ...)
#and then
none_qs = MyModel.objects.none()
qs = list(chain(none_qs, my_obj_list))
You could also do:
none_qs = MyModel.objects.none()
qs = none_qs | sub_qs_1 | sub_qs_2
However, This would not work for sliced querysets
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actually, you dont need the
none
qs. You could simply create a list and pass it in the context.– karthikrAug 15, 2013 at 15:25 -
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2@karthikr I am trying to manually create a queryset from a list of objects. My comment was a bit of a shorthand. The type of qs is still a list in the first code sample you gave - looking at it now it should be obvious.– dz210Apr 20, 2016 at 15:18
You can't do that. A queryset is a representation of a database query. You can't add items to it manually.
But if you need an arbitrary ordered collection of model instances, just use a list.
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the problem with the list that i can't display it on a table created from a model Aug 15, 2013 at 15:23
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1
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for x in xx: query=Xx.objects.filter(id=x.id) lisst.append(query) table = getXtable(lisst) Aug 15, 2013 at 15:27
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4And am I supposed to guess what
getXtable
is, or why it doesn't work? Aug 15, 2013 at 16:18 -
Were you able to get this done? Even I want to pass a custom list instead of a querylist. I am unable to use this list method working. Its is giving me a valueerror from the admin view. I am using this in a
filter
>queryset(self, request, queryset)
The custom list is a created list and is not a queryset– GaryFeb 4, 2019 at 14:38
I'm really late to this one, but for a future reference you can create a queryset with all then filter for the objects that have a particular property.
Filtering on field object properties
Model.objects.filter(foo='bar')
Model.objects.exclude(foo='bar')
Filtering on non-field object properties
def return_queryset_with_desired_objects(self):
qs = SomeModel.objects.all()
wanted_ids = [obj.id for obj in qs if obj.foo]
return self.filter(id__in=wanted_ids]
def return_queryset_without_undesired_objects(self):
qs = SomeModel.objects.all()
unwanted_ids = [obj.id for obj in qs if not obj.foo]
return self.exclude(id__in=unwanted_ids]
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unwanted_ids = [obj.id for obj in qs if not obj.foo]
would mean a flock of trips to the database. Tryunwanted_ids=SomeModel.objects.filter(foo=False).values_list('id', flat=True)
– mehmetApr 28, 2017 at 1:14 -
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I still think the list comprehension you do would bring the objects to the python side, probably in just 1 trip, but bringing entire objects would be more of a load on the database than just bringing a
values_list
.– mehmetApr 29, 2017 at 17:25 -