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I have the following two models:

class JobPosition(models.Model):
    job = models.ForeignKey(Job, related_name='positions')
    position = models.ForeignKey('userprofile.Position')
    date_added = models.DateTimeField()
    end_date = models.DateTimeField()

class ExternalJob(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=256)
    position = models.ForeignKey('userprofile.Position') 
    date_added = models.DateTimeField()
    end_date = models.DateTimeField()

How would I concatenate a Queryset, basically combining the following into one QS?

internal_jobs = JobPosition.objects.filter(end_date__gte=datetime.now())
external_jobs = ExternalJob.objects.filter(end_date__gte=datetime.now())
all_jobs = (internal_jobs + external_jobs).order_by('-date_added')

2 Answers 2

1

First see if this similar question help you: Using django how can I combine two queries from separate models into one query? . This might be the approach you have to do in order to append another SQL statement (though I am not sure if its possible to do what you are asking on the SQL side)

If all you want to achieve is a lazy evaluating combination of these two queryset's then you can use itertools.chain:

from itertools import chain

combined = chain(internal_jobs, external_jobs)
# combined is a generator that will iterate over your combined
# iteratables
for result in combined:
    # do something

I think for the final date sort, you might have to do this on the client side. The full queryset list will be evaluated when you do the sorted call.

from operator import attrgetter

combined = chain(internal_jobs, external_jobs)
for result in sorted(combined, key=attrgetter("date_added"), reverse=True):
    # do something
0

update

Just found How to combine 2 or more querysets in a Django view? , refs it for normal case


If the performance is critical and the result is used as an iterator, below is a simpler version of https://stackoverflow.com/a/313149/165603 in the link posted by jdi

def merge_by_latest_date_added(*querysets):
    querysets = [[qs, None] for qs in querysets]

    def iterator_helper():
        for qs_v in querysets[:]:
            qs, v = qs_v
            if v is not None:
                continue
            try:
                qs_v[1] = qs.next()
            except StopIteration:
                querysets.remove(qs_v)
        return querysets

    while iterator_helper():
        qs_v = max(querysets, key=lambda x:x[1].date_added)
        yield qs_v[1]
        qs_v[1] = None

You could then

internal_jobs = internal_jobs.order_by('-date_added').iterator()
external_jobs = externals_jobs.order_by('-date_added').iterator()
all_jobs = merge_by_latest_date_added(internal_jobs, external_jobs)

For DB backends such as psycopg2, you may want to wrap querysets by using trick to reduce memory footprint.

You could also isolate code inside the while statement to make the merge function a general version. I used it to process large querysets sharing PK in practice, for example.

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