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I have one Product Model that has a FK to price, as one product can contain many prices. But I also want to be able to pick which one of those many prices should be the actual price, therefore I have both price (in Product Model) and product (in Price Model) to accomplish this. Consider these following models:

class Product(models.Model):
name = models.CharField()
price     = models.ForeignKey('Price', blank=True, null=True, related_name='Product')

class Price(models.Model):
amount = models.IntegerField()
product = models.ForeignKey('Product', related_name='product')

This works fine although I am having problem filtering the prices in the drop down menu. It gives me all the prices instead of just the prices that pertains to that product. Tried

limit_choices_to

but that doesn't seem to work with dynamic values.

I have also come across this patch: http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/2445

Not sure what the best solution would be here. Would appreciate some pointers, thanks!

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What do you mean when a product can contain many prices, but then pick one? I'm just trying to understand the scope of what you're trying to do with that so I can suggest something relevant. – AlbertoPL Jul 2 at 14:39
One product can have many prices (FK 1, inline). But out of those prices that pertains to one product, one is chosen to be the "main" price (FK 2, drop down menu) that will later be shown on the detail view page. I hope that was a better explanation :) – orwellian Jul 4 at 5:05

1 Answer

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You could do:

prices = price.object_set_all(product='your product')

I left the tag 'your product' in because I don't recall if self will work in this situation. However I think this may be the correct approach.

You should not have the ForeignKey showing up in both models, you really only need it in Price. Then, your Product model can have a field called current_price which is based on a user selection.

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Thanks for your reply AlbertoPL I get: 'ForeignKey' object has no attribute 'object_set' or: 'ForeignKey' object has no attribute 'object_set_all' on: price = models.ForeignKey('Price') prices = data.object_set_all(product='your product') Also I am not sure how the current_price field in the Product model should look. – orwellian Jul 4 at 17:37
That's because I told you the completely wrong this heh, it should be Product.objects.all() <- and you can filter by whatever field you wish within the parenthesis. – AlbertoPL Jul 4 at 17:54
Rather, it should be Price.objects.all(), sorry. – AlbertoPL Jul 4 at 17:54
Then I get NameError: name 'Product' is not defined. Lowercase gives another error. Are you sure I can do this in a module definition? – orwellian Jul 4 at 19:01
No, and in fact, I think it should be done in views instead. Otherwise, I would just use a ManyToManyField, which is defined only in a single model (either Product or Price). Let me know what you end up doing. – AlbertoPL Jul 5 at 2:06

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