7

Does anyone know how I can sort (in this instance date) my django query set against todays date ?

class Person(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    date = models.DateField()

My goal is to list the name and date entries. At the top of the list will be the entry with the date that is closest to todays date (day/month).

3
  • 1
    What does "to sort against" mean? You can sort by date with ordinary .order_by('date'). Apr 9, 2013 at 20:26
  • @PavelAnossov I guess he means [today, 2 days ago, 3 days in future, 4 days ago, ...] - sort relative to today
    – karthikr
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:37
  • can you provide a sample output
    – catherine
    Apr 12, 2013 at 7:26

2 Answers 2

8
+100

You can use extra queryset method to select additional data from database table.

This is example that works with MySql:

Person.objects.extra(select={
    'datediff': 'ABS(DATEDIFF(date, NOW()))'}).order_by('datediff')

DATEDIFF - returns difference in days bewteen two dates, ABS - returns absolute value. For sqlite, there is different syntax, see this answer.

EDIT: use current year

Person.objects.extra(select={
    'datediff': "ABS(DATEDIFF(CONCAT(YEAR(now()), '-', MONTH(date), '-', DAY(date)), NOW()))"}
).order_by('datediff')

EDIT 2: optimized *

from datetime import date
dayofyear = int(date.today().strftime("%j"))

datediff = 'LEAST(ABS(DAYOFYEAR(date) - %d), ABS((366 - %d + DAYOFYEAR(date))) MOD 366)' % (
      dayofyear, dayofyear
    )
Person.objects.extra(select={'datediff': datediff}).order_by('datediff')

EDIT 3: closest date after given (todays) date

    from datetime import date
    dayofyear = int(date.today().strftime("%j"))

    datediff = '(DAYOFYEAR(date) - %d + 365) MOD 365' % (
          dayofyear
        )
    Persion.objects.extra(select={'datediff': datediff}).order_by('datediff')
11
  • Thanks, I think this would work if I could perform this query but without the year i.e the closest day/month to the current date.
    – felix001
    Apr 14, 2013 at 17:01
  • What do you mean with "but without the year" - do you mean that 04-15-1999 would come before 04-01-2013 (with assumption that current date is 04-15-2013.)
    – bmihelac
    Apr 15, 2013 at 7:01
  • So if you have 12-4-1980 and 1-4-1991 and the date was 9-4-2013 then 12-4-1980 would come first. i.e I only want to sort the dates using the month and day as each will be used as a date of birthday. So I want to see the closest birthday.
    – felix001
    Apr 15, 2013 at 10:03
  • I have updated the answer to use current year. This could be optimised.
    – bmihelac
    Apr 15, 2013 at 10:23
  • "Edit 2" version compares days of year and not dates.
    – bmihelac
    Apr 15, 2013 at 11:41
-1

If you want to sort based on date, you can order as: .order_by('date') on a result queryset.

I'm not sure if that answers your question. In case you mean you want to select only the Persons with date of today, you can use:

import datetime
now = datetime.datetime.now()
persons_with_date_today = Person.objects.filter(date=now)
6
  • This is filtering the results, the OP needs to sort it based on today's date
    – karthikr
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:32
  • I know, that's what I also answered - but because of ambiguity in the wording of OP I also added explanation in case he needed filtering.
    – Javaaaa
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:35
  • The question is, sort in increasing order of difference in timestamp relative to now
    – karthikr
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:36
  • example [today, 2 days ago, 3 days in future, 4 days ago, ...]
    – karthikr
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:37
  • Just a note... that is not timezone-aware so even if you have USE_TZ set, it won't use it. Django's django.utils.timezone has a now method that IS timezone aware so depending on your needs, timezone.now() may be better.
    – Ngenator
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:58

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