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I'm trying to find a way to implement both a custom QuerySet and a custom Manager without breaking DRY. This is what I have so far:

class MyInquiryManager(models.Manager):
    def for_user(self, user):
        return self.get_query_set().filter(
                    Q(assigned_to_user=user) |
                    Q(assigned_to_group__in=user.groups.all())
                )

class Inquiry(models.Model):   
    ts = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
    status = models.ForeignKey(InquiryStatus)
    assigned_to_user = models.ForeignKey(User, blank=True, null=True)
    assigned_to_group = models.ForeignKey(Group, blank=True, null=True)
    objects = MyInquiryManager()

This works fine, until I do something like this:

inquiries = Inquiry.objects.filter(status=some_status)
my_inquiry_count = inquiries.for_user(request.user).count()

This promptly breaks everything because the QuerySet doesn't have the same methods as the Manager. I've tried creating a custom QuerySet class, and implementing it in MyInquiryManager, but I end up replicating all of my method definitions.

I also found this snippet which works, but I need to pass in the extra argument to for_user so it breaks down because it relies heavily on redefining get_query_set.

Is there a way to do this without redefining all of my methods in both the QuerySet and the Manager subclasses?

share|improve this question
Warning: The selected answer by T.Stone results in a severe performance penalty (from millisecond response times to multi-second responses) when .defer or .only methods are used. For example, in Django 1.3 a query such as: MyModel.objects.only('some_field').get(id=1) => returns in 3.7ms but, add the CustomManager as described above, and I get: MyModel.objects.only('some_field').get(id=1) => returns in ~ 357ms – Aneil Mallavarapu May 9 '11 at 4:33
Has anybody else reproduced this? What about with Django 1.4? – fletom Jul 23 '12 at 18:32
Okay. But why and how does this happen? Are the queries different, or did you profile that operation, without actually hitting the database? – Fábio Santos Sep 6 '12 at 14:45

3 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

The way I've implemented this is by adding the actual get_active_for_account as a method of a custom QuerySet. Then, to make it work off the manager, you can simply trap the __getattr__ and return it accordingly

To make this pattern re-usable, I've extracted out the Manager bits to a separate model manager:

custom_queryset/models.py

from django.db import models
from django.db.models.query import QuerySet

class CustomQuerySetManager(models.Manager):
    """A re-usable Manager to access a custom QuerySet"""
    def __getattr__(self, attr, *args):
        try:
            return getattr(self.__class__, attr, *args)
        except AttributeError:
            return getattr(self.get_query_set(), attr, *args)

    def get_query_set(self):
        return self.model.QuerySet(self.model)

Once you've got that, on your models all you need to do is define a QuerySet as a custom inner class and set the manager to your custom manager:

your_app/models.py

from custom_queryset.models import CustomQuerySetManager
from django.db.models.query import QuerySet

class Inquiry(models.Model):
    objects = CustomQuerySetManager()

    class QuerySet(QuerySet):
        def active_for_account(self, account, *args, **kwargs):
            return self.filter(account=account, deleted=False, *args, **kwargs)

With this pattern, any of these will work:

>>> Inquiry.objects.active_for_account(user)
>>> Inquiry.objects.all().active_for_account(user)
>>> Inquiry.objects.filter(first_name='John').active_for_account(user)
share|improve this answer
This is so cool – wakandan Jan 21 '11 at 10:13
can you decide what should be done with stackoverflow.com/edit-suggestions/1216 – Sam Saffron Feb 1 '11 at 4:19
@Sam Saffron I'd take that edit – T. Stone Feb 4 '11 at 17:08
1  
WARNING: I tried this method and discovered that it severely slows down .defer and .only calls. – Aneil Mallavarapu May 9 '11 at 4:20
1  
+1 for fitler :) – Alp Jul 2 '12 at 1:30
show 2 more comments

A slightly improved version of T. Stone’s approach:

def objects_extra(mixin_class):
    class MixinManager(models.Manager, mixin_class):
        class MixinQuerySet(QuerySet, mixin_class):
            pass

        def get_query_set(self):
            return self.MixinQuerySet(self.model, using=self._db)

    return MixinManager()

Class decorators make usage as simple as:

class SomeModel(models.Model):
    ...
    @objects_extra
    class objects:
        def filter_by_something_complex(self, whatever parameters):
            return self.extra(...)
        ...

Update: support for nonstandard Manager and QuerySet base classes, e. g. @objects_extra(django.contrib.gis.db.models.GeoManager, django.contrib.gis.db.models.query.GeoQuerySet):

def objects_extra(Manager=django.db.models.Manager, QuerySet=django.db.models.query.QuerySet):
    def oe_inner(Mixin, Manager=django.db.models.Manager, QuerySet=django.db.models.query.QuerySet):
        class MixinManager(Manager, Mixin):
            class MixinQuerySet(QuerySet, Mixin):
                pass

            def get_query_set(self):
                return self.MixinQuerySet(self.model, using=self._db)

        return MixinManager()

    if issubclass(Manager, django.db.models.Manager):
        return lambda Mixin: oe_inner(Mixin, Manager, QuerySet)
    else:
        return oe_inner(Mixin=Manager)
share|improve this answer

The following works for me.

def get_active_for_account(self,account,*args,**kwargs):
    """Returns a queryset that is 
    Not deleted
    For the specified account
    """
    return self.filter(account = account,deleted=False,*args,**kwargs)

This is on the default manager; so I used to do something like:

Model.objects.get_active_for_account(account).filter()

But there is no reason it should not work for a secondary manager.

share|improve this answer
2  
Try doing a filter, then using get_active_for_account. It works in your example, but not once you've already used a filter, and are then working with a QuerySet, which was my example. – Jack M. Jan 29 '10 at 17:19

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