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I'm trying to make some types in Django that map to standard Django types. The custom model field documentation goes into complicated cases; I just want to store a basic Django type from a class with a bunch of handy methods.

For example, if I were storing playing cards, I want something like:

class Card(object):
    """ A playing card.  """
    def as_number(self):
        """ returns a number from 1 (Ace of Clubs) and 52 (King of Spades)."""
        return self.number + self.suit_rank() * 13
    def __unicode(self): ...
    def is_highest(self, other_cards, trump=None):...
    def __init__(self, number, suit):  ...
     ...

I want my models to have something like:

class my_game(models.Model):
    ante = models.IntegerField()
    bonus_card = Card()   # Really stored as an models.IntegerField()
    ....

I'm expecting the answer will look like inheriting from the correct type, adding some specially named get/store fields for card, and renaming init(). Does anyone have sample code or better documentation?

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3 Answers

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I'd do this with a subclass of Django's PositiveIntegerField:

from django.db import models

class Card(object):
    """The ``Card`` class you described."""
    ...

class CardField(models.PositiveIntegerField):
    __metaclass__ = models.SubfieldBase

    def get_db_prep_value(self, value):
        """Return the ``int`` equivalent of ``value``."""
        if value is None: return None
        try:
            int_value = value.as_number()
        except AttributeError:
            int_value = int(value)
        return int_value

    def to_python(self, value):
        """Return the ``Card`` equivalent of ``value``."""
        if value is None or isinstance(value, Card):
            return value
        return Card(int(value))

The get_db_prep_value method is responsible for converting value into something suitable for interacting with the database, in this case either an int or None.

The to_python method does the reverse, converting value into a Card. Just like before, you'll need to handle the possibility of None as a value. Using the SubfieldBase ensures that to_python is called every time a value is assigned to the field.

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vote up 2 vote down

Why can't you do something like the following?

class Card(models.Model):
    """ A playing card.  """
    self.suit = models.PositiveIntegerField()
    self.rank = models.PositiveIntegerField( choices=SUIT_CHOICES )
    def as_number(self):
        """ returns a number from 1 (Ace of Clubs) and 52 (King of Spades)."""
        return self.number + self.suit * 13
    def __unicode__(self):
        return ...
    def is_highest(self, other_cards, trump=None):...

Certainly, this is quite simple, and fits comfortably with what Django does naturally.

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This only works in the trivial case, creates a new table to manage, and burns about 100x more storage and computation time. Thanks for the attempt. – charles.merriam Dec 3 '08 at 4:37
Don't know what "trivial case" means, since this always works. The integer uses 52*4 bytes, this uses 100*52*4 = 21K bytes, still nothing. And you don't manage the tables, Django does. Don't see the actual problem yet. – S.Lott Dec 3 '08 at 10:35
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Don't be afraid to adapt the model classes in Django to your own needs. There's nothing magical about them. And I guess this is the Right Place for this code: In the model.

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