121

How can I add a field for the count of objects in a database. I have the following models:

class Item(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField()

class Contest(models.Model);
    name = models.CharField()

class Votes(models.Model):
    user = models.ForeignKey(User)
    item = models.ForeignKey(Item)
    contest = models.ForeignKey(Contest)
    comment = models.TextField()

To find the votes for contestA I am using the following query in my view

current_vote = Item.objects.filter(votes__contest=contestA)

This returns a queryset with all of the votes individually but I want to get the count votes for each item, anyone know how I can do that? thanks

4 Answers 4

201

To get the number of votes for a specific item, you would use:

vote_count = Item.objects.filter(votes__contest=contestA).count()

If you wanted a break down of the distribution of votes in a particular contest, I would do something like the following:

contest = Contest.objects.get(pk=contest_id)
votes   = contest.votes_set.select_related()

vote_counts = {}

for vote in votes:
  if not vote_counts.has_key(vote.item.id):
    vote_counts[vote.item.id] = {
      'item': vote.item,
      'count': 0
    }

  vote_counts[vote.item.id]['count'] += 1

This will create dictionary that maps items to number of votes. Not the only way to do this, but it's pretty light on database hits, so will run pretty quickly.

1
  • 1
    for anyone interested - has_key was removed in Python 3: You can update it to use the in operator instead. Example:. if vote.item.id not in vote_counts: vote_counts[vote.item.id] = { 'item': vote.item, 'count': 0 } May 6, 2022 at 15:43
26

Another way of doing this would be using Aggregation. You should be able to achieve a similar result using a single query. Such as this:

from django.db.models import Count

Item.objects.values("contest").annotate(Count("id"))

I did not test this specific query, but this should output a count of the items for each value in contests as a dictionary.

4
  • 1
    This is still confusing to me. If you annotate on a queryset, you're counting the number of id's belonging to each object, which is obviously 1. So how is that helpful?
    – AlxVallejo
    Jun 14, 2018 at 17:08
  • Yes, if you were counting contest on the Contest model that would be the case. However, in this case we are aggregating on Item which have unique contests.
    – salomonvh
    Jun 18, 2018 at 8:25
  • What if the count for two objects are same and then we have to sort them based on some other condition. Then how to do that?
    – Tarun
    Sep 6, 2018 at 20:24
  • @Tarun you can add values in the annotate, just make sure you do not try to add items that get aggregated during the annotation. Since it returns a queryset all the usual sort functions still apply .order_by('some_value').
    – salomonvh
    Sep 7, 2018 at 17:16
2

Use related name to count votes for a specific contest

class Item(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField()

class Contest(models.Model);
    name = models.CharField()

class Votes(models.Model):
    user = models.ForeignKey(User)
    item = models.ForeignKey(Item)
    contest = models.ForeignKey(Contest, related_name="contest_votes")
    comment = models.TextField()

>>> comments = Contest.objects.get(id=contest_id).contest_votes.count()
0

You can use len() to get the count of contestA's votes:

current_vote = len(Item.objects.filter(votes__contest=contestA))

Actually, len() is used with select_for_update() as shown below:

current_vote = len(Item.objects.select_for_update().filter(votes__contest=contestA))

Because select_for_update() doesn't work with count() as shown below:

current_vote = Item.objects.select_for_update().filter(votes__contest=contestA).count()

You can see my answer explaning about select_for_update() with count() or len().

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