I'm trying to dynamically generate a new Model, based on fields from an existing Model. Both are defined in /apps/main/models.py
. The existing model looks something like this:
from django.db import models
class People(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=32)
age = models.IntegerField()
height = models.IntegerField()
I have a list containing the names of fields that I would like to copy:
target_fields = ["name", "age"]
I want to generate a new model the has all of the Fields named in target_fields
, but in this case they should be indexed (db_index = True
).
I originally hoped that I would just be able to iterate over the class properties of People
and use copy.copy
to copy the field descriptions that are defined on it. Like this:
from copy import copy
d = {}
for field_name in target_fields:
old_field = getattr(People, field_name) # alas, AttributeError
new_field = copy(old_field)
new_field.db_index = True
d[field_name] = new_field
IndexedPeople = type("IndexedPeople", (models.Model,), d)
I wasn't sure if copy.copy()
ing Fields would work, but I didn't get far enough to find out: the fields listed in the class definition don't aren't actually included as properties on the class object. I assume they're used for some metaclass shenanigans instead.
After poking around in the debugger, I found some type of Field objects listed in People._meta.local_fields
. However, these aren't just simple description that can be copy.copy()
ed and used to describe another model. For example, they include a .model
property referring to People
.
How can I create a field description for a new model based on a field of an existing model?
ForeignKey
referencing the first.) These facts are relevant to my motivation but not the core technical question; I thought they would be a distraction.