What is the best way to store an array of integers in a django database?
CommaSeparatedIntergerField
is no more available since Django 1.9:
Deprecated since version 1.9: This field is deprecated in favor of
CharField
with validators=[validate_comma_separated_integer_list].
By default it sets a comma separated integer list field.
Returns a RegexValidator instance that ensures a string consists of integers separated by sep. It allows negative integers when allow_negative is True.
from django.db import models
from django.core.validators import int_list_validator
class YourModel(models.Model):
....
....
int_list = models.CharField(validators=int_list_validator)
....
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5It should be something like
models.CharField(validators=[int_list_validator], max_length=100)
– msampaio Aug 1 '18 at 1:15
CommaSeparatedIntegerField comes to mind instantly. It is implemented as VARCHAR
on most database backends. To be sure though, you may want to skim through django/db/backends/*
.
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That basically means that I have to convert the string back into integers myself? – Christian Sep 15 '09 at 22:02
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7This is super dated information. The current dev (nor the current release: v1.11) site that you linked, doesn't mention a CommaSeparatedIntegerField. – VertigoRay Mar 5 '17 at 23:23
See this answer for a description of a possible alternative version of CommaSeparatedIntegerField that would do more of the work for you (converting from list to string and back). Maybe you could check in with that guy about whether he wrote it already :-)
I'm using ArrayField: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.1/ref/contrib/postgres/fields/#querying-arrayfield
eg.
class Place(models.Model):
nearby_places_ids = ArrayField(models.IntegerField(null=True, blank=True), null=True, blank=True)
with usage:
place.nearby_places_ids = [1,2,3]
place.save()
models.Place.objects.filter(nearby_places_ids__contains=[1])
<QuerySet [<Place: Hostel DIC>]>
models.Place.objects.filter(nearby_places_ids__contains=[1,2,3,4])
<QuerySet []>
If you're using PostgreSQL, you can store array types natively.
See for example: https://github.com/aino/django-arrayfields and https://github.com/ecometrica/django-dbarray
Use ArrayField . Here's the syntax :
from django.contrib.postgres.fields import ArrayField
class SampleModel(models.Model):
my_integer_array = ArrayField(
models.IntegerField(),
default= [1,1,0,0], blank=False,null = False, size = 4)
To store a complete array :
SampleModel.my_integer_array = [3,4,5,6]
SampleModel.save()
To store/update a single element :
SampleModel.my_integer_array[2] =7
SampleModel.save()
To fetch the entire array :
my_variable = SampleModel.my_integer_array
To fetch a single element :
e = SampleModel.my_integer_array[3]
Note : ArrayField can only be used when you are using postgreSQL as the database