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Can I specify the name I want for the many to many table?

3 Answers 3

3

Yes. See Table Names for all of the exciting details.

Update: OK, then perhaps the related_name option is what you are looking for. There are some caveats covered here.

Updatex2: OK, Kelvin gets a star for answering his own question! It's been an age since I perused the Django Meta Model Options, but, in retrospect, that's where we should have started.

BTW, wandering through the django/db/ code on only half a cup of coffee is definitely a challenge.

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  • Thanks, but I want to specify the table name of the many to many field.
    – kelvinfix
    May 2, 2011 at 4:10
  • +1 for the related_name. Its also good to point out that the naming syntax has changed in 1.2 docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/db/models/… May 2, 2011 at 4:40
  • I was actually thinking that the though argument would let you specify the name of the m2m table and related_name just lets you name the backwards lookup.
    – dting
    May 2, 2011 at 7:12
  • 1
    Sigh, I guess I can't win today. Remember, Kids, this is what happens when you answer questions after a couple of beers. May 2, 2011 at 14:25
  • 6
    Solved, use db_table for the ManyToManyField.
    – kelvinfix
    May 2, 2011 at 14:53
2

You define the table name using the db_table option when declaring the ManyToManyField attribute. See example below:

class revision(models.Model):
    revision_id = models.AutoField(primary_key=True)
    issue_list = models.ManyToManyField(issue, related_name='revisions', db_table='issue_revision')

related_name is the field by which this class will be seen by issue, meaning, you will access it as my_issue.revisions(). And the table being used in the DB is named issue_revision.

0

msb's answer works great, however if (like me) you needed to set it to the same name (because of known naming issues mysql-django backend), you would need to register it in a migration.

The new problem is that Django will try to create a new table of the same name when you run the automatically created new migrations, which will throw a "database already exists" error.

You would thus need to go back to the original migration where that ManyToManyField was created and add what you included there.

For example:

app/models.py:

class revision(models.Model):
    revision_id = models.AutoField(primary_key=True)
    issue_list = models.ManyToManyField(issue, related_name='revisions', db_table='app_revision_issue_list')

# In here, 'app_revision_issue_list' was originally created automatically, 
# however lets say you need to explicitly declare it (compatible across all environments)

app/migrations/0003_.py:

migrations.CreateModel(
            name='revision',
            fields=[
                ('revision_id', models.BigAutoField(auto_created=True, primary_key=True, serialize=False, verbose_name='ID')),
                ('issue_list', models.ManyToManyField(issue, related_name='revisions', db_table='app_revision_issue_list')), 
                # originally no db_table parameter in this migration operation
            ],
        ),

If you edit the original migration where the field was created, there is no further need to makemigrations and migrate.

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