Warning: this package is now unmantained.
NOTE: This package should not to have support for django 1.7, because this package has a lot of limitations, and new custom lookups of django 1.7 can solve a big part of things that djorm-ext-expressions intends to solve.
Django by default, provides a wide range of field types and generic lookups for queries. This in many cases is more than enough. But there are cases where you need to use types defined for yourself and search operators that are not defined in django lookups and another important case is to make searches requiring the execution of some function in WHERE clause.
In django, for these last two cases, it requires writing SQL statements. djorm-ext-expressions
introduces the method manager.where()
and some class'es (SqlExpression, SqlFunction, AND, OR, ...) to facilite sql construction for advanced cases.
Imagine some django model with postgresql integer array field. You need to find objects in the field containing a set of group numbers.
NOTE: array field is part of django orm extensions package and is located on djorm-ext-pgarray
submodule.
Example model definition
from django.db import models
from djorm_expressions.models import ExpressionManager
from .somefiels import ArrayField
class Register(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=200)
points = ArrayField(dbtype="int")
objects = ExpressionManager()
With this model definition, we can do this searches:
from djorm_expressions.base import SqlExpression, AND, OR
# search all register items that points field contains [2,3]
qs = Register.manager.where(
SqlExpression("points", "@>", [2,3])
)
# search all register items that points fields contains [2,3] or [5,6]
expression = OR(
SqlExpression("points", "@>", [2,3]),
SqlExpression("points", "@>", [5,6]),
)
qs = Register.objects.where(expression)
Also, we can use functions to construct a expression:
from djorm_expressions.base import SqlFunction
class BitLength(SqlFunction):
sql_function = "bit_length"
# search all registers items that bit_length(name) > 20.
qs = Register.objects.where(
SqlExpression(BitLength("name"), ">", 20)
)
I finally can redefine the behavior "SqlExpression" and make it more "object oriented":
class ArrayExpression(object):
def __init__(self, field):
self.field = field
def contains(self, value):
return SqlExpression(self.field, "@>", value)
def overlap(self, value):
return SqlExpression(self.field, "&&", value)
# search all register items that points field contains [2,3]
qs = Register.objects.where(
ArrayExpression("points").contains([2,3])
)