from django.db.models import F
qset = Coding.objects.filter(response__coding__value__gt=F('value') + 1,
qid='risk', coder=4
).extra(where=['T3.qid = %s', 'T3.coder_id = %s'],
params=['risk', 3])
responses = [c.response for c in qset.select_related('response')]
When you join to a table already in the query, the ORM will assign the second one an alias, in this case T3, which you can using in parameters to extra()
. To find out what the alias is you can drop into the shell and print qset.query
.
See Django documentation on F objects and extra
Update: It seems you actually don't have to use extra()
, or figure out what alias django uses, because every time you refer to response__coding
in your lookups, django will use the alias created initially. Here's one way to look for differences in either direction:
from django.db.models import Q, F
gt = Q(response__coding__value__gt=F('value') + 1)
lt = Q(response__coding__value__lt=F('value') - 1)
match = Q(response__coding__qid='risk', response__coding__coder=4)
qset = Coding.objects.filter(match & (gt | lt), qid='risk', coder=3)
responses = [c.response for c in qset.select_related('response')]
See Django documentation on Q objects
BTW, If you are going to want both Coding instances, you have an N + 1 queries problem here, because django's select_related()
won't get reverse FK relationships. But since you have the data in the query already, you could retrieve the required information using the T3 alias as described above and extra(select={'other_value':'T3.value'})
. The value
data from the corresponding Coding record would be accessible as an attribute on the retrieved Coding instance, i.e. as c.other_value
.
Incidentally, your question is general enough, but it looks like you have an entity-attribute-value schema, which in an RDB scenario is generally considered an anti-pattern. You might be better off long-term (and this query would be simpler) with a risk
field:
class Coding(models.Model):
response = models.ForeignKey(Response)
coder = models.ForeignKey(User)
risk = models.IntegerField()
# other fields for other qid 'attribute' names...