.. index:: Manager, Models, Object Relational Mapper, ORM
*****************
Create the Models
*****************
"A model is the single, definitive source of information about your data.
It contains the essential fields and behaviors of the data you’re storing.
Generally, each model maps to a single database table."
-- :djangodocs:`Models | Django documentation `
The next step is to create the data structure with help from models.
Models define how data is saved. Usually a model represents a table in
the database, and has fields, metadata and methods. With this
information Django can automatically generate an interface to the
database that allows object oriented access to it. This is called
Object-Relation-Mapping (ORM).
.. graphviz:: models.dot
:alt: An entity–relationship model of our application
:inline:
.. raw:: latex
\newpage
In django-marcador, two models are required. You can see them in the
entity–relationship model above. ``Bookmark`` represents the actual
bookmarks and has fields for URL, title and description. Data about who
created the bookmark and when, as well as whether the bookmark is public
or not is also stored here. This data will be used later to filter the
bookmarks. A second model ``Tag`` represents keywords that can be
attached to bookmarks to make them easier to find. ``Bookmark`` and
``Tag`` have a many-to-many relationship, so Django will create the
intermediate table automatically.
In order that Django recognises your class as a model, it must inherit
from ``django.db.models.Model`` and be placed in :file:`models.py` in
your app directory (in this example :file:`mysite/marcador/`).
.. _model-fields:
Fields
======
Fields are defined as class attributes, and map to the columns in the
table. Django has several different types of fields, in order to allow
access to the data in the most sensible way. For example ``CharField``
means a ``VARCHAR`` column in an SQL database. You can find a
:djangodocs:`list of field types ` in the Django
documentation.
.. literalinclude:: ../src/mysite/marcador/models.py
:lines: 1-3, 6-7, 9-10, 25-26, 28-37
:linenos:
Metadata
========
Models can contain :djangodocs:`Metadata `, that
can influence how they are displayed or how they behave. They are
defined in the internal class ``Meta``. In the example, the display
name for presentation is set (singular and plural), as well as the
default sort order.
.. literalinclude:: ../src/mysite/marcador/models.py
:lines: 1-3, 6-7, 9-15, 25-26, 28-37, 41-45
:emphasize-lines: 9-12, 26-29
:linenos:
.. _model-methods:
Methods
=======
You can now add Model functionality :djangodocs:`Methods
` for actions that apply to a single
record. For instance, it is usual to create a human readable form of the
record with the method ``__str__``.
.. literalinclude:: ../src/mysite/marcador/models.py
:lines: 1-18, 25-37, 41-54
:emphasize-lines: 4-5, 8, 17-18, 21, 38-45
:linenos:
In the bookmark model, we'll also override the method ``save()`` to set
the right creation or last-changed date. The state of the ``id`` field
will be used, in order to decide if the model has already been saved or
not. The field ``id`` exists in every model - if it's not explicitely
declared, Django will create it automatically. It is used as the primary
key of the model, to uniquely identify the record. If this field
doesn't exist, the model hasn't been saved yet. As a last step, the
function ``super()`` is used to call the method ``save()`` from the base
class (i.e. the class that we've inherited from).
.. note::
Marcador supports Python 2 and Python 3. This is achieved by the
the decorator ``@python_2_unicode_compatible`` and by using
``__str__`` instead of ``__unicode__`` as you may find it in older
versions of the documentation.
.. _manager:
Manager
=======
In order to run the database queries, there's a :djangodocs:`manager
` for every model. Unless it's otherwise defined,
the attribute ``objects`` holds a reference to the default manager. The
queries can be altered by overriding the default manager or adding
another one.
The Django documentation explains the usage of a manager as follows:
"To retrieve objects from your database, construct a ``QuerySet`` via
a ``Manager`` on your model class.
A ``QuerySet`` represents a collection of objects from your
database. It can have zero, one or many *filters* -- criteria that
narrow down the collection based on given parameters. In SQL terms,
a ``QuerySet`` equates to a ``SELECT`` statement, and a filter is a
limiting clause such as ``WHERE`` or ``LIMIT``."
-- :djangodocs:`Making queries | Django documentation `
Most of the ``QuerySet`` methods return a new ``QuerySet`` so you can combine
multiple of them. To access the items in a ``QuerySet`` you can loop over it or
simply use the item's index. For example the following Python code returns the
first item of a ``QuerySet`` which contains all public bookmarks ordered by
their title:
::
>>> Bookmark.objects.filter(is_public=True).order_by('title')[0]
The SQL query executed against the database for the Python code above looks
like this:
.. code-block:: sql
SELECT "marcador_bookmark"."id",
"marcador_bookmark"."url",
"marcador_bookmark"."title",
"marcador_bookmark"."description",
"marcador_bookmark"."is_public",
"marcador_bookmark"."date_created",
"marcador_bookmark"."date_updated",
"marcador_bookmark"."owner_id"
FROM "marcador_bookmark"
WHERE "marcador_bookmark"."is_public" = True
ORDER BY "marcador_bookmark"."title" ASC LIMIT 1
You can find a list of all ``QuerySet`` methods in the
:djangodocs:`documentation [`.
In our example we'll often show only public bookmarks so we add a
second manager to the ``Bookmark`` model that will only
return the public bookmarks. We'll assign it to the attribute
``public``. In order to keep a reference to the default manager, we have
to explicitely assign it to the ``objects`` attribute of the
``Bookmark`` class.
.. literalinclude:: ../src/mysite/marcador/models.py
:lines: 21-54
:emphasize-lines: 1-4, 19-20
:linenos:
The complete file
=================
When everything is complete, the file :file:`models.py` should look as follows:
.. literalinclude:: ../src/mysite/marcador/models.py
:linenos:
]