Custom Lookups¶
Django offers a wide variety of built-in lookups for
filtering (for example, exact
and icontains
). This documentation
explains how to write custom lookups and how to alter the working of existing
lookups. For the API references of lookups, see the Lookup API reference.
A simple lookup example¶
Let’s start with a simple custom lookup. We will write a custom lookup ne
which works opposite to exact
. Author.objects.filter(name__ne='Jack')
will translate to the SQL:
"author"."name" <> 'Jack'
This SQL is backend independent, so we don’t need to worry about different databases.
There are two steps to making this work. Firstly we need to implement the lookup, then we need to tell Django about it. The implementation is quite straightforward:
from django.db.models import Lookup
class NotEqual(Lookup):
lookup_name = 'ne'
def as_sql(self, compiler, connection):
lhs, lhs_params = self.process_lhs(compiler, connection)
rhs, rhs_params = self.process_rhs(compiler, connection)
params = lhs_params + rhs_params
return '%s <> %s' % (lhs, rhs), params
To register the NotEqual
lookup we will just need to call
register_lookup
on the field class we want the lookup to be available. In
this case, the lookup makes sense on all Field
subclasses, so we register
it with Field
directly:
from django.db.models.fields import Field
Field.register_lookup(NotEqual)
Lookup registration can also be done using a decorator pattern:
from django.db.models.fields import Field
@Field.register_lookup
class NotEqualLookup(Lookup):
# ...
We can now use foo__ne
for any field foo
. You will need to ensure that
this registration happens before you try to create any querysets using it. You
could place the implementation in a models.py
file, or register the lookup
in the ready()
method of an AppConfig
.
Taking a closer look at the implementation, the first required attribute is
lookup_name
. This allows the ORM to understand how to interpret name__ne
and use NotEqual
to generate the SQL. By convention, these names are always
lowercase strings containing only letters, but the only hard requirement is
that it must not contain the string __
.
We then need to define the as_sql
method. This takes a SQLCompiler
object, called compiler
, and the active database connection.
SQLCompiler
objects are not documented, but the only thing we need to know
about them is that they have a compile()
method which returns a tuple
containing an SQL string, and the parameters to be interpolated into that
string. In most cases, you don’t need to use it directly and can pass it on to
process_lhs()
and process_rhs()
.
A Lookup
works against two values, lhs
and rhs
, standing for
left-hand side and right-hand side. The left-hand side is usually a field
reference, but it can be anything implementing the query expression API. The right-hand is the value given by the user. In the
example Author.objects.filter(name__ne='Jack')
, the left-hand side is a
reference to the name
field of the Author
model, and 'Jack'
is the
right-hand side.
We call process_lhs
and process_rhs
to convert them into the values we
need for SQL using the compiler
object described before. These methods
return tuples containing some SQL and the parameters to be interpolated into
that SQL, just as we need to return from our as_sql
method. In the above
example, process_lhs
returns ('"author"."name"', [])
and
process_rhs
returns ('"%s"', ['Jack'])
. In this example there were no
parameters for the left hand side, but this would depend on the object we have,
so we still need to include them in the parameters we return.
Finally we combine the parts into an SQL expression with <>
, and supply all
the parameters for the query. We then return a tuple containing the generated
SQL string and the parameters.
A simple transformer example¶
The custom lookup above is great, but in some cases you may want to be able to
chain lookups together. For example, let’s suppose we are building an
application where we want to make use of the abs()
operator.
We have an Experiment
model which records a start value, end value, and the
change (start - end). We would like to find all experiments where the change
was equal to a certain amount (Experiment.objects.filter(change__abs=27)
),
or where it did not exceed a certain amount
(Experiment.objects.filter(change__abs__lt=27)
).
Note
This example is somewhat contrived, but it nicely demonstrates the range of functionality which is possible in a database backend independent manner, and without duplicating functionality already in Django.
We will start by writing a AbsoluteValue
transformer. This will use the SQL
function ABS()
to transform the value before comparison:
from django.db.models import Transform
class AbsoluteValue(Transform):
lookup_name = 'abs'
function = 'ABS'
Next, let’s register it for IntegerField
:
from django.db.models import IntegerField
IntegerField.register_lookup(AbsoluteValue)
We can now run the queries we had before.
Experiment.objects.filter(change__abs=27)
will generate the following SQL:
SELECT ... WHERE ABS("experiments"."change") = 27
By using Transform
instead of Lookup
it means we are able to chain
further lookups afterwards. So
Experiment.objects.filter(change__abs__lt=27)
will generate the following
SQL:
SELECT ... WHERE ABS("experiments"."change") < 27
Note that in case there is no other lookup specified, Django interprets
change__abs=27
as change__abs__exact=27
.
When looking for which lookups are allowable after the Transform
has been
applied, Django uses the output_field
attribute. We didn’t need to specify
this here as it didn’t change, but supposing we were applying AbsoluteValue
to some field which represents a more complex type (for example a point
relative to an origin, or a complex number) then we may have wanted to specify
that the transform returns a FloatField
type for further lookups. This can
be done by adding an output_field
attribute to the transform:
from django.db.models import FloatField, Transform
class AbsoluteValue(Transform):
lookup_name = 'abs'
function = 'ABS'
@property
def output_field(self):
return FloatField()
This ensures that further lookups like abs__lte
behave as they would for
a FloatField
.
Writing an efficient abs__lt
lookup¶
When using the above written abs
lookup, the SQL produced will not use
indexes efficiently in some cases. In particular, when we use
change__abs__lt=27
, this is equivalent to change__gt=-27
AND
change__lt=27
. (For the lte
case we could use the SQL BETWEEN
).
So we would like Experiment.objects.filter(change__abs__lt=27)
to generate
the following SQL:
SELECT .. WHERE "experiments"."change" < 27 AND "experiments"."change" > -27
The implementation is:
from django.db.models import Lookup
class AbsoluteValueLessThan(Lookup):
lookup_name = 'lt'
def as_sql(self, compiler, connection):
lhs, lhs_params = compiler.compile(self.lhs.lhs)
rhs, rhs_params = self.process_rhs(compiler, connection)
params = lhs_params + rhs_params + lhs_params + rhs_params
return '%s < %s AND %s > -%s' % (lhs, rhs, lhs, rhs), params
AbsoluteValue.register_lookup(AbsoluteValueLessThan)
There are a couple of notable things going on. First, AbsoluteValueLessThan
isn’t calling process_lhs()
. Instead it skips the transformation of the
lhs
done by AbsoluteValue
and uses the original lhs
. That is, we
want to get "experiments"."change"
not ABS("experiments"."change")
.
Referring directly to self.lhs.lhs
is safe as AbsoluteValueLessThan
can be accessed only from the AbsoluteValue
lookup, that is the lhs
is always an instance of AbsoluteValue
.
Notice also that as both sides are used multiple times in the query the params
need to contain lhs_params
and rhs_params
multiple times.
The final query does the inversion (27
to -27
) directly in the
database. The reason for doing this is that if the self.rhs
is something else
than a plain integer value (for example an F()
reference) we can’t do the
transformations in Python.
Note
In fact, most lookups with __abs
could be implemented as range queries
like this, and on most database backends it is likely to be more sensible to
do so as you can make use of the indexes. However with PostgreSQL you may
want to add an index on abs(change)
which would allow these queries to
be very efficient.
A bilateral transformer example¶
The AbsoluteValue
example we discussed previously is a transformation which
applies to the left-hand side of the lookup. There may be some cases where you
want the transformation to be applied to both the left-hand side and the
right-hand side. For instance, if you want to filter a queryset based on the
equality of the left and right-hand side insensitively to some SQL function.
Let’s examine the simple example of case-insensitive transformation here. This transformation isn’t very useful in practice as Django already comes with a bunch of built-in case-insensitive lookups, but it will be a nice demonstration of bilateral transformations in a database-agnostic way.
We define an UpperCase
transformer which uses the SQL function UPPER()
to
transform the values before comparison. We define
bilateral = True
to indicate that
this transformation should apply to both lhs
and rhs
:
from django.db.models import Transform
class UpperCase(Transform):
lookup_name = 'upper'
function = 'UPPER'
bilateral = True
Next, let’s register it:
from django.db.models import CharField, TextField
CharField.register_lookup(UpperCase)
TextField.register_lookup(UpperCase)
Now, the queryset Author.objects.filter(name__upper="doe")
will generate a case
insensitive query like this:
SELECT ... WHERE UPPER("author"."name") = UPPER('doe')
Writing alternative implementations for existing lookups¶
Sometimes different database vendors require different SQL for the same
operation. For this example we will rewrite a custom implementation for
MySQL for the NotEqual operator. Instead of <>
we will be using !=
operator. (Note that in reality almost all databases support both, including
all the official databases supported by Django).
We can change the behavior on a specific backend by creating a subclass of
NotEqual
with a as_mysql
method:
class MySQLNotEqual(NotEqual):
def as_mysql(self, compiler, connection):
lhs, lhs_params = self.process_lhs(compiler, connection)
rhs, rhs_params = self.process_rhs(compiler, connection)
params = lhs_params + rhs_params
return '%s != %s' % (lhs, rhs), params
Field.register_lookup(MySQLNotEqual)
We can then register it with Field
. It takes the place of the original
NotEqual
class as it has the same lookup_name
.
When compiling a query, Django first looks for as_%s % connection.vendor
methods, and then falls back to as_sql
. The vendor names for the in-built
backends are sqlite
, postgresql
, oracle
and mysql
.
How Django determines the lookups and transforms which are used¶
In some cases you may wish to dynamically change which Transform
or
Lookup
is returned based on the name passed in, rather than fixing it. As
an example, you could have a field which stores coordinates or an arbitrary
dimension, and wish to allow a syntax like .filter(coords__x7=4)
to return
the objects where the 7th coordinate has value 4. In order to do this, you
would override get_lookup
with something like:
class CoordinatesField(Field):
def get_lookup(self, lookup_name):
if lookup_name.startswith('x'):
try:
dimension = int(lookup_name[1:])
except ValueError:
pass
else:
return get_coordinate_lookup(dimension)
return super(CoordinatesField, self).get_lookup(lookup_name)
You would then define get_coordinate_lookup
appropriately to return a
Lookup
subclass which handles the relevant value of dimension
.
There is a similarly named method called get_transform()
. get_lookup()
should always return a Lookup
subclass, and get_transform()
a
Transform
subclass. It is important to remember that Transform
objects can be further filtered on, and Lookup
objects cannot.
When filtering, if there is only one lookup name remaining to be resolved, we
will look for a Lookup
. If there are multiple names, it will look for a
Transform
. In the situation where there is only one name and a Lookup
is not found, we look for a Transform
and then the exact
lookup on that
Transform
. All call sequences always end with a Lookup
. To clarify:
.filter(myfield__mylookup)
will callmyfield.get_lookup('mylookup')
..filter(myfield__mytransform__mylookup)
will callmyfield.get_transform('mytransform')
, and thenmytransform.get_lookup('mylookup')
..filter(myfield__mytransform)
will first callmyfield.get_lookup('mytransform')
, which will fail, so it will fall back to callingmyfield.get_transform('mytransform')
and thenmytransform.get_lookup('exact')
.