This document contains all the API references of Field
including the
field options and field types Django offers.
See also
If the built-in fields don’t do the trick, you can try django-localflavor (documentation), which contains assorted pieces of code that are useful for particular countries and cultures.
Also, you can easily write your own custom model fields.
Note
Technically, these models are defined in django.db.models.fields
, but
for convenience they’re imported into django.db.models
; the standard
convention is to use from django.db import models
and refer to fields as
models.<Foo>Field
.
The following arguments are available to all field types. All are optional.
null
¶Field.
null
¶If True
, Django will store empty values as NULL
in the database. Default
is False
.
Avoid using null
on string-based fields such as
CharField
and TextField
. If a string-based field has
null=True
, that means it has two possible values for “no data”: NULL
,
and the empty string. In most cases, it’s redundant to have two possible values
for “no data;” the Django convention is to use the empty string, not
NULL
. One exception is when a CharField
has both unique=True
and blank=True
set. In this situation, null=True
is required to avoid
unique constraint violations when saving multiple objects with blank values.
For both string-based and non-string-based fields, you will also need to
set blank=True
if you wish to permit empty values in forms, as the
null
parameter only affects database storage
(see blank
).
Note
When using the Oracle database backend, the value NULL
will be stored to
denote the empty string regardless of this attribute.
blank
¶Field.
blank
¶If True
, the field is allowed to be blank. Default is False
.
Note that this is different than null
. null
is
purely database-related, whereas blank
is validation-related. If
a field has blank=True
, form validation will allow entry of an empty value.
If a field has blank=False
, the field will be required.
choices
¶Field.
choices
¶An iterable (e.g., a list or tuple) consisting itself of iterables of exactly
two items (e.g. [(A, B), (A, B) ...]
) to use as choices for this field. If
choices are given, they’re enforced by model validation and the default form widget will be a select box with
these choices instead of the standard text field.
The first element in each tuple is the actual value to be set on the model, and the second element is the human-readable name. For example:
YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES = (
('FR', 'Freshman'),
('SO', 'Sophomore'),
('JR', 'Junior'),
('SR', 'Senior'),
)
Generally, it’s best to define choices inside a model class, and to define a suitably-named constant for each value:
from django.db import models
class Student(models.Model):
FRESHMAN = 'FR'
SOPHOMORE = 'SO'
JUNIOR = 'JR'
SENIOR = 'SR'
YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES = (
(FRESHMAN, 'Freshman'),
(SOPHOMORE, 'Sophomore'),
(JUNIOR, 'Junior'),
(SENIOR, 'Senior'),
)
year_in_school = models.CharField(
max_length=2,
choices=YEAR_IN_SCHOOL_CHOICES,
default=FRESHMAN,
)
def is_upperclass(self):
return self.year_in_school in (self.JUNIOR, self.SENIOR)
Though you can define a choices list outside of a model class and then
refer to it, defining the choices and names for each choice inside the
model class keeps all of that information with the class that uses it,
and makes the choices easy to reference (e.g, Student.SOPHOMORE
will work anywhere that the Student
model has been imported).
You can also collect your available choices into named groups that can be used for organizational purposes:
MEDIA_CHOICES = (
('Audio', (
('vinyl', 'Vinyl'),
('cd', 'CD'),
)
),
('Video', (
('vhs', 'VHS Tape'),
('dvd', 'DVD'),
)
),
('unknown', 'Unknown'),
)
The first element in each tuple is the name to apply to the group. The second element is an iterable of 2-tuples, with each 2-tuple containing a value and a human-readable name for an option. Grouped options may be combined with ungrouped options within a single list (such as the unknown option in this example).
For each model field that has choices
set, Django will add a
method to retrieve the human-readable name for the field’s current value. See
get_FOO_display()
in the database API
documentation.
Note that choices can be any iterable object – not necessarily a list or tuple.
This lets you construct choices dynamically. But if you find yourself hacking
choices
to be dynamic, you’re probably better off using a proper
database table with a ForeignKey
. choices
is meant for
static data that doesn’t change much, if ever.
Unless blank=False
is set on the field along with a
default
then a label containing "---------"
will be rendered
with the select box. To override this behavior, add a tuple to choices
containing None
; e.g. (None, 'Your String For Display')
.
Alternatively, you can use an empty string instead of None
where this makes
sense - such as on a CharField
.
db_column
¶Field.
db_column
¶The name of the database column to use for this field. If this isn’t given, Django will use the field’s name.
If your database column name is an SQL reserved word, or contains characters that aren’t allowed in Python variable names – notably, the hyphen – that’s OK. Django quotes column and table names behind the scenes.
db_tablespace
¶Field.
db_tablespace
¶The name of the database tablespace to use for
this field’s index, if this field is indexed. The default is the project’s
DEFAULT_INDEX_TABLESPACE
setting, if set, or the
db_tablespace
of the model, if any. If the backend doesn’t
support tablespaces for indexes, this option is ignored.
default
¶Field.
default
¶The default value for the field. This can be a value or a callable object. If callable it will be called every time a new object is created.
The default can’t be a mutable object (model instance, list
, set
, etc.),
as a reference to the same instance of that object would be used as the default
value in all new model instances. Instead, wrap the desired default in a
callable. For example, if you want to specify a default dict
for
JSONField
, use a function:
def contact_default():
return {"email": "[email protected]"}
contact_info = JSONField("ContactInfo", default=contact_default)
lambda
s can’t be used for field options like default
because they
can’t be serialized by migrations. See that
documentation for other caveats.
For fields like ForeignKey
that map to model instances, defaults
should be the value of the field they reference (pk
unless
to_field
is set) instead of model instances.
The default value is used when new model instances are created and a value
isn’t provided for the field. When the field is a primary key, the default is
also used when the field is set to None
.
editable
¶Field.
editable
¶If False
, the field will not be displayed in the admin or any other
ModelForm
. They are also skipped during model
validation. Default is True
.
error_messages
¶Field.
error_messages
¶The error_messages
argument lets you override the default messages that the
field will raise. Pass in a dictionary with keys matching the error messages you
want to override.
Error message keys include null
, blank
, invalid
, invalid_choice
,
unique
, and unique_for_date
. Additional error message keys are
specified for each field in the Field types section below.
These error messages often don’t propagate to forms. See Considerations regarding model’s error_messages.
help_text
¶Field.
help_text
¶Extra “help” text to be displayed with the form widget. It’s useful for documentation even if your field isn’t used on a form.
Note that this value is not HTML-escaped in automatically-generated
forms. This lets you include HTML in help_text
if you so
desire. For example:
help_text="Please use the following format: <em>YYYY-MM-DD</em>."
Alternatively you can use plain text and
django.utils.html.escape()
to escape any HTML special characters. Ensure
that you escape any help text that may come from untrusted users to avoid a
cross-site scripting attack.
primary_key
¶Field.
primary_key
¶If True
, this field is the primary key for the model.
If you don’t specify primary_key=True
for any field in your model, Django
will automatically add an AutoField
to hold the primary key, so you
don’t need to set primary_key=True
on any of your fields unless you want to
override the default primary-key behavior. For more, see
Automatic primary key fields.
primary_key=True
implies null=False
and
unique=True
. Only one primary key is allowed on an
object.
The primary key field is read-only. If you change the value of the primary key on an existing object and then save it, a new object will be created alongside the old one.
unique
¶Field.
unique
¶If True
, this field must be unique throughout the table.
This is enforced at the database level and by model validation. If
you try to save a model with a duplicate value in a unique
field, a django.db.IntegrityError
will be raised by the model’s
save()
method.
This option is valid on all field types except ManyToManyField
and
OneToOneField
.
Note that when unique
is True
, you don’t need to specify
db_index
, because unique
implies the creation of an index.
unique_for_date
¶Field.
unique_for_date
¶Set this to the name of a DateField
or DateTimeField
to
require that this field be unique for the value of the date field.
For example, if you have a field title
that has
unique_for_date="pub_date"
, then Django wouldn’t allow the entry of two
records with the same title
and pub_date
.
Note that if you set this to point to a DateTimeField
, only the date
portion of the field will be considered. Besides, when USE_TZ
is
True
, the check will be performed in the current time zone at the time the object gets saved.
This is enforced by Model.validate_unique()
during model validation
but not at the database level. If any unique_for_date
constraint
involves fields that are not part of a ModelForm
(for
example, if one of the fields is listed in exclude
or has
editable=False
), Model.validate_unique()
will
skip validation for that particular constraint.
unique_for_month
¶Field.
unique_for_month
¶Like unique_for_date
, but requires the field to be unique with
respect to the month.
verbose_name
¶Field.
verbose_name
¶A human-readable name for the field. If the verbose name isn’t given, Django will automatically create it using the field’s attribute name, converting underscores to spaces. See Verbose field names.
validators
¶Field.
validators
¶A list of validators to run for this field. See the validators documentation for more information.
Field
implements the lookup registration API.
The API can be used to customize which lookups are available for a field class, and
how lookups are fetched from a field.
AutoField
¶An IntegerField
that automatically increments
according to available IDs. You usually won’t need to use this directly; a
primary key field will automatically be added to your model if you don’t specify
otherwise. See Automatic primary key fields.
BigAutoField
¶A 64-bit integer, much like an AutoField
except that it is
guaranteed to fit numbers from 1
to 9223372036854775807
.
BigIntegerField
¶A 64-bit integer, much like an IntegerField
except that it is
guaranteed to fit numbers from -9223372036854775808
to
9223372036854775807
. The default form widget for this field is a
TextInput
.
BinaryField
¶A field to store raw binary data. It can be assigned bytes
,
bytearray
, or memoryview
.
By default, BinaryField
sets editable
to False
, in which
case it can’t be included in a ModelForm
.
Older versions don’t allow setting editable
to True
.
BinaryField
has one extra optional argument:
BinaryField.
max_length
¶The maximum length (in characters) of the field. The maximum length is
enforced in Django’s validation using
MaxLengthValidator
.
Abusing BinaryField
Although you might think about storing files in the database, consider that it is bad design in 99% of the cases. This field is not a replacement for proper static files handling.
BooleanField
¶A true/false field.
The default form widget for this field is CheckboxInput
,
or NullBooleanSelect
if null=True
.
The default value of BooleanField
is None
when Field.default
isn’t defined.
In older versions, this field doesn’t permit null=True
, so you have to
use NullBooleanField
instead. Using the latter is now discouraged
as it’s likely to be deprecated in a future version of Django.
CharField
¶A string field, for small- to large-sized strings.
For large amounts of text, use TextField
.
The default form widget for this field is a TextInput
.
CharField
has one extra required argument:
CharField.
max_length
¶The maximum length (in characters) of the field. The max_length is enforced
at the database level and in Django’s validation using
MaxLengthValidator
.
Note
If you are writing an application that must be portable to multiple
database backends, you should be aware that there are restrictions on
max_length
for some backends. Refer to the database backend
notes for details.
DateField
¶A date, represented in Python by a datetime.date
instance. Has a few extra,
optional arguments:
DateField.
auto_now
¶Automatically set the field to now every time the object is saved. Useful for “last-modified” timestamps. Note that the current date is always used; it’s not just a default value that you can override.
The field is only automatically updated when calling Model.save()
. The field isn’t updated when making updates
to other fields in other ways such as QuerySet.update()
, though you can specify a custom
value for the field in an update like that.
DateField.
auto_now_add
¶Automatically set the field to now when the object is first created. Useful
for creation of timestamps. Note that the current date is always used;
it’s not just a default value that you can override. So even if you
set a value for this field when creating the object, it will be ignored.
If you want to be able to modify this field, set the following instead of
auto_now_add=True
:
DateField
: default=date.today
- from
datetime.date.today()
DateTimeField
: default=timezone.now
- from
django.utils.timezone.now()
The default form widget for this field is a
TextInput
. The admin adds a JavaScript calendar,
and a shortcut for “Today”. Includes an additional invalid_date
error
message key.
The options auto_now_add
, auto_now
, and default
are mutually exclusive.
Any combination of these options will result in an error.
Note
As currently implemented, setting auto_now
or auto_now_add
to
True
will cause the field to have editable=False
and blank=True
set.
Note
The auto_now
and auto_now_add
options will always use the date in
the default timezone at the moment of
creation or update. If you need something different, you may want to
consider simply using your own callable default or overriding save()
instead of using auto_now
or auto_now_add
; or using a
DateTimeField
instead of a DateField
and deciding how to handle the
conversion from datetime to date at display time.
DateTimeField
¶A date and time, represented in Python by a datetime.datetime
instance.
Takes the same extra arguments as DateField
.
The default form widget for this field is a single
TextInput
. The admin uses two separate
TextInput
widgets with JavaScript shortcuts.
DecimalField
¶A fixed-precision decimal number, represented in Python by a
Decimal
instance. It validates the input using
DecimalValidator
.
Has two required arguments:
DecimalField.
max_digits
¶The maximum number of digits allowed in the number. Note that this number
must be greater than or equal to decimal_places
.
DecimalField.
decimal_places
¶The number of decimal places to store with the number.
For example, to store numbers up to 999
with a resolution of 2 decimal
places, you’d use:
models.DecimalField(..., max_digits=5, decimal_places=2)
And to store numbers up to approximately one billion with a resolution of 10 decimal places:
models.DecimalField(..., max_digits=19, decimal_places=10)
The default form widget for this field is a NumberInput
when localize
is False
or
TextInput
otherwise.
Note
For more information about the differences between the
FloatField
and DecimalField
classes, please
see FloatField vs. DecimalField.
DurationField
¶A field for storing periods of time - modeled in Python by
timedelta
. When used on PostgreSQL, the data type
used is an interval
and on Oracle the data type is INTERVAL DAY(9) TO
SECOND(6)
. Otherwise a bigint
of microseconds is used.
Note
Arithmetic with DurationField
works in most cases. However on all
databases other than PostgreSQL, comparing the value of a DurationField
to arithmetic on DateTimeField
instances will not work as expected.
EmailField
¶A CharField
that checks that the value is a valid email address using
EmailValidator
.
FileField
¶A file-upload field.
Note
The primary_key
argument isn’t supported and will raise an error if
used.
Has two optional arguments:
FileField.
upload_to
¶This attribute provides a way of setting the upload directory and file name,
and can be set in two ways. In both cases, the value is passed to the
Storage.save()
method.
If you specify a string value, it may contain strftime()
formatting, which will be replaced by the date/time of the file upload (so
that uploaded files don’t fill up the given directory). For example:
class MyModel(models.Model):
# file will be uploaded to MEDIA_ROOT/uploads
upload = models.FileField(upload_to='uploads/')
# or...
# file will be saved to MEDIA_ROOT/uploads/2015/01/30
upload = models.FileField(upload_to='uploads/%Y/%m/%d/')
If you are using the default
FileSystemStorage
, the string value
will be appended to your MEDIA_ROOT
path to form the location on
the local filesystem where uploaded files will be stored. If you are using
a different storage, check that storage’s documentation to see how it
handles upload_to
.
upload_to
may also be a callable, such as a function. This will be
called to obtain the upload path, including the filename. This callable must
accept two arguments and return a Unix-style path (with forward slashes)
to be passed along to the storage system. The two arguments are:
Argument | Description |
---|---|
instance |
An instance of the model where the
In most cases, this object will not have been
saved to the database yet, so if it uses the
default |
filename |
The filename that was originally given to the file. This may or may not be taken into account when determining the final destination path. |
For example:
def user_directory_path(instance, filename):
# file will be uploaded to MEDIA_ROOT/user_<id>/<filename>
return 'user_{0}/{1}'.format(instance.user.id, filename)
class MyModel(models.Model):
upload = models.FileField(upload_to=user_directory_path)
FileField.
storage
¶A storage object, which handles the storage and retrieval of your files. See Managing files for details on how to provide this object.
The default form widget for this field is a
ClearableFileInput
.
Using a FileField
or an ImageField
(see below) in a model
takes a few steps:
MEDIA_ROOT
as the
full path to a directory where you’d like Django to store uploaded files.
(For performance, these files are not stored in the database.) Define
MEDIA_URL
as the base public URL of that directory. Make sure
that this directory is writable by the Web server’s user account.FileField
or ImageField
to your model, defining
the upload_to
option to specify a subdirectory of
MEDIA_ROOT
to use for uploaded files.MEDIA_ROOT
). You’ll most likely want to use the
convenience url
attribute
provided by Django. For example, if your ImageField
is called
mug_shot
, you can get the absolute path to your image in a template with
{{ object.mug_shot.url }}
.For example, say your MEDIA_ROOT
is set to '/home/media'
, and
upload_to
is set to 'photos/%Y/%m/%d'
. The '%Y/%m/%d'
part of upload_to
is strftime()
formatting;
'%Y'
is the four-digit year, '%m'
is the two-digit month and '%d'
is
the two-digit day. If you upload a file on Jan. 15, 2007, it will be saved in
the directory /home/media/photos/2007/01/15
.
If you wanted to retrieve the uploaded file’s on-disk filename, or the file’s
size, you could use the name
and
size
attributes respectively; for more
information on the available attributes and methods, see the
File
class reference and the Managing files
topic guide.
Note
The file is saved as part of saving the model in the database, so the actual file name used on disk cannot be relied on until after the model has been saved.
The uploaded file’s relative URL can be obtained using the
url
attribute. Internally,
this calls the url()
method of the
underlying Storage
class.
Note that whenever you deal with uploaded files, you should pay close attention to where you’re uploading them and what type of files they are, to avoid security holes. Validate all uploaded files so that you’re sure the files are what you think they are. For example, if you blindly let somebody upload files, without validation, to a directory that’s within your Web server’s document root, then somebody could upload a CGI or PHP script and execute that script by visiting its URL on your site. Don’t allow that.
Also note that even an uploaded HTML file, since it can be executed by the browser (though not by the server), can pose security threats that are equivalent to XSS or CSRF attacks.
FileField
instances are created in your database as varchar
columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you
can change the maximum length using the max_length
argument.
FileField
and FieldFile
¶When you access a FileField
on a model, you are
given an instance of FieldFile
as a proxy for accessing the underlying
file.
The API of FieldFile
mirrors that of File
,
with one key difference: The object wrapped by the class is not necessarily a
wrapper around Python’s built-in file object. Instead, it is a wrapper around
the result of the Storage.open()
method, which may be a File
object, or it may be a
custom storage’s implementation of the File
API.
In addition to the API inherited from File
such as
read()
and write()
, FieldFile
includes several methods that
can be used to interact with the underlying file:
Warning
Two methods of this class, save()
and
delete()
, default to saving the model object of the
associated FieldFile
in the database.
FieldFile.
name
¶The name of the file including the relative path from the root of the
Storage
of the associated
FileField
.
FieldFile.
size
¶The result of the underlying Storage.size()
method.
FieldFile.
url
¶A read-only property to access the file’s relative URL by calling the
url()
method of the underlying
Storage
class.
Opens or reopens the file associated with this instance in the specified
mode
. Unlike the standard Python open()
method, it doesn’t return a
file descriptor.
Since the underlying file is opened implicitly when accessing it, it may be
unnecessary to call this method except to reset the pointer to the underlying
file or to change the mode
.
Behaves like the standard Python file.close()
method and closes the file
associated with this instance.
This method takes a filename and file contents and passes them to the storage
class for the field, then associates the stored file with the model field.
If you want to manually associate file data with
FileField
instances on your model, the save()
method is used to persist that file data.
Takes two required arguments: name
which is the name of the file, and
content
which is an object containing the file’s contents. The
optional save
argument controls whether or not the model instance is
saved after the file associated with this field has been altered. Defaults to
True
.
Note that the content
argument should be an instance of
django.core.files.File
, not Python’s built-in file object.
You can construct a File
from an existing
Python file object like this:
from django.core.files import File
# Open an existing file using Python's built-in open()
f = open('/path/to/hello.world')
myfile = File(f)
Or you can construct one from a Python string like this:
from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
myfile = ContentFile("hello world")
For more information, see Managing files.
Deletes the file associated with this instance and clears all attributes on
the field. Note: This method will close the file if it happens to be open when
delete()
is called.
The optional save
argument controls whether or not the model instance is
saved after the file associated with this field has been deleted. Defaults to
True
.
Note that when a model is deleted, related files are not deleted. If you need to cleanup orphaned files, you’ll need to handle it yourself (for instance, with a custom management command that can be run manually or scheduled to run periodically via e.g. cron).
FilePathField
¶A CharField
whose choices are limited to the filenames in a certain
directory on the filesystem. Has three special arguments, of which the first is
required:
FilePathField.
path
¶Required. The absolute filesystem path to a directory from which this
FilePathField
should get its choices. Example: "/home/images"
.
FilePathField.
match
¶Optional. A regular expression, as a string, that FilePathField
will use to filter filenames. Note that the regex will be applied to the
base filename, not the full path. Example: "foo.*\.txt$"
, which will
match a file called foo23.txt
but not bar.txt
or foo23.png
.
FilePathField.
recursive
¶Optional. Either True
or False
. Default is False
. Specifies
whether all subdirectories of path
should be included
FilePathField.
allow_files
¶Optional. Either True
or False
. Default is True
. Specifies
whether files in the specified location should be included. Either this or
allow_folders
must be True
.
FilePathField.
allow_folders
¶Optional. Either True
or False
. Default is False
. Specifies
whether folders in the specified location should be included. Either this
or allow_files
must be True
.
Of course, these arguments can be used together.
The one potential gotcha is that match
applies to the
base filename, not the full path. So, this example:
FilePathField(path="/home/images", match="foo.*", recursive=True)
…will match /home/images/foo.png
but not /home/images/foo/bar.png
because the match
applies to the base filename
(foo.png
and bar.png
).
FilePathField
instances are created in your database as varchar
columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you
can change the maximum length using the max_length
argument.
FloatField
¶A floating-point number represented in Python by a float
instance.
The default form widget for this field is a NumberInput
when localize
is False
or
TextInput
otherwise.
FloatField
vs. DecimalField
The FloatField
class is sometimes mixed up with the
DecimalField
class. Although they both represent real numbers, they
represent those numbers differently. FloatField
uses Python’s float
type internally, while DecimalField
uses Python’s Decimal
type. For
information on the difference between the two, see Python’s documentation
for the decimal
module.
ImageField
¶ImageField
(upload_to=None, height_field=None, width_field=None, max_length=100, **options)[source]¶Inherits all attributes and methods from FileField
, but also
validates that the uploaded object is a valid image.
In addition to the special attributes that are available for FileField
,
an ImageField
also has height
and width
attributes.
To facilitate querying on those attributes, ImageField
has two extra
optional arguments:
ImageField.
height_field
¶Name of a model field which will be auto-populated with the height of the image each time the model instance is saved.
ImageField.
width_field
¶Name of a model field which will be auto-populated with the width of the image each time the model instance is saved.
Requires the Pillow library.
ImageField
instances are created in your database as varchar
columns with a default max length of 100 characters. As with other fields, you
can change the maximum length using the max_length
argument.
The default form widget for this field is a
ClearableFileInput
.
IntegerField
¶An integer. Values from -2147483648
to 2147483647
are safe in all
databases supported by Django.
It uses MinValueValidator
and
MaxValueValidator
to validate the input based
on the values that the default database supports.
The default form widget for this field is a NumberInput
when localize
is False
or
TextInput
otherwise.
GenericIPAddressField
¶An IPv4 or IPv6 address, in string format (e.g. 192.0.2.30
or
2a02:42fe::4
). The default form widget for this field is a
TextInput
.
The IPv6 address normalization follows RFC 4291#section-2.2 section 2.2,
including using the IPv4 format suggested in paragraph 3 of that section, like
::ffff:192.0.2.0
. For example, 2001:0::0:01
would be normalized to
2001::1
, and ::ffff:0a0a:0a0a
to ::ffff:10.10.10.10
. All characters
are converted to lowercase.
GenericIPAddressField.
protocol
¶Limits valid inputs to the specified protocol.
Accepted values are 'both'
(default), 'IPv4'
or 'IPv6'
. Matching is case insensitive.
GenericIPAddressField.
unpack_ipv4
¶Unpacks IPv4 mapped addresses like ::ffff:192.0.2.1
.
If this option is enabled that address would be unpacked to
192.0.2.1
. Default is disabled. Can only be used
when protocol
is set to 'both'
.
If you allow for blank values, you have to allow for null values since blank values are stored as null.
NullBooleanField
¶Like BooleanField
with null=True
. Use that instead of this field
as it’s likely to be deprecated in a future version of Django.
PositiveIntegerField
¶Like an IntegerField
, but must be either positive or zero (0
).
Values from 0
to 2147483647
are safe in all databases supported by
Django. The value 0
is accepted for backward compatibility reasons.
PositiveSmallIntegerField
¶Like a PositiveIntegerField
, but only allows values under a certain
(database-dependent) point. Values from 0
to 32767
are safe in all
databases supported by Django.
SlugField
¶Slug is a newspaper term. A slug is a short label for something, containing only letters, numbers, underscores or hyphens. They’re generally used in URLs.
Like a CharField, you can specify max_length
(read the note
about database portability and max_length
in that section,
too). If max_length
is not specified, Django will use a
default length of 50.
Implies setting Field.db_index
to True
.
It is often useful to automatically prepopulate a SlugField based on the value
of some other value. You can do this automatically in the admin using
prepopulated_fields
.
It uses validate_slug
or
validate_unicode_slug
for validation.
SlugField.
allow_unicode
¶If True
, the field accepts Unicode letters in addition to ASCII
letters. Defaults to False
.
SmallIntegerField
¶Like an IntegerField
, but only allows values under a certain
(database-dependent) point. Values from -32768
to 32767
are safe in all
databases supported by Django.
TextField
¶A large text field. The default form widget for this field is a
Textarea
.
If you specify a max_length
attribute, it will be reflected in the
Textarea
widget of the auto-generated form field.
However it is not enforced at the model or database level. Use a
CharField
for that.
TimeField
¶A time, represented in Python by a datetime.time
instance. Accepts the same
auto-population options as DateField
.
The default form widget for this field is a TextInput
.
The admin adds some JavaScript shortcuts.
URLField
¶A CharField
for a URL, validated by
URLValidator
.
The default form widget for this field is a TextInput
.
Like all CharField
subclasses, URLField
takes the optional
max_length
argument. If you don’t specify
max_length
, a default of 200 is used.
UUIDField
¶A field for storing universally unique identifiers. Uses Python’s
UUID
class. When used on PostgreSQL, this stores in a
uuid
datatype, otherwise in a char(32)
.
Universally unique identifiers are a good alternative to AutoField
for
primary_key
. The database will not generate the UUID for you, so
it is recommended to use default
:
import uuid
from django.db import models
class MyUUIDModel(models.Model):
id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False)
# other fields
Note that a callable (with the parentheses omitted) is passed to default
,
not an instance of UUID
.
Field
[source]¶Field
is an abstract class that represents a database table column.
Django uses fields to create the database table (db_type()
), to map
Python types to database (get_prep_value()
) and vice-versa
(from_db_value()
).
A field is thus a fundamental piece in different Django APIs, notably,
models
and querysets
.
In models, a field is instantiated as a class attribute and represents a
particular table column, see Models. It has attributes
such as null
and unique
, and methods that Django uses to
map the field value to database-specific values.
A Field
is a subclass of
RegisterLookupMixin
and thus both
Transform
and
Lookup
can be registered on it to be used
in QuerySet
s (e.g. field_name__exact="foo"
). All built-in
lookups are registered by default.
All of Django’s built-in fields, such as CharField
, are particular
implementations of Field
. If you need a custom field, you can either
subclass any of the built-in fields or write a Field
from scratch. In
either case, see Writing custom model fields.
description
¶A verbose description of the field, e.g. for the
django.contrib.admindocs
application.
The description can be of the form:
description = _("String (up to %(max_length)s)")
where the arguments are interpolated from the field’s __dict__
.
To map a Field
to a database-specific type, Django exposes several
methods:
get_internal_type
()[source]¶Returns a string naming this field for backend specific purposes. By default, it returns the class name.
See Emulating built-in field types for usage in custom fields.
db_type
(connection)[source]¶Returns the database column data type for the Field
, taking
into account the connection
.
See Custom database types for usage in custom fields.
rel_db_type
(connection)[source]¶Returns the database column data type for fields such as ForeignKey
and OneToOneField
that point to the Field
, taking
into account the connection
.
See Custom database types for usage in custom fields.
There are three main situations where Django needs to interact with the database backend and fields:
When querying, get_db_prep_value()
and get_prep_value()
are used:
get_prep_value
(value)[source]¶value
is the current value of the model’s attribute, and the method
should return data in a format that has been prepared for use as a
parameter in a query.
See Converting Python objects to query values for usage.
get_db_prep_value
(value, connection, prepared=False)[source]¶Converts value
to a backend-specific value. By default it returns
value
if prepared=True
and get_prep_value()
if is
False
.
See Converting query values to database values for usage.
When loading data, from_db_value()
is used:
from_db_value
(value, expression, connection)¶Converts a value as returned by the database to a Python object. It is
the reverse of get_prep_value()
.
This method is not used for most built-in fields as the database backend already returns the correct Python type, or the backend itself does the conversion.
See Converting values to Python objects for usage.
Note
For performance reasons, from_db_value
is not implemented as a
no-op on fields which do not require it (all Django fields).
Consequently you may not call super
in your definition.
When saving, pre_save()
and get_db_prep_save()
are used:
get_db_prep_save
(value, connection)[source]¶Same as the get_db_prep_value()
, but called when the field value
must be saved to the database. By default returns
get_db_prep_value()
.
pre_save
(model_instance, add)[source]¶Method called prior to get_db_prep_save()
to prepare the value
before being saved (e.g. for DateField.auto_now
).
model_instance
is the instance this field belongs to and add
is whether the instance is being saved to the database for the first
time.
It should return the value of the appropriate attribute from
model_instance
for this field. The attribute name is in
self.attname
(this is set up by Field
).
See Preprocessing values before saving for usage.
Fields often receive their values as a different type, either from serialization or from forms.
to_python
(value)[source]¶Converts the value into the correct Python object. It acts as the
reverse of value_to_string()
, and is also called in
clean()
.
See Converting values to Python objects for usage.
Besides saving to the database, the field also needs to know how to serialize its value:
value_from_object
(obj)[source]¶Returns the field’s value for the given model instance.
This method is often used by value_to_string()
.
value_to_string
(obj)[source]¶Converts obj
to a string. Used to serialize the value of the field.
See Converting field data for serialization for usage.
When using model forms
, the Field
needs to know which form field it should be represented by:
formfield
(form_class=None, choices_form_class=None, **kwargs)[source]¶Returns the default django.forms.Field
of this field for
ModelForm
.
By default, if both form_class
and choices_form_class
are
None
, it uses CharField
. If the field has
choices
and choices_form_class
isn’t specified, it uses TypedChoiceField
.
See Specifying the form field for a model field for usage.
deconstruct
()[source]¶Returns a 4-tuple with enough information to recreate the field:
"django.db.models.IntegerField"
).
This should be the most portable version, so less specific may be better.This method must be added to fields prior to 1.7 to migrate its data using Migrations.
Every Field
instance contains several attributes that allow
introspecting its behavior. Use these attributes instead of isinstance
checks when you need to write code that depends on a field’s functionality.
These attributes can be used together with the Model._meta API to narrow down a search for specific field types.
Custom model fields should implement these flags.
Field.
auto_created
¶Boolean flag that indicates if the field was automatically created, such
as the OneToOneField
used by model inheritance.
Field.
concrete
¶Boolean flag that indicates if the field has a database column associated with it.
Boolean flag that indicates if a field is used to back another non-hidden
field’s functionality (e.g. the content_type
and object_id
fields
that make up a GenericForeignKey
). The hidden
flag is used to
distinguish what constitutes the public subset of fields on the model from
all the fields on the model.
Note
Options.get_fields()
excludes hidden fields by default. Pass in include_hidden=True
to
return hidden fields in the results.
Field.
is_relation
¶Boolean flag that indicates if a field contains references to one or
more other models for its functionality (e.g. ForeignKey
,
ManyToManyField
, OneToOneField
, etc.).
Field.
model
¶Returns the model on which the field is defined. If a field is defined on
a superclass of a model, model
will refer to the superclass, not the
class of the instance.
These attributes are used to query for the cardinality and other details of a
relation. These attribute are present on all fields; however, they will only
have boolean values (rather than None
) if the field is a relation type
(Field.is_relation=True
).
Field.
many_to_many
¶Boolean flag that is True
if the field has a many-to-many relation;
False
otherwise. The only field included with Django where this is
True
is ManyToManyField
.
Field.
many_to_one
¶Boolean flag that is True
if the field has a many-to-one relation, such
as a ForeignKey
; False
otherwise.
Field.
one_to_many
¶Boolean flag that is True
if the field has a one-to-many relation, such
as a GenericRelation
or the reverse of a ForeignKey
; False
otherwise.
Field.
one_to_one
¶Boolean flag that is True
if the field has a one-to-one relation, such
as a OneToOneField
; False
otherwise.
Points to the model the field relates to. For example, Author
in
ForeignKey(Author, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
. The related_model
for
a GenericForeignKey
is always None
.
Oct 31, 2018