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Deferred foreign keys for Django

Project description

django-dfk

django-dfk implements deferred foreign keys for Django. Deferred foreign keys are conceptually similar to generic foreign keys, except that they are resolved to a real foreign key at runtime, and cause proper foreign keys to be created in the database.

This package allows you to do two things:

* Declare that a model's foreign key field is 'deferrable', and should be repointed later
* Repoint an existing model's foreign key fields, even if that model is not django-dfk aware.

You should perform the latter with caution - consider it a similar process to monkey-patching!

This package is alpha software, and is not feature-complete. See the TODO section for what’s on the list.

Installation

Install django-dfk using your preferred Python package manager. Use of virtualenv is also recommended:

pip install django-dfk

Usage

Pointing a single foreign key

Let’s say you want to reinvent the wheel, and develop a commenting app. Your comment model might look like this, in mycomments.models:

from dfk import DeferredForeignKey

class Comment(models.Model):
    commenter = models.ForeignKey('auth.User')
    content = DeferredForeignKey()
    body = models.TextField()

Now, you come to integrate this application with your blog system (which, as you’re keen on wheel reinvention, you have also written yourself). Here’s blog/models.py:

from dfk import point
from mycomments.models import Comment

class BlogPost(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    slug = models.SlugField()
    body = models.TextField()

point(Comment, 'content', BlogPost)

The call to point will replace the DeferredForeignKey on Comment with a foreign key to BlogPost.

Pointing may foreign keys at once

When writing models that use deferred foreign keys, you may need to declare that a number should point to the same ‘kind’ of object. Let’s say you had wild scope creep, and your commenting app needed the ability to associate images with a blog post. So you edit your comment app’s models.py so it looks like this:

from dfk import DeferredForeignKey

class Comment(models.Model):
    commenter = models.ForeignKey('auth.User')
    content = DeferredForeignKey(name='Content')
    body = models.TextField()

class Image(models.Model):
    image = models.ImageField()
    content = DeferredForeignKey(name='Content')

This expresses that both comments and images need to point to the same kind of model. This is accomplished with the point_named function:

from dfk import point_named
point_named('blog', 'Content', BlogPost)

Now, all DeferredForeignKey instances in the blog app which are called Content will be replaced by real foreign keys to BlogPost.

Arguments to the generated foreign keys

When declaring a deferred foreign key, you may specify additional keyword arguments. Aside from name, this will be passed on verbatim to the final foreign key.

It is also possible to pass arbitrary keyword arguments in calls to point or point_named. These will also be passed to the final foreign key. Where arguments are present in both the DFK definition and in the point/point_named call, arguments from the latter will take precedence.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to ISM Fantasy Games Ltd. for sponsoring this package.

0.0.3

  • Fix packaging error

0.0.2

  • Fix an issue when repointing foreign keys on model classes with custom fields which use the django.db.models.SubfieldBase metaclass

  • Fix an issue migrating from Django 1.2 to 1.3.

0.0.1

  • Initial version

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