Skip to main content

Model your data and store it in a database.

Project description

plain.models

Model your data and store it in a database.

Overview

# app/users/models.py
from plain import models
from plain.passwords.models import PasswordField


@models.register_model
class User(models.Model):
    email = models.EmailField()
    password = PasswordField()
    is_admin = models.BooleanField(default=False)
    created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)

    def __str__(self):
        return self.email

Every model automatically includes an id field which serves as the primary key. The name id is reserved and can't be used for other fields.

Create, update, and delete instances of your models:

from .models import User


# Create a new user
user = User.query.create(
    email="test@example.com",
    password="password",
)

# Update a user
user.email = "new@example.com"
user.save()

# Delete a user
user.delete()

# Query for users
admin_users = User.query.filter(is_admin=True)

Database connection

To connect to a database, you can provide a DATABASE_URL environment variable:

DATABASE_URL=postgresql://user:password@localhost:5432/dbname

Or you can manually define the DATABASE setting:

# app/settings.py
DATABASE = {
    "ENGINE": "plain.models.backends.postgresql",
    "NAME": "dbname",
    "USER": "user",
    "PASSWORD": "password",
    "HOST": "localhost",
    "PORT": "5432",
}

Multiple backends are supported, including Postgres, MySQL, and SQLite.

Querying

Models come with a powerful query API through their QuerySet interface:

# Get all users
all_users = User.query.all()

# Filter users
admin_users = User.query.filter(is_admin=True)
recent_users = User.query.filter(created_at__gte=datetime.now() - timedelta(days=7))

# Get a single user
user = User.query.get(email="test@example.com")

# Complex queries with Q objects
from plain.models import Q
users = User.query.filter(
    Q(is_admin=True) | Q(email__endswith="@example.com")
)

# Ordering
users = User.query.order_by("-created_at")

# Limiting results
first_10_users = User.query.all()[:10]

For more advanced querying options, see the QuerySet class.

Migrations

Migrations track changes to your models and update the database schema accordingly:

# Create migrations for model changes
plain makemigrations

# Apply migrations to the database
plain migrate

# See migration status
plain models show-migrations

Migrations are Python files that describe database schema changes. They're stored in your app's migrations/ directory.

Fields

Plain provides many field types for different data:

from plain import models

class Product(models.Model):
    # Text fields
    name = models.CharField(max_length=200)
    description = models.TextField()

    # Numeric fields
    price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=10, decimal_places=2)
    quantity = models.IntegerField(default=0)

    # Boolean fields
    is_active = models.BooleanField(default=True)

    # Date and time fields
    created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
    updated_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)

    # Relationships
    category = models.ForeignKey("Category", on_delete=models.CASCADE)
    tags = models.ManyToManyField("Tag")

Common field types include:

Validation

Models can be validated before saving:

class User(models.Model):
    email = models.EmailField(unique=True)
    age = models.IntegerField()

    def clean(self):
        if self.age < 18:
            raise ValidationError("User must be 18 or older")

    def save(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self.full_clean()  # Runs validation
        super().save(*args, **kwargs)

Field-level validation happens automatically based on field types and constraints.

Indexes and constraints

Optimize queries and ensure data integrity with indexes and constraints:

class User(models.Model):
    email = models.EmailField()
    username = models.CharField(max_length=150)
    age = models.IntegerField()

    model_options = models.Options(
        indexes=[
            models.Index(fields=["email"]),
            models.Index(fields=["-created_at"], name="user_created_idx"),
        ],
        constraints=[
            models.UniqueConstraint(fields=["email", "username"], name="unique_user"),
            models.CheckConstraint(check=models.Q(age__gte=0), name="age_positive"),
        ],
    )

Custom QuerySets

With the Manager functionality now merged into QuerySet, you can customize QuerySet classes to provide specialized query methods.

Define a custom QuerySet and assign it to your model's query attribute:

from typing import Self

class PublishedQuerySet(models.QuerySet["Article"]):
    def published_only(self) -> Self:
        return self.filter(status="published")

    def draft_only(self) -> Self:
        return self.filter(status="draft")

@models.register_model
class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=200)
    status = models.CharField(max_length=20)

    query = PublishedQuerySet()

# Usage - all methods available on Article.query
all_articles = Article.query.all()
published_articles = Article.query.published_only()
draft_articles = Article.query.draft_only()

Custom methods can be chained with built-in QuerySet methods:

# Chaining works naturally
recent_published = Article.query.published_only().order_by("-created_at")[:10]

Programmatic QuerySet usage

For internal code that needs to create QuerySet instances programmatically, use from_model():

class SpecialQuerySet(models.QuerySet["Article"]):
    def special_filter(self) -> Self:
        return self.filter(special=True)

# Create and use the QuerySet programmatically
special_qs = SpecialQuerySet.from_model(Article)
special_articles = special_qs.special_filter()

Forms

Models integrate with Plain's form system:

from plain import forms
from .models import User

class UserForm(forms.ModelForm):
    class Meta:
        model = User
        fields = ["email", "is_admin"]

# Usage
form = UserForm(data=request.data)
if form.is_valid():
    user = form.save()

Sharing fields across models

To share common fields across multiple models, use Python classes as mixins. The final, registered model must inherit directly from models.Model and the mixins should not.

from plain import models


# Regular Python class for shared fields
class TimestampedMixin:
    created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
    updated_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)


# Models inherit from the mixin AND models.Model
@models.register_model
class User(TimestampedMixin, models.Model):
    email = models.EmailField()
    password = PasswordField()
    is_admin = models.BooleanField(default=False)


@models.register_model
class Note(TimestampedMixin, models.Model):
    content = models.TextField(max_length=1024)
    liked = models.BooleanField(default=False)

Installation

Install the plain.models package from PyPI:

uv add plain.models

Then add to your INSTALLED_PACKAGES:

# app/settings.py
INSTALLED_PACKAGES = [
    ...
    "plain.models",
]

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

plain_models-0.51.1.tar.gz (379.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

plain_models-0.51.1-py3-none-any.whl (435.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file plain_models-0.51.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: plain_models-0.51.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 379.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.9.0

File hashes

Hashes for plain_models-0.51.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 46783d6f9fc92818c6b41c83383e6756414f6b21553ae8864777026b960a5f27
MD5 18708eab82fea0827b0fd745ca7fe75a
BLAKE2b-256 01a09153bd897d5961544d4c411bbd7bdfefa49f3c56de5d7171511b0310836d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file plain_models-0.51.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for plain_models-0.51.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 29ec229a6a1277c3f81de43e6b24e34b451ef5e46e821d136edc386a9ddd0a0c
MD5 7d9f9acf185b8f74063d1f978544693b
BLAKE2b-256 a6f39114c0226ca44a973a47083a8ccdb292bd253d2e3eec4c1cbaaeb72fa1cc

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page