Hi Simon,
-- thanks for your reply, I suspected exactly what you said.
I am not sure, this is not my code so I am not aware of the reason for this but I will try to refactor it the way you suggest.
Cheers,
filipa
On Friday, December 4, 2015 at 4:38:41 PM UTC+1, Simon Charette wrote:
On Friday, December 4, 2015 at 4:38:41 PM UTC+1, Simon Charette wrote:
Hi filias,
I personally didn't know one could define a reverse foreign key this way and
I doubt this use case is covered by the test suite. I'm afraid it worked for
Django < 1.8 by chance since it's not documented you can re-use the
implicitly created intermediary model as a `through` argument. I suspect this
might be due to the `_meta`[1] refactoring that happened in 1.8.
May I ask you why you don't simply define a `related_name`[2] if you simply
want to have a different reverse relationship name?
class Pizza(models.Model):
pass
class Topping(models.Model):
all_pizzas = models.ManyToManyField(
Pizza, related_name='available_toppings',
verbose_name='available pizzas'
)
Cheers,
Simon
[1] https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/releases/1.8/# model-meta-api
[2] https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/ref/models/fields/# django.db.models. ManyToManyField.related_name
Le vendredi 4 décembre 2015 07:08:51 UTC-5, filias a écrit :Indeed something in the project's code must be wrong but it is not the bi-directional ManyToMany as this has been working in django 1.4, 1.5, 1.6 and 1.7. One might want to had the ManyToMany in both models so to be able to add more information, as it is stated in the django docs https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/ in my case I just want the field to have a different name. I am thinking of using a property but I got into some troubles with my code when I did that, specifically the migration to remove the all_pizzas field crashes.topics/db/models/#extra- fields-on-many-to-many- relationships I have created a new project with only those 2 models and it seems to work correctly, so the problem is somehow related to our test runner (py.test) and something else which I still don't know.My models.py file looks like this:from django.db import modelsclass Pizza(models.Model):available_toppings = models.ManyToManyField('Topping') class Topping(models.Model):all_pizzas = models.ManyToManyField(Pizza, through=Pizza.available_toppings.through, verbose_name='available pizzas') I will continue investigating.
On Friday, December 4, 2015 at 11:31:19 AM UTC+1, Remco Gerlich wrote:RemcoSo your current code is almost certainly wrong, but if these are your exact models than I don't think they are related to your error.One, from that error message alone I can't figure out what is happening and why when you run tests, so I can't help there.But two: you don't have a ManyToManyField, you have TWO ManyToManyFields. If you define a many to many field on one model, than it's automatically also defined on the other (if you only have the one on Pizza, then you can do topping.pizza_set.all() from the other side.On Fri, Dec 4, 2015 at 9:54 AM, filias <filipa....@gmail.com> wrote:Hi,--I have recently upgraded to sjango 1.8 and I have 2 models with a bi-directional ManyToMany field. It looks like thisclass Pizza(Model):available_toppings = ManyToManyField('Topping')class Topping(Model):all_pizzas = ManyToManyField(Pizza, through=Pizza.available_stoppings.through, verbose_name='available pizzas') Everything was fine in django 1.7 but right now when running tests, specifically when creating the test database, I get this exception:self = <django.db.backends.sqlite3.base.SQLiteCursorWrapper object at 0x7fd24fca4b00> def execute(self, query, params=None):if params is None:> return Database.Cursor.execute(self, query)E OperationalError: table "products_pizza_available_toppings" already exists So it looks like the creation of the test database is trying to re-create the intermediate table for the ManyToMany.I do not get any exception when running my site.Does anyone know how can I fix this?Thank you in advance
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