Link to the question: [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51175110/how-
to-left-outer-join-with-extra-condition-in-django]
----
I have these three models:
{{{
class Track(models.Model):
title = models.TextField()
artist = models.TextField()
class Tag(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
class TrackHasTag(models.Model):
track = models.ForeignKey('Track', on_delete=models.CASCADE)
tag = models.ForeignKey('Tag', on_delete=models.PROTECT)
}}}
And I want to retrieve all Tracks that are not tagged with a specific tag.
This gets me what I want:
`Track.objects.exclude(trackhastag__tag_id='1').only('id')` but it's very
slow when the tables grow. This is what I get when printing `.query` of
the queryset:
{{{
SELECT "track"."id"
FROM "track"
WHERE NOT ( "track"."id" IN (SELECT U1."track_id" AS Col1
FROM "trackhastag" U1
WHERE U1."tag_id" = 1) )
}}}
I would like Django to send this query instead:
{{{
SELECT "track"."id"
FROM "track"
LEFT OUTER JOIN "trackhastag"
ON "track"."id" = "trackhastag"."track_id"
AND "trackhastag"."tag_id" = 1
WHERE "trackhastag"."id" IS NULL;
}}}
But haven't found a way to do so. Using a Raw Query is not really an
option as I have to filter the resulting queryset very often.
The cleanest workaround I have found is to create a view in the database
and a model TrackHasTagFoo with managed = False that I use to query like:
`Track.objects.filter(trackhastagfoo__isnull=True)`. I don't think this is
an elegant nor sustainable solution as it involves adding Raw SQL to my
migrations to mantain said view.
This is just one example of a situation where we need to do this kind of
left join with an extra condition, but the truth is that we are facing
this problem in more parts of our application.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/29555>
Django <https://code.djangoproject.com/>
The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
Comment (by Simon Charette):
Hello Enric,
Since the introduction of `FilteredRelation`
[https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.0/ref/models/querysets
/#filteredrelation-objects in Django 2.0] you should be able to achieved
exactly what you're after with the following
{{{#!python
Track.objects.annotate(
has_tag=FilteredRelation('trackhastag',
condition=Q(trackhastag__tag=1)),
).filter(
has_tag__isnull=True,
)
}}}
I'll mark this ticket as ''invalid'' for now but feel free to re-open it
if it doesn't match your use case of `extra()`.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/29555#comment:1>
* status: new => closed
* resolution: => invalid
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/29555#comment:2>
Comment (by Tim Graham):
There is also #29262 which talks about custom left outer joins.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/29555#comment:3>