{{{
last_location = Subquery(PersonLocation.objects.filter(
person=OuterRef('id'),
departure_date=None).order_by('-arrival_date').values('location')[:1])
persons1 =
Person.objects_with_inactive.annotate(current_location=last_location)
}}}
Where PersonLocation is the table connecting the Person to a Location (to
keep track of the location history of a person).
And further in the code I do:
{{{
persons2 = persons1.exclude(current_location=location.id)
}}}
This will always return an empty queryset. Even if in persons1 there are
person objects that have `current_location = None` annotated.
This is very counter-intuitive, right?
I'm also not aware of a way to fix this. I tried
`persons1.filter(~Q(current_location=location.id))`, but the result is the
same.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32684>
Django <https://code.djangoproject.com/>
The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
Old description:
> Let's say I have the following query
>
> {{{
> last_location = Subquery(PersonLocation.objects.filter(
> person=OuterRef('id'),
> departure_date=None).order_by('-arrival_date').values('location')[:1])
>
> persons1 =
> Person.objects_with_inactive.annotate(current_location=last_location)
> }}}
> Where PersonLocation is the table connecting the Person to a Location (to
> keep track of the location history of a person).
>
> And further in the code I do:
>
> {{{
> persons2 = persons1.exclude(current_location=location.id)
> }}}
> This will always return an empty queryset. Even if in persons1 there are
> person objects that have `current_location = None` annotated.
> This is very counter-intuitive, right?
>
> I'm also not aware of a way to fix this. I tried
> `persons1.filter(~Q(current_location=location.id))`, but the result is
> the same.
New description:
Let's say I have the following query
{{{
last_location = Subquery(PersonLocation.objects.filter(
person=OuterRef('id'),
departure_date=None).order_by('-arrival_date').values('location')[:1])
persons1 =
Person.objects_with_inactive.annotate(current_location=last_location)
}}}
Where PersonLocation is the table connecting the Person to a Location (to
keep track of the location history of a person).
And further in the code I do:
{{{
persons2 = persons1.exclude(current_location=location.id)
}}}
This will always return an empty queryset. Even if in persons1 there are
person objects that have `current_location = None` annotated.
This is very counter-intuitive, right?
I'm also not aware of a way to fix this. I tried
`persons1.filter(~Q(current_location=location.id))`, but the result is the
same.
NOTE: the location.id is a UUID, not sure if that makes a difference
though.
--
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32684#comment:1>
* status: new => closed
* resolution: => duplicate
Comment:
Duplicate of #32398.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32684#comment:2>
Comment (by Gerben Morsink):
Replying to [comment:2 Mariusz Felisiak]:
> Duplicate of #32398.
I'm sorry I didn't find that issue. Thank you.
--
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32684#comment:3>