Conditional expressions let you use if
… elif
… else
logic within filters, annotations, aggregations, and updates. A conditional expression evaluates a series of conditions for each row of a table and returns the matching result expression. Conditional expressions can also be combined and nested like other expressions.
We’ll be using the following model in the subsequent examples:
from django.db import models class Client(models.Model): REGULAR = 'R' GOLD = 'G' PLATINUM = 'P' ACCOUNT_TYPE_CHOICES = [ (REGULAR, 'Regular'), (GOLD, 'Gold'), (PLATINUM, 'Platinum'), ] name = models.CharField(max_length=50) registered_on = models.DateField() account_type = models.CharField( max_length=1, choices=ACCOUNT_TYPE_CHOICES, default=REGULAR, )
When
class When(condition=None, then=None, **lookups)
[source]
A When()
object is used to encapsulate a condition and its result for use in the conditional expression. Using a When()
object is similar to using the filter()
method. The condition can be specified using field lookups or Q
objects. The result is provided using the then
keyword.
Some examples:
>>> from django.db.models import F, Q, When >>> # String arguments refer to fields; the following two examples are equivalent: >>> When(account_type=Client.GOLD, then='name') >>> When(account_type=Client.GOLD, then=F('name')) >>> # You can use field lookups in the condition >>> from datetime import date >>> When(registered_on__gt=date(2014, 1, 1), ... registered_on__lt=date(2015, 1, 1), ... then='account_type') >>> # Complex conditions can be created using Q objects >>> When(Q(name__startswith="John") | Q(name__startswith="Paul"), ... then='name')
Keep in mind that each of these values can be an expression.
Note
Since the then
keyword argument is reserved for the result of the When()
, there is a potential conflict if a Model
has a field named then
. This can be resolved in two ways:
>>> When(then__exact=0, then=1) >>> When(Q(then=0), then=1)
Case
class Case(*cases, **extra)
[source]
A Case()
expression is like the if
… elif
… else
statement in Python
. Each condition
in the provided When()
objects is evaluated in order, until one evaluates to a truthful value. The result
expression from the matching When()
object is returned.
A simple example:
>>> >>> from datetime import date, timedelta >>> from django.db.models import Case, CharField, Value, When >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='Jane Doe', ... account_type=Client.REGULAR, ... registered_on=date.today() - timedelta(days=36)) >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='James Smith', ... account_type=Client.GOLD, ... registered_on=date.today() - timedelta(days=5)) >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='Jack Black', ... account_type=Client.PLATINUM, ... registered_on=date.today() - timedelta(days=10 * 365)) >>> # Get the discount for each Client based on the account type >>> Client.objects.annotate( ... discount=Case( ... When(account_type=Client.GOLD, then=Value('5%')), ... When(account_type=Client.PLATINUM, then=Value('10%')), ... default=Value('0%'), ... output_field=CharField(), ... ), ... ).values_list('name', 'discount') <QuerySet [('Jane Doe', '0%'), ('James Smith', '5%'), ('Jack Black', '10%')]>
Case()
accepts any number of When()
objects as individual arguments. Other options are provided using keyword arguments. If none of the conditions evaluate to TRUE
, then the expression given with the default
keyword argument is returned. If a default
argument isn’t provided, None
is used.
If we wanted to change our previous query to get the discount based on how long the Client
has been with us, we could do so using lookups:
>>> a_month_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=30) >>> a_year_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=365) >>> # Get the discount for each Client based on the registration date >>> Client.objects.annotate( ... discount=Case( ... When(registered_on__lte=a_year_ago, then=Value('10%')), ... When(registered_on__lte=a_month_ago, then=Value('5%')), ... default=Value('0%'), ... output_field=CharField(), ... ) ... ).values_list('name', 'discount') <QuerySet [('Jane Doe', '5%'), ('James Smith', '0%'), ('Jack Black', '10%')]>
Note
Remember that the conditions are evaluated in order, so in the above example we get the correct result even though the second condition matches both Jane Doe and Jack Black. This works just like an if
… elif
… else
statement in Python
.
Case()
also works in a filter()
clause. For example, to find gold clients that registered more than a month ago and platinum clients that registered more than a year ago:
>>> a_month_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=30) >>> a_year_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=365) >>> Client.objects.filter( ... registered_on__lte=Case( ... When(account_type=Client.GOLD, then=a_month_ago), ... When(account_type=Client.PLATINUM, then=a_year_ago), ... ), ... ).values_list('name', 'account_type') <QuerySet [('Jack Black', 'P')]>
Conditional expressions can be used in annotations, aggregations, lookups, and updates. They can also be combined and nested with other expressions. This allows you to make powerful conditional queries.
Let’s say we want to change the account_type
for our clients to match their registration dates. We can do this using a conditional expression and the update()
method:
>>> a_month_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=30) >>> a_year_ago = date.today() - timedelta(days=365) >>> # Update the account_type for each Client from the registration date >>> Client.objects.update( ... account_type=Case( ... When(registered_on__lte=a_year_ago, ... then=Value(Client.PLATINUM)), ... When(registered_on__lte=a_month_ago, ... then=Value(Client.GOLD)), ... default=Value(Client.REGULAR) ... ), ... ) >>> Client.objects.values_list('name', 'account_type') <QuerySet [('Jane Doe', 'G'), ('James Smith', 'R'), ('Jack Black', 'P')]>
What if we want to find out how many clients there are for each account_type
? We can use the filter
argument of aggregate functions to achieve this:
>>> # Create some more Clients first so we can have something to count >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='Jean Grey', ... account_type=Client.REGULAR, ... registered_on=date.today()) >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='James Bond', ... account_type=Client.PLATINUM, ... registered_on=date.today()) >>> Client.objects.create( ... name='Jane Porter', ... account_type=Client.PLATINUM, ... registered_on=date.today()) >>> # Get counts for each value of account_type >>> from django.db.models import Count >>> Client.objects.aggregate( ... regular=Count('pk', filter=Q(account_type=Client.REGULAR)), ... gold=Count('pk', filter=Q(account_type=Client.GOLD)), ... platinum=Count('pk', filter=Q(account_type=Client.PLATINUM)), ... ) {'regular': 2, 'gold': 1, 'platinum': 3}
This aggregate produces a query with the SQL 2003 FILTER WHERE
syntax on databases that support it:
SELECT count('id') FILTER (WHERE account_type=1) as regular, count('id') FILTER (WHERE account_type=2) as gold, count('id') FILTER (WHERE account_type=3) as platinum FROM clients;
On other databases, this is emulated using a CASE
statement:
SELECT count(CASE WHEN account_type=1 THEN id ELSE null) as regular, count(CASE WHEN account_type=2 THEN id ELSE null) as gold, count(CASE WHEN account_type=3 THEN id ELSE null) as platinum FROM clients;
The two SQL statements are functionally equivalent but the more explicit FILTER
may perform better.
© Django Software Foundation and individual contributors
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/models/conditional-expressions/