I have a model Employees
and I would like to have a QuerySet of all rows, but with some specific fields from each row, and not all fields.
I know how to quer
We can select required fields over values.
Employee.objects.all().values('eng_name','rank')
In addition to values_list
as Daniel mentions you can also use only (or defer for the opposite effect) to get a queryset of objects only having their id and specified fields:
Employees.objects.only('eng_name')
This will run a single query:
SELECT id, eng_name FROM employees
Employees.objects.values_list('eng_name', flat=True)
That creates a flat list of all eng_name
s. If you want more than one field per row, you can't do a flat list: this will create a list of tuples:
Employees.objects.values_list('eng_name', 'rank')
Daniel answer is right on the spot. If you want to query more than one field do this:
Employee.objects.values_list('eng_name','rank')
This will return list of tuples. You cannot use named=Ture when querying more than one field.
Moreover if you know that only one field exists with that info and you know the pk id then do this:
Employee.objects.values_list('eng_name','rank').get(pk=1)
Oskar Persson's answer is the best way to handle it because makes it easier to pass the data to the context and treat it normally from the template as we get the object instances (easily iterable to get props) instead of a plain value list.
After that you can just easily get the wanted prop:
for employee in employees:
print(employee.eng_name)
Or in the template:
{% for employee in employees %}
<p>{{ employee.eng_name }}</p>
{% endfor %}
You can use values_list alongside filter like so;
active_emps_first_name = Employees.objects.filter(active=True).values_list('first_name',flat=True)
More details here