The classes documented below provide a way for users to use functions provided by the underlying database as annotations, aggregations, or filters in Django. Functions are also expressions, so they can be used and combined with other expressions like aggregate functions.
We’ll be using the following model in examples of each function:
class Author(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
age = models.PositiveIntegerField(null=True, blank=True)
alias = models.CharField(max_length=50, null=True, blank=True)
goes_by = models.CharField(max_length=50, null=True, blank=True)
We don’t usually recommend allowing null=True
for CharField
since this
allows the field to have two “empty values”, but it’s important for the
Coalesce
example below.
Cast
¶Forces the result type of expression
to be the one from output_field
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cast
>>> Author.objects.create(age=25, name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(
... age_as_float=Cast('age', output_field=FloatField()),
... ).get()
>>> print(author.age_as_float)
25.0
Coalesce
¶Accepts a list of at least two field names or expressions and returns the first non-null value (note that an empty string is not considered a null value). Each argument must be of a similar type, so mixing text and numbers will result in a database error.
Usage examples:
>>> # Get a screen name from least to most public
>>> from django.db.models import Sum, Value as V
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Coalesce
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith', goes_by='Maggie')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(
... screen_name=Coalesce('alias', 'goes_by', 'name')).get()
>>> print(author.screen_name)
Maggie
>>> # Prevent an aggregate Sum() from returning None
>>> aggregated = Author.objects.aggregate(
... combined_age=Coalesce(Sum('age'), V(0)),
... combined_age_default=Sum('age'))
>>> print(aggregated['combined_age'])
0
>>> print(aggregated['combined_age_default'])
None
Warning
A Python value passed to Coalesce
on MySQL may be converted to an
incorrect type unless explicitly cast to the correct database type:
>>> from django.db.models import DateTimeField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cast, Coalesce
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> now = timezone.now()
>>> Coalesce('updated', Cast(now, DateTimeField()))
Collate
¶Takes an expression and a collation name to query against.
For example, to filter case-insensitively in SQLite:
>>> Author.objects.filter(name=Collate(Value('john'), 'nocase'))
<QuerySet [<Author: John>, <Author: john>]>
It can also be used when ordering, for example with PostgreSQL:
>>> Author.objects.order_by(Collate('name', 'et-x-icu'))
<QuerySet [<Author: Ursula>, <Author: Veronika>, <Author: Ülle>]>
Greatest
¶Accepts a list of at least two field names or expressions and returns the greatest value. Each argument must be of a similar type, so mixing text and numbers will result in a database error.
Usage example:
class Blog(models.Model):
body = models.TextField()
modified = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
class Comment(models.Model):
body = models.TextField()
modified = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
blog = models.ForeignKey(Blog, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Greatest
>>> blog = Blog.objects.create(body='Greatest is the best.')
>>> comment = Comment.objects.create(body='No, Least is better.', blog=blog)
>>> comments = Comment.objects.annotate(last_updated=Greatest('modified', 'blog__modified'))
>>> annotated_comment = comments.get()
annotated_comment.last_updated
will be the most recent of blog.modified
and comment.modified
.
Warning
The behavior of Greatest
when one or more expression may be null
varies between databases:
PostgreSQL: Greatest
will return the largest non-null expression,
or null
if all expressions are null
.
SQLite, Oracle, and MySQL: If any expression is null
, Greatest
will return null
.
The PostgreSQL behavior can be emulated using Coalesce
if you know
a sensible minimum value to provide as a default.
JSONObject
¶Takes a list of key-value pairs and returns a JSON object containing those pairs.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models import F
>>> from django.db.models.functions import JSONObject, Lower
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith', alias='msmith', age=25)
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(json_object=JSONObject(
... name=Lower('name'),
... alias='alias',
... age=F('age') * 2,
... )).get()
>>> author.json_object
{'name': 'margaret smith', 'alias': 'msmith', 'age': 50}
Least
¶Accepts a list of at least two field names or expressions and returns the least value. Each argument must be of a similar type, so mixing text and numbers will result in a database error.
Warning
The behavior of Least
when one or more expression may be null
varies between databases:
PostgreSQL: Least
will return the smallest non-null expression,
or null
if all expressions are null
.
SQLite, Oracle, and MySQL: If any expression is null
, Least
will return null
.
The PostgreSQL behavior can be emulated using Coalesce
if you know
a sensible maximum value to provide as a default.
NullIf
¶Accepts two expressions and returns None
if they are equal, otherwise
returns expression1
.
Caveats on Oracle
Due to an Oracle convention, this
function returns the empty string instead of None
when the expressions
are of type CharField
.
Passing Value(None)
to expression1
is prohibited on Oracle since
Oracle doesn’t accept NULL
as the first argument.
We’ll be using the following model in examples of each function:
class Experiment(models.Model):
start_datetime = models.DateTimeField()
start_date = models.DateField(null=True, blank=True)
start_time = models.TimeField(null=True, blank=True)
end_datetime = models.DateTimeField(null=True, blank=True)
end_date = models.DateField(null=True, blank=True)
end_time = models.TimeField(null=True, blank=True)
Extract
¶Extracts a component of a date as a number.
Takes an expression
representing a DateField
, DateTimeField
,
TimeField
, or DurationField
and a lookup_name
, and returns the part
of the date referenced by lookup_name
as an IntegerField
.
Django usually uses the databases’ extract function, so you may use any
lookup_name
that your database supports. A tzinfo
subclass, usually
provided by pytz
, can be passed to extract a value in a specific timezone.
Given the datetime 2015-06-15 23:30:01.000321+00:00
, the built-in
lookup_name
s return:
“year”: 2015
“iso_year”: 2015
“quarter”: 2
“month”: 6
“day”: 15
“week”: 25
“week_day”: 2
“iso_week_day”: 1
“hour”: 23
“minute”: 30
“second”: 1
If a different timezone like Australia/Melbourne
is active in Django, then
the datetime is converted to the timezone before the value is extracted. The
timezone offset for Melbourne in the example date above is +10:00. The values
returned when this timezone is active will be the same as above except for:
“day”: 16
“week_day”: 3
“iso_week_day”: 2
“hour”: 9
week_day
values
The week_day
lookup_type
is calculated differently from most
databases and from Python’s standard functions. This function will return
1
for Sunday, 2
for Monday, through 7
for Saturday.
The equivalent calculation in Python is:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> dt = datetime(2015, 6, 15)
>>> (dt.isoweekday() % 7) + 1
2
week
values
The week
lookup_type
is calculated based on ISO-8601, i.e.,
a week starts on a Monday. The first week of a year is the one that
contains the year’s first Thursday, i.e. the first week has the majority
(four or more) of its days in the year. The value returned is in the range
1 to 52 or 53.
Each lookup_name
above has a corresponding Extract
subclass (listed
below) that should typically be used instead of the more verbose equivalent,
e.g. use ExtractYear(...)
rather than Extract(..., lookup_name='year')
.
Usage example:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Extract
>>> start = datetime(2015, 6, 15)
>>> end = datetime(2015, 7, 2)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(
... start_datetime=start, start_date=start.date(),
... end_datetime=end, end_date=end.date())
>>> # Add the experiment start year as a field in the QuerySet.
>>> experiment = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... start_year=Extract('start_datetime', 'year')).get()
>>> experiment.start_year
2015
>>> # How many experiments completed in the same year in which they started?
>>> Experiment.objects.filter(
... start_datetime__year=Extract('end_datetime', 'year')).count()
1
DateField
extracts¶Returns the ISO-8601 week-numbering year.
Returns the ISO-8601 week day with day 1 being Monday and day 7 being Sunday.
These are logically equivalent to Extract('date_field', lookup_name)
. Each
class is also a Transform
registered on DateField
and DateTimeField
as __(lookup_name)
, e.g. __year
.
Since DateField
s don’t have a time component, only Extract
subclasses
that deal with date-parts can be used with DateField
:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> from django.db.models.functions import (
... ExtractDay, ExtractMonth, ExtractQuarter, ExtractWeek,
... ExtractIsoWeekDay, ExtractWeekDay, ExtractIsoYear, ExtractYear,
... )
>>> start_2015 = datetime(2015, 6, 15, 23, 30, 1, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> end_2015 = datetime(2015, 6, 16, 13, 11, 27, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(
... start_datetime=start_2015, start_date=start_2015.date(),
... end_datetime=end_2015, end_date=end_2015.date())
>>> Experiment.objects.annotate(
... year=ExtractYear('start_date'),
... isoyear=ExtractIsoYear('start_date'),
... quarter=ExtractQuarter('start_date'),
... month=ExtractMonth('start_date'),
... week=ExtractWeek('start_date'),
... day=ExtractDay('start_date'),
... weekday=ExtractWeekDay('start_date'),
... isoweekday=ExtractIsoWeekDay('start_date'),
... ).values(
... 'year', 'isoyear', 'quarter', 'month', 'week', 'day', 'weekday',
... 'isoweekday',
... ).get(end_date__year=ExtractYear('start_date'))
{'year': 2015, 'isoyear': 2015, 'quarter': 2, 'month': 6, 'week': 25,
'day': 15, 'weekday': 2, 'isoweekday': 1}
DateTimeField
extracts¶In addition to the following, all extracts for DateField
listed above may
also be used on DateTimeField
s .
These are logically equivalent to Extract('datetime_field', lookup_name)
.
Each class is also a Transform
registered on DateTimeField
as
__(lookup_name)
, e.g. __minute
.
DateTimeField
examples:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> from django.db.models.functions import (
... ExtractDay, ExtractHour, ExtractMinute, ExtractMonth,
... ExtractQuarter, ExtractSecond, ExtractWeek, ExtractIsoWeekDay,
... ExtractWeekDay, ExtractIsoYear, ExtractYear,
... )
>>> start_2015 = datetime(2015, 6, 15, 23, 30, 1, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> end_2015 = datetime(2015, 6, 16, 13, 11, 27, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(
... start_datetime=start_2015, start_date=start_2015.date(),
... end_datetime=end_2015, end_date=end_2015.date())
>>> Experiment.objects.annotate(
... year=ExtractYear('start_datetime'),
... isoyear=ExtractIsoYear('start_datetime'),
... quarter=ExtractQuarter('start_datetime'),
... month=ExtractMonth('start_datetime'),
... week=ExtractWeek('start_datetime'),
... day=ExtractDay('start_datetime'),
... weekday=ExtractWeekDay('start_datetime'),
... isoweekday=ExtractIsoWeekDay('start_datetime'),
... hour=ExtractHour('start_datetime'),
... minute=ExtractMinute('start_datetime'),
... second=ExtractSecond('start_datetime'),
... ).values(
... 'year', 'isoyear', 'month', 'week', 'day',
... 'weekday', 'isoweekday', 'hour', 'minute', 'second',
... ).get(end_datetime__year=ExtractYear('start_datetime'))
{'year': 2015, 'isoyear': 2015, 'quarter': 2, 'month': 6, 'week': 25,
'day': 15, 'weekday': 2, 'isoweekday': 1, 'hour': 23, 'minute': 30,
'second': 1}
When USE_TZ
is True
then datetimes are stored in the database
in UTC. If a different timezone is active in Django, the datetime is converted
to that timezone before the value is extracted. The example below converts to
the Melbourne timezone (UTC +10:00), which changes the day, weekday, and hour
values that are returned:
>>> import pytz
>>> melb = pytz.timezone('Australia/Melbourne') # UTC+10:00
>>> with timezone.override(melb):
... Experiment.objects.annotate(
... day=ExtractDay('start_datetime'),
... weekday=ExtractWeekDay('start_datetime'),
... isoweekday=ExtractIsoWeekDay('start_datetime'),
... hour=ExtractHour('start_datetime'),
... ).values('day', 'weekday', 'isoweekday', 'hour').get(
... end_datetime__year=ExtractYear('start_datetime'),
... )
{'day': 16, 'weekday': 3, 'isoweekday': 2, 'hour': 9}
Explicitly passing the timezone to the Extract
function behaves in the same
way, and takes priority over an active timezone:
>>> import pytz
>>> melb = pytz.timezone('Australia/Melbourne')
>>> Experiment.objects.annotate(
... day=ExtractDay('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... weekday=ExtractWeekDay('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... isoweekday=ExtractIsoWeekDay('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... hour=ExtractHour('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... ).values('day', 'weekday', 'isoweekday', 'hour').get(
... end_datetime__year=ExtractYear('start_datetime'),
... )
{'day': 16, 'weekday': 3, 'isoweekday': 2, 'hour': 9}
Now
¶Returns the database server’s current date and time when the query is executed,
typically using the SQL CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Now
>>> Article.objects.filter(published__lte=Now())
<QuerySet [<Article: How to Django>]>
PostgreSQL considerations
On PostgreSQL, the SQL CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
returns the time that the
current transaction started. Therefore for cross-database compatibility,
Now()
uses STATEMENT_TIMESTAMP
instead. If you need the transaction
timestamp, use django.contrib.postgres.functions.TransactionNow
.
Trunc
¶Truncates a date up to a significant component.
When you only care if something happened in a particular year, hour, or day,
but not the exact second, then Trunc
(and its subclasses) can be useful to
filter or aggregate your data. For example, you can use Trunc
to calculate
the number of sales per day.
Trunc
takes a single expression
, representing a DateField
,
TimeField
, or DateTimeField
, a kind
representing a date or time
part, and an output_field
that’s either DateTimeField()
,
TimeField()
, or DateField()
. It returns a datetime, date, or time
depending on output_field
, with fields up to kind
set to their minimum
value. If output_field
is omitted, it will default to the output_field
of expression
. A tzinfo
subclass, usually provided by pytz
, can be
passed to truncate a value in a specific timezone.
The is_dst
parameter indicates whether or not pytz
should interpret
nonexistent and ambiguous datetimes in daylight saving time. By default (when
is_dst=None
), pytz
raises an exception for such datetimes.
Given the datetime 2015-06-15 14:30:50.000321+00:00
, the built-in kind
s
return:
“year”: 2015-01-01 00:00:00+00:00
“quarter”: 2015-04-01 00:00:00+00:00
“month”: 2015-06-01 00:00:00+00:00
“week”: 2015-06-15 00:00:00+00:00
“day”: 2015-06-15 00:00:00+00:00
“hour”: 2015-06-15 14:00:00+00:00
“minute”: 2015-06-15 14:30:00+00:00
“second”: 2015-06-15 14:30:50+00:00
If a different timezone like Australia/Melbourne
is active in Django, then
the datetime is converted to the new timezone before the value is truncated.
The timezone offset for Melbourne in the example date above is +10:00. The
values returned when this timezone is active will be:
“year”: 2015-01-01 00:00:00+11:00
“quarter”: 2015-04-01 00:00:00+10:00
“month”: 2015-06-01 00:00:00+10:00
“week”: 2015-06-16 00:00:00+10:00
“day”: 2015-06-16 00:00:00+10:00
“hour”: 2015-06-16 00:00:00+10:00
“minute”: 2015-06-16 00:30:00+10:00
“second”: 2015-06-16 00:30:50+10:00
The year has an offset of +11:00 because the result transitioned into daylight saving time.
Each kind
above has a corresponding Trunc
subclass (listed below) that
should typically be used instead of the more verbose equivalent,
e.g. use TruncYear(...)
rather than Trunc(..., kind='year')
.
The subclasses are all defined as transforms, but they aren’t registered with
any fields, because the lookup names are already reserved by the Extract
subclasses.
Usage example:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.db.models import Count, DateTimeField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Trunc
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=datetime(2015, 6, 15, 14, 30, 50, 321))
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=datetime(2015, 6, 15, 14, 40, 2, 123))
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=datetime(2015, 12, 25, 10, 5, 27, 999))
>>> experiments_per_day = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... start_day=Trunc('start_datetime', 'day', output_field=DateTimeField())
... ).values('start_day').annotate(experiments=Count('id'))
>>> for exp in experiments_per_day:
... print(exp['start_day'], exp['experiments'])
...
2015-06-15 00:00:00 2
2015-12-25 00:00:00 1
>>> experiments = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... start_day=Trunc('start_datetime', 'day', output_field=DateTimeField())
... ).filter(start_day=datetime(2015, 6, 15))
>>> for exp in experiments:
... print(exp.start_datetime)
...
2015-06-15 14:30:50.000321
2015-06-15 14:40:02.000123
DateField
truncation¶Truncates to midnight on the Monday of the week.
These are logically equivalent to Trunc('date_field', kind)
. They truncate
all parts of the date up to kind
which allows grouping or filtering dates
with less precision. expression
can have an output_field
of either
DateField
or DateTimeField
.
Since DateField
s don’t have a time component, only Trunc
subclasses
that deal with date-parts can be used with DateField
:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.db.models import Count
>>> from django.db.models.functions import TruncMonth, TruncYear
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> start1 = datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 30, 50, 321, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> start2 = datetime(2015, 6, 15, 14, 40, 2, 123, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> start3 = datetime(2015, 12, 31, 17, 5, 27, 999, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start1, start_date=start1.date())
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start2, start_date=start2.date())
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start3, start_date=start3.date())
>>> experiments_per_year = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... year=TruncYear('start_date')).values('year').annotate(
... experiments=Count('id'))
>>> for exp in experiments_per_year:
... print(exp['year'], exp['experiments'])
...
2014-01-01 1
2015-01-01 2
>>> import pytz
>>> melb = pytz.timezone('Australia/Melbourne')
>>> experiments_per_month = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... month=TruncMonth('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb)).values('month').annotate(
... experiments=Count('id'))
>>> for exp in experiments_per_month:
... print(exp['month'], exp['experiments'])
...
2015-06-01 00:00:00+10:00 1
2016-01-01 00:00:00+11:00 1
2014-06-01 00:00:00+10:00 1
DateTimeField
truncation¶The tzinfo
parameter was added.
TruncDate
casts expression
to a date rather than using the built-in SQL
truncate function. It’s also registered as a transform on DateTimeField
as
__date
.
The tzinfo
parameter was added.
TruncTime
casts expression
to a time rather than using the built-in SQL
truncate function. It’s also registered as a transform on DateTimeField
as
__time
.
These are logically equivalent to Trunc('datetime_field', kind)
. They
truncate all parts of the date up to kind
and allow grouping or filtering
datetimes with less precision. expression
must have an output_field
of
DateTimeField
.
Usage example:
>>> from datetime import date, datetime
>>> from django.db.models import Count
>>> from django.db.models.functions import (
... TruncDate, TruncDay, TruncHour, TruncMinute, TruncSecond,
... )
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> import pytz
>>> start1 = datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 30, 50, 321, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start1, start_date=start1.date())
>>> melb = pytz.timezone('Australia/Melbourne')
>>> Experiment.objects.annotate(
... date=TruncDate('start_datetime'),
... day=TruncDay('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... hour=TruncHour('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... minute=TruncMinute('start_datetime'),
... second=TruncSecond('start_datetime'),
... ).values('date', 'day', 'hour', 'minute', 'second').get()
{'date': datetime.date(2014, 6, 15),
'day': datetime.datetime(2014, 6, 16, 0, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'Australia/Melbourne' AEST+10:00:00 STD>),
'hour': datetime.datetime(2014, 6, 16, 0, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'Australia/Melbourne' AEST+10:00:00 STD>),
'minute': 'minute': datetime.datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 30, tzinfo=<UTC>),
'second': datetime.datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 30, 50, tzinfo=<UTC>)
}
TimeField
truncation¶These are logically equivalent to Trunc('time_field', kind)
. They truncate
all parts of the time up to kind
which allows grouping or filtering times
with less precision. expression
can have an output_field
of either
TimeField
or DateTimeField
.
Since TimeField
s don’t have a date component, only Trunc
subclasses
that deal with time-parts can be used with TimeField
:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from django.db.models import Count, TimeField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import TruncHour
>>> from django.utils import timezone
>>> start1 = datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 30, 50, 321, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> start2 = datetime(2014, 6, 15, 14, 40, 2, 123, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> start3 = datetime(2015, 12, 31, 17, 5, 27, 999, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start1, start_time=start1.time())
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start2, start_time=start2.time())
>>> Experiment.objects.create(start_datetime=start3, start_time=start3.time())
>>> experiments_per_hour = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... hour=TruncHour('start_datetime', output_field=TimeField()),
... ).values('hour').annotate(experiments=Count('id'))
>>> for exp in experiments_per_hour:
... print(exp['hour'], exp['experiments'])
...
14:00:00 2
17:00:00 1
>>> import pytz
>>> melb = pytz.timezone('Australia/Melbourne')
>>> experiments_per_hour = Experiment.objects.annotate(
... hour=TruncHour('start_datetime', tzinfo=melb),
... ).values('hour').annotate(experiments=Count('id'))
>>> for exp in experiments_per_hour:
... print(exp['hour'], exp['experiments'])
...
2014-06-16 00:00:00+10:00 2
2016-01-01 04:00:00+11:00 1
We’ll be using the following model in math function examples:
class Vector(models.Model):
x = models.FloatField()
y = models.FloatField()
Abs
¶Returns the absolute value of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Abs
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=-0.5, y=1.1)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_abs=Abs('x'), y_abs=Abs('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_abs, vector.y_abs
(0.5, 1.1)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Abs
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Abs)
>>> # Get vectors inside the unit cube
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__abs__lt=1, y__abs__lt=1)
ACos
¶Returns the arccosine of a numeric field or expression. The expression value must be within the range -1 to 1.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ACos
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=0.5, y=-0.9)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_acos=ACos('x'), y_acos=ACos('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_acos, vector.y_acos
(1.0471975511965979, 2.6905658417935308)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ACos
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(ACos)
>>> # Get vectors whose arccosine is less than 1
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__acos__lt=1, y__acos__lt=1)
ASin
¶Returns the arcsine of a numeric field or expression. The expression value must be in the range -1 to 1.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ASin
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=0, y=1)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_asin=ASin('x'), y_asin=ASin('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_asin, vector.y_asin
(0.0, 1.5707963267948966)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ASin
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(ASin)
>>> # Get vectors whose arcsine is less than 1
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__asin__lt=1, y__asin__lt=1)
ATan
¶Returns the arctangent of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ATan
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=3.12, y=6.987)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_atan=ATan('x'), y_atan=ATan('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_atan, vector.y_atan
(1.2606282660069106, 1.428638798133829)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ATan
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(ATan)
>>> # Get vectors whose arctangent is less than 2
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__atan__lt=2, y__atan__lt=2)
ATan2
¶Returns the arctangent of expression1 / expression2
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import ATan2
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=2.5, y=1.9)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(atan2=ATan2('x', 'y')).get()
>>> vector.atan2
0.9209258773829491
Ceil
¶Returns the smallest integer greater than or equal to a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Ceil
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=3.12, y=7.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_ceil=Ceil('x'), y_ceil=Ceil('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_ceil, vector.y_ceil
(4.0, 7.0)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Ceil
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Ceil)
>>> # Get vectors whose ceil is less than 10
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__ceil__lt=10, y__ceil__lt=10)
Cos
¶Returns the cosine of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cos
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=-8.0, y=3.1415926)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_cos=Cos('x'), y_cos=Cos('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_cos, vector.y_cos
(-0.14550003380861354, -0.9999999999999986)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cos
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Cos)
>>> # Get vectors whose cosine is less than 0.5
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__cos__lt=0.5, y__cos__lt=0.5)
Cot
¶Returns the cotangent of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cot
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=12.0, y=1.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_cot=Cot('x'), y_cot=Cot('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_cot, vector.y_cot
(-1.5726734063976826, 0.642092615934331)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Cot
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Cot)
>>> # Get vectors whose cotangent is less than 1
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__cot__lt=1, y__cot__lt=1)
Degrees
¶Converts a numeric field or expression from radians to degrees.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Degrees
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=-1.57, y=3.14)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_d=Degrees('x'), y_d=Degrees('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_d, vector.y_d
(-89.95437383553924, 179.9087476710785)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Degrees
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Degrees)
>>> # Get vectors whose degrees are less than 360
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__degrees__lt=360, y__degrees__lt=360)
Exp
¶Returns the value of e
(the natural logarithm base) raised to the power of
a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Exp
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=-2.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_exp=Exp('x'), y_exp=Exp('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_exp, vector.y_exp
(221.40641620418717, 0.1353352832366127)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Exp
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Exp)
>>> # Get vectors whose exp() is greater than 10
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__exp__gt=10, y__exp__gt=10)
Floor
¶Returns the largest integer value not greater than a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Floor
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=-2.3)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_floor=Floor('x'), y_floor=Floor('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_floor, vector.y_floor
(5.0, -3.0)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Floor
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Floor)
>>> # Get vectors whose floor() is greater than 10
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__floor__gt=10, y__floor__gt=10)
Ln
¶Returns the natural logarithm a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Ln
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=233.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_ln=Ln('x'), y_ln=Ln('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_ln, vector.y_ln
(1.6863989535702288, 5.4510384535657)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Ln
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Ln)
>>> # Get vectors whose value greater than e
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__ln__gt=1, y__ln__gt=1)
Log
¶Accepts two numeric fields or expressions and returns the logarithm of the first to base of the second.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Log
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=2.0, y=4.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(log=Log('x', 'y')).get()
>>> vector.log
2.0
Mod
¶Accepts two numeric fields or expressions and returns the remainder of the first divided by the second (modulo operation).
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Mod
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=2.3)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(mod=Mod('x', 'y')).get()
>>> vector.mod
0.8
Pi
¶Returns the value of the mathematical constant π
.
Power
¶Accepts two numeric fields or expressions and returns the value of the first raised to the power of the second.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Power
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=2, y=-2)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(power=Power('x', 'y')).get()
>>> vector.power
0.25
Radians
¶Converts a numeric field or expression from degrees to radians.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Radians
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=-90, y=180)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_r=Radians('x'), y_r=Radians('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_r, vector.y_r
(-1.5707963267948966, 3.141592653589793)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Radians
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Radians)
>>> # Get vectors whose radians are less than 1
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__radians__lt=1, y__radians__lt=1)
Random
¶Returns a random value in the range 0.0 ≤ x < 1.0
.
Round
¶Rounds a numeric field or expression to the nearest integer. Whether half values are rounded up or down depends on the database.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Round
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=-2.3)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_r=Round('x'), y_r=Round('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_r, vector.y_r
(5.0, -2.0)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Round
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Round)
>>> # Get vectors whose round() is less than 20
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__round__lt=20, y__round__lt=20)
Sign
¶Returns the sign (-1, 0, 1) of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sign
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=-2.3)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_sign=Sign('x'), y_sign=Sign('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_sign, vector.y_sign
(1, -1)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sign
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Sign)
>>> # Get vectors whose signs of components are less than 0.
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__sign__lt=0, y__sign__lt=0)
Sin
¶Returns the sine of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sin
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=5.4, y=-2.3)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_sin=Sin('x'), y_sin=Sin('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_sin, vector.y_sin
(-0.7727644875559871, -0.7457052121767203)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sin
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Sin)
>>> # Get vectors whose sin() is less than 0
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__sin__lt=0, y__sin__lt=0)
Sqrt
¶Returns the square root of a nonnegative numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sqrt
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=4.0, y=12.0)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_sqrt=Sqrt('x'), y_sqrt=Sqrt('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_sqrt, vector.y_sqrt
(2.0, 3.46410)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Sqrt
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Sqrt)
>>> # Get vectors whose sqrt() is less than 5
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__sqrt__lt=5, y__sqrt__lt=5)
Tan
¶Returns the tangent of a numeric field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Tan
>>> Vector.objects.create(x=0, y=12)
>>> vector = Vector.objects.annotate(x_tan=Tan('x'), y_tan=Tan('y')).get()
>>> vector.x_tan, vector.y_tan
(0.0, -0.6358599286615808)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import FloatField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Tan
>>> FloatField.register_lookup(Tan)
>>> # Get vectors whose tangent is less than 0
>>> vectors = Vector.objects.filter(x__tan__lt=0, y__tan__lt=0)
Chr
¶Accepts a numeric field or expression and returns the text representation of
the expression as a single character. It works the same as Python’s chr()
function.
Like Length
, it can be registered as a transform on IntegerField
.
The default lookup name is chr
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Chr
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.filter(name__startswith=Chr(ord('M'))).get()
>>> print(author.name)
Margaret Smith
Concat
¶Accepts a list of at least two text fields or expressions and returns the
concatenated text. Each argument must be of a text or char type. If you want
to concatenate a TextField()
with a CharField()
, then be sure to tell
Django that the output_field
should be a TextField()
. Specifying an
output_field
is also required when concatenating a Value
as in the
example below.
This function will never have a null result. On backends where a null argument results in the entire expression being null, Django will ensure that each null part is converted to an empty string first.
Usage example:
>>> # Get the display name as "name (goes_by)"
>>> from django.db.models import CharField, Value as V
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Concat
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith', goes_by='Maggie')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(
... screen_name=Concat(
... 'name', V(' ('), 'goes_by', V(')'),
... output_field=CharField()
... )
... ).get()
>>> print(author.screen_name)
Margaret Smith (Maggie)
Left
¶Returns the first length
characters of the given text field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Left
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(first_initial=Left('name', 1)).get()
>>> print(author.first_initial)
M
Length
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the number of characters the value has. If the expression is null, then the length will also be null.
Usage example:
>>> # Get the length of the name and goes_by fields
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Length
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(
... name_length=Length('name'),
... goes_by_length=Length('goes_by')).get()
>>> print(author.name_length, author.goes_by_length)
(14, None)
It can also be registered as a transform. For example:
>>> from django.db.models import CharField
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Length
>>> CharField.register_lookup(Length)
>>> # Get authors whose name is longer than 7 characters
>>> authors = Author.objects.filter(name__length__gt=7)
Lower
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the lowercase representation.
It can also be registered as a transform as described in Length
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(name_lower=Lower('name')).get()
>>> print(author.name_lower)
margaret smith
LPad
¶Returns the value of the given text field or expression padded on the left side
with fill_text
so that the resulting value is length
characters long.
The default fill_text
is a space.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models import Value
>>> from django.db.models.functions import LPad
>>> Author.objects.create(name='John', alias='j')
>>> Author.objects.update(name=LPad('name', 8, Value('abc')))
1
>>> print(Author.objects.get(alias='j').name)
abcaJohn
LTrim
¶Similar to Trim
, but removes only leading
spaces.
MD5
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the MD5 hash of the string.
It can also be registered as a transform as described in Length
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import MD5
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(name_md5=MD5('name')).get()
>>> print(author.name_md5)
749fb689816b2db85f5b169c2055b247
Ord
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the Unicode code point
value for the first character of that expression. It works similar to Python’s
ord()
function, but an exception isn’t raised if the expression is more
than one character long.
It can also be registered as a transform as described in Length
.
The default lookup name is ord
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Ord
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(name_code_point=Ord('name')).get()
>>> print(author.name_code_point)
77
Repeat
¶Returns the value of the given text field or expression repeated number
times.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Repeat
>>> Author.objects.create(name='John', alias='j')
>>> Author.objects.update(name=Repeat('name', 3))
1
>>> print(Author.objects.get(alias='j').name)
JohnJohnJohn
Replace
¶Replaces all occurrences of text
with replacement
in expression
.
The default replacement text is the empty string. The arguments to the function
are case-sensitive.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models import Value
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Replace
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Johnson')
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> Author.objects.update(name=Replace('name', Value('Margaret'), Value('Margareth')))
2
>>> Author.objects.values('name')
<QuerySet [{'name': 'Margareth Johnson'}, {'name': 'Margareth Smith'}]>
Reverse
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the characters of that expression in reverse order.
It can also be registered as a transform as described in Length
. The
default lookup name is reverse
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Reverse
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(backward=Reverse('name')).get()
>>> print(author.backward)
htimS teragraM
Right
¶Returns the last length
characters of the given text field or expression.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Right
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(last_letter=Right('name', 1)).get()
>>> print(author.last_letter)
h
RPad
¶Similar to LPad
, but pads on the right
side.
RTrim
¶Similar to Trim
, but removes only trailing
spaces.
SHA1
, SHA224
, SHA256
, SHA384
, and SHA512
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the particular hash of the string.
They can also be registered as transforms as described in Length
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import SHA1
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(name_sha1=SHA1('name')).get()
>>> print(author.name_sha1)
b87efd8a6c991c390be5a68e8a7945a7851c7e5c
PostgreSQL
The pgcrypto extension must be installed. You can use the
CryptoExtension
migration
operation to install it.
Oracle
Oracle doesn’t support the SHA224
function.
StrIndex
¶Returns a positive integer corresponding to the 1-indexed position of the first
occurrence of substring
inside string
, or 0 if substring
is not
found.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models import Value as V
>>> from django.db.models.functions import StrIndex
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Smith, Margaret')
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Jackson')
>>> Author.objects.filter(name='Margaret Jackson').annotate(
... smith_index=StrIndex('name', V('Smith'))
... ).get().smith_index
0
>>> authors = Author.objects.annotate(
... smith_index=StrIndex('name', V('Smith'))
... ).filter(smith_index__gt=0)
<QuerySet [<Author: Margaret Smith>, <Author: Smith, Margaret>]>
Warning
In MySQL, a database table’s collation determines
whether string comparisons (such as the expression
and substring
of
this function) are case-sensitive. Comparisons are case-insensitive by
default.
Substr
¶Returns a substring of length length
from the field or expression starting
at position pos
. The position is 1-indexed, so the position must be greater
than 0. If length
is None
, then the rest of the string will be returned.
Usage example:
>>> # Set the alias to the first 5 characters of the name as lowercase
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Lower, Substr
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> Author.objects.update(alias=Lower(Substr('name', 1, 5)))
1
>>> print(Author.objects.get(name='Margaret Smith').alias)
marga
Trim
¶Returns the value of the given text field or expression with leading and trailing spaces removed.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Trim
>>> Author.objects.create(name=' John ', alias='j')
>>> Author.objects.update(name=Trim('name'))
1
>>> print(Author.objects.get(alias='j').name)
John
Upper
¶Accepts a single text field or expression and returns the uppercase representation.
It can also be registered as a transform as described in Length
.
Usage example:
>>> from django.db.models.functions import Upper
>>> Author.objects.create(name='Margaret Smith')
>>> author = Author.objects.annotate(name_upper=Upper('name')).get()
>>> print(author.name_upper)
MARGARET SMITH
There are a number of functions to use in a
Window
expression for computing the rank
of elements or the Ntile
of some rows.
CumeDist
¶Calculates the cumulative distribution of a value within a window or partition. The cumulative distribution is defined as the number of rows preceding or peered with the current row divided by the total number of rows in the frame.
DenseRank
¶Equivalent to Rank
but does not have gaps.
FirstValue
¶Returns the value evaluated at the row that’s the first row of the window
frame, or None
if no such value exists.
Lag
¶Calculates the value offset by offset
, and if no row exists there, returns
default
.
default
must have the same type as the expression
, however, this is
only validated by the database and not in Python.
MariaDB and default
MariaDB doesn’t support
the default
parameter.
LastValue
¶Comparable to FirstValue
, it calculates the last value in a given
frame clause.
Lead
¶Calculates the leading value in a given frame. Both
offset
and default
are evaluated with respect to the current row.
default
must have the same type as the expression
, however, this is
only validated by the database and not in Python.
MariaDB and default
MariaDB doesn’t support
the default
parameter.
NthValue
¶Computes the row relative to the offset nth
(must be a positive value)
within the window. Returns None
if no row exists.
Some databases may handle a nonexistent nth-value differently. For example,
Oracle returns an empty string rather than None
for character-based
expressions. Django doesn’t do any conversions in these cases.
Ntile
¶Calculates a partition for each of the rows in the frame clause, distributing
numbers as evenly as possible between 1 and num_buckets
. If the rows don’t
divide evenly into a number of buckets, one or more buckets will be represented
more frequently.
PercentRank
¶Computes the percentile rank of the rows in the frame clause. This computation is equivalent to evaluating:
(rank - 1) / (total rows - 1)
The following table explains the calculation for the percentile rank of a row:
Row # |
Value |
Rank |
Calculation |
Percent Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
15 |
1 |
(1-1)/(7-1) |
0.0000 |
2 |
20 |
2 |
(2-1)/(7-1) |
0.1666 |
3 |
20 |
2 |
(2-1)/(7-1) |
0.1666 |
4 |
20 |
2 |
(2-1)/(7-1) |
0.1666 |
5 |
30 |
5 |
(5-1)/(7-1) |
0.6666 |
6 |
30 |
5 |
(5-1)/(7-1) |
0.6666 |
7 |
40 |
7 |
(7-1)/(7-1) |
1.0000 |
Rank
¶Comparable to RowNumber
, this function ranks rows in the window. The
computed rank contains gaps. Use DenseRank
to compute rank without
gaps.
RowNumber
¶Computes the row number according to the ordering of either the frame clause or the ordering of the whole query if there is no partitioning of the window frame.
Dec 25, 2023