No, it won't. See 
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/release-process/#supported-versions
 
for the guidelines on which changes are backported.

On Saturday, March 28, 2015 at 2:49:21 AM UTC-4, Gergely Polonkai wrote:
>
> Great, thank you!
>
> Although I'm more than willing to upgrade, I still wonder if this fix will 
> be backported to 1.7…
> On 28 Mar 2015 02:15, "Tim Graham" <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>> This is fixed in Django 1.8. See the fifth item in 
>> https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/releases/1.8/#models.
>>
>> On Friday, March 27, 2015 at 5:38:15 PM UTC-4, Gergely Polonkai wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I’d like to execute the following code:
>>>
>>> Booking.objects.filter(start_ts__isnull = False, end_ts__isnull = 
>>> False).extra(select = {'amount': "strftime('%s', end_ts) - strftime('%s', 
>>> start_ts)"})
>>>
>>> However, in the shell, I get the following error:
>>>
>>> Traceback (most recent call last): File "<console>", line 1, in <module> 
>>> File "/home/polesz/Projects/duckbook/venv/lib/python3.4/
>>> site-packages/django/db/models/query.py", line 835, in extra 
>>> clone.query.add_extra(select, select_params, where, params, tables, 
>>> order_by) File "/home/polesz/Projects/duckbook/venv/lib/python3.4/
>>> site-packages/django/db/models/sql/query.py", line 1744, in add_extra 
>>> entry_params.append(next(param_iter)) StopIteration
>>>
>>> I have tried doubling the percent signs (%%s) and escaping them with a 
>>> backslash (\%s), but neither helped. I also looked at this answer 
>>> <http://stackoverflow.com/a/18143147/1305139>[1], but that solution 
>>> doesn’t work with QuerySet.extra() (or I just miss the point).
>>>
>>> What is the correct way to solve this?
>>>
>>> I also tried to use select_params like this:
>>>
>>> Booking.objects.filter(start_ts__isnull = False, end_ts__isnull = 
>>> False).extra(select = {'amount': "strftime('%s', end_ts) - strftime(%s, 
>>> start_ts)"}, select_params = ['%s', '%s'])
>>>
>>> but regardless the usage of quote signs, the resulting query has \'%s\', 
>>> which gives an SQL error, of course.
>>>
>>> Best,
>>> Gergely
>>>
>>> [1] http://stackoverflow.com/a/18143147/1305139
>>>
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