This is my first message here, and sure enough I'm necromancing this thread
from 2016!
Below there's a message about how to use Q objects with get_or_create by
chaining them. This works! But it's not documented. Is it crazy to document
this?
I think I used the advice in this thread a while
I think it's perfectly sane to document the filter + get_or_create combo,
feel free to open a ticket and pull request
On 20 February 2018 at 20:26, 'Mike Lissner' via Django developers
(Contributions to Django itself) wrote:
> This is my first message here,
Hi,
This was an approach we deliberately avoided during development of the
current migration system - it works poorly with diverging feature branches
and requires that your developers have access to production schema at all
times (and additionally that you don't have divergent
Yes, this approach certainly doesn't magically solve data migration issues,
however the data migrations question has been a common one.
The nature of data migrations is that they are very one-off and context
dependent and so still something you'd need to script up manually. You
might use the
Hi all,
Some thoughts on schema migrations that may interest you. By way of
background, I'm the author of migra (https://github.com/djrobstep/migra), a
schema comparison/diff tool for Postgres.
I initially wrote this tool because I wanted to be able to generate
migration scripts
Hi,
I must say your idea intrigues me... and I'd certainly like to discuss
it further.
The first thought that comes to mind is how would such a system handle
data migrations?
Being able to leap from one schema state to another is great, buy
typically in the life-cycle of a reusable app
No, we don't have a team of people putting together ideas. If you have some
experience with Django, you could probably look through Trac tickets and
put together an original proposal.
On Friday, February 16, 2018 at 4:07:35 PM UTC-5, hardik dadhich wrote:
>
> hello All,
>
> It's my first chance
Hi Priyansh,
Your proposal isn't really detailed enough for me to understand what the
outcome of your project would be (I haven't watched Russell's talk that you
linked). What are the "big wins"? There are projects like
https://github.com/potatolondon/djangae, which allows using Django with