Hello Aymeric,
To be clear, I don't contest in any way that design choice. I understand
and approve it.
I'm just pointing to this unwanted side-effect, wondering if anyone has
ideas how to circumvent it, as I think it's a legitimate use case.
I'm also aware that we have not much control over tes
It might be a bit early in the day for me, but isn't that query already
optimised? That is, it's already eliminated a join. It hasn't joined to the
"Especialidad" table, it's only joined to the intermediate table. I *think*
the join to the intermediate table is necessary because there could be
One correction, inspectdb doesn't currently create models for views, but
this isn't the first time that code caused confusion, see
https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/25038.
I agree that fixing the inspect SQL would be the ideal solution. José, I
didn't follow the conversation closely enough
Hello there,
Lets say I have these two models (sorry about the spanish names!) ( Django
1.8.6 and MySQL backend )
class Especialidad(models.Model):
nombre = models.CharField(max_length=250, blank=False, unique=True)
class Usuario(AbstractBaseUser):
permisosEspecialidad = models.ManyT
Hello Claude,
Generally speaking, you cannot safely use a model that isn't defined in an
application that is in INSTALLED_APPS. Django raises a warning when you import
such a model.
This restriction prevents situations where relations between models aren't set
up correctly. There’s a string of
Hello,
I have a Django project with different apps and settings. Let's say
settings A have A in INSTALLED_APPS but not B, and settings B have B in
INSTALLED_APPS but not A. Note also that I cannot have both apps installed,
for some reason.
In that configuration and from Django 1.9, ./manage.py
Considering the information provided by Donald, it’s pretty clear to me that we
should switch to rc as proposed by Tim.
--
Aymeric.
> On 18 nov. 2015, at 01:26, Tim Graham wrote:
>
> Thanks Donald, updating setuptools was the factor I missed, not Python 2 vs.
> 3.
>
> On Tuesday, November