I have a subscriber and address table.
a subscriber will have one and only one 'MAIN' address.
I want the subscriber and MAIN address to be represented by one class
'Subscriber'. However, I want that class to have a collection
'addresses' which contains other addresses (e.g. old addresses) - (it
can include the 'MAIN' address too .. or not.. I don't care)
subscriber_table = Table('subscriber', metadata,
Column('id', primary_key=True),
autoload=True)
address_table = Table('address',
metadata,
Column('subscriber_id', ForeignKey
('subscriber.id'), primary_key=True),
Column('address_type', primary_key=True),
autoload=True)
subscriber_with_default_address = sql.join( subscriber_table.c.id
== address_table.c.subscriber_id).??? <- something to say
address_table.type is 'MAIN'
mapper(Address, address_table)
mapper(Subscriber, subscriber_and_address, properties={
'id':[subscriber_table.c.id, address_table.c.subscriber_id],
'addresses' : relation(Address, collection_class=Addresses,
backref='customer')
})
a) I can't quite figure out how to say (address.type is default)
b) even without this I get:
sqlalchemy.exc.ArgumentError: Can't determine relation direction for
relationshi
p 'Subscriber.addresses' - foreign key columns are present in both the
parent an
d the child's mapped tables. Specify 'foreign_keys' argument.
if I do specify foreign_keys parameter to the relation function, then
I still get the same.
Thanks
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