bumping in case you missed the previous question since we posted at
the same time

On Oct 26, 11:47 pm, "mr.freeze" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Also, why doesn't this work?:
>
> record = db(db.tablename.id==1).select()[0]
> print record.author.email
>
> It seems like it should work since author is a reference to auth_user
> and it's referencing a distinct record.
>
> On Oct 26, 11:25 pm, mdipierro <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Given:
>
> > ... Field("author", db.auth_user, default=auth.user.if if auth.user
> > else 0) ...
>
> > db.tablename.author.requires=IS_IN_DB(db,'auth_user.id','%(first_name)
> > s %(last_name)s')
>
> > You can do
>
> > record = db(db.tablename.id>0).select().first()
> > print db.auth_user[record.author].first_name
>
> > and/or
>
> > row= db(db.tablename.author==db.auth_user.id).select.first()
> > print row.tablename, row.auth_user.first_name
>
> > On Oct 26, 10:58 pm, Wiiboy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > And then how would I get the user's info?
>
> > > db(db.auth_user.id == db.tablename.author)
>
> > > ?
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