On Feb 12, 2008 2:23 PM, Malcolm Tredinnick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 2008-02-12 at 14:13 +0100, Hanne Moa wrote:
> > 1. how do I get "Region: 'someregion (somelocation)'" in the admin
> > interface instead of "Region: '---------'"?
>
> I don't know why this is happening. ForeignKeys normally just work
> properly. It should be working as you expect.
>
> [..] So there's something slightly amiss with
> the way things are matched up in your retrofitted models. You could also
> try comparing the output of "manage.py sql <app_name>" to the actual
> database tables to make sure the reference is pointing to the right
> field, etc.

I checked the generated sql. No wonder it went wrong. With db_column
in the ForeignKey, the attribute Org.region in python became org.id in
the sql, meaning there were several fields "id" in the same table!
When I removed db_column in ForeignKey, the Python attribute
Org.region became org.region_id in the table and hence not matching
the existing table. Too much automagic or what?

In case you wondered: inspectdb croaks on this monster so the models
are all hand-made.

So, new question: how do I prevent the python-attribute in the
Org-class from being renamed in the sql? Now, if I had made the
underlying sql I would never have called every primary key the same
though, because if you don't, you get to use natural joins, which
rocks when it comes to readability/maintenance of sql... but that's
just me.


HM

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