I have a simple view that I want to respond to both ajax and regular HTTP requests. Simplified, it looks like this:
def tag_search(request, tag):
items = Item.objects.filter(tags__tagname__exact=tag)
if request.is_ajax():
return HttpResponse(serializers.serialize('json', items), mimetype='application/json')
else:
return render_to_response('mytemplate.html', locals())
The problem is that it isn't returning the values of the many to many relationships - just a list of the primary keys like:
[1, 2, 5]
I understand that I can't use select_related() to follow many to many relationships - can anyon开发者_运维技巧e provide me with a best practice for passing that information back, or an example?
Update - it seems Django doesn't support this particularly well, but there's a third party serializer that does:
DjangoFullSerializers
I have written some code to do serialization in my project. It serializes model objects into dictionaries based upon a context, which describes how to serialize objects of each encountered type, so you may drop some fields from serialization or add new fields not present in the model. The code lacks comments, but you can find usage samples in unit tests. Hope that helps.
You may want to do a bulk select using those ids (probably the easiest solution)
item_ids = [1, 2, 5]
Item.objects.in_bulk(item_ids)
# Another option:
Item.objects.filter(id__in=item_ids)
edit: My advice is to either use django-tagging which handles this for you. OR just add a method to your Item model that gets the tags (and uses cache liberally)
from django.core.cache import cache
class Item(models.Model):
...
def get_tags(self):
cache_key = "item_%s_tags" % self.id
cache_timeout = 600 # 10 minutes or whatever
tags = cache.get(cache_key, False)
if not tags:
tags = self.tags.all()
cache.set(cache_key, tags, cache_timeout)
return tags
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