#35731 closed Cleanup/optimization (fixed)
Extend documentation about db_default and DatabaseDefault
Reported by: | Kyle Bebak | Owned by: | YashRaj1506 |
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Component: | Database layer (models, ORM) | Version: | dev |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Kyle Bebak, Simon Charette, Lily Foote | Triage Stage: | Ready for checkin |
Has patch: | yes | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description (last modified by )
I would be helpful if the existing docs at ref/models/fields.txt
, when describing db_default
, would mention DatabaseDefault
.
Also, the docs topics/db/models.txt
describe most of the Field
options but db_default
is missing, so ideally we would add a section for it with examples, including some that would show how and when DatabaseDefault
is returned/used.
Original report
For example, if client code creates a model Foo
with val = IntegerField(db_default=10)
, does foo = Foo()
, and accesses foo.val
, they get an instance of django.db.models.expressions.DatabaseDefault
.
This DatabaseDefault
seems to be used for bookkeeping until the model instance is written to the DB, after which foo.val
is an int
. IMO this is not a good design, because it's a case of an implementation detail (setting a value for the field once it's saved to the DB) changing the model's public interface (IMO a model instance's field values are part of its public interface).
If instead we do val = IntegerField()
, and foo = Foo()
, and access foo.val
, we get None
, s.t. the type of foo.val
is int | None
. Using db_default
means that the type of foo.val
is now int | DatabaseDefault
. DatabaseDefault
is a bookkeeping type that client code usually shouldn't interact with. If users aren't aware of db_default
's implementation, they might still write code like this, which would be broken: if foo.val is not None: print(foo.val + 10)
.
Because DatabaseDefault
is for bookkeeping, it seems like there's no reason the model instance couldn't store its DatabaseDefault
instances on a "private" field which wouldn't affect the model's public interface. This would be a lot cleaner IMO. Most users shouldn't know about DatabaseDefault
, which unsurprisingly isn't mentioned here, https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/5.1/ref/models/fields/#db-default, or anywhere else in the docs AFAICT.
Change History (12)
comment:2 by , 3 months ago
Owner: | set to |
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Status: | new → assigned |
comment:3 by , 3 months ago
Description: | modified (diff) |
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Summary: | Fields with db_default, and without default, are initialized to instance of DatabaseDefault → Extend documentation about db_default and DatabaseDefault |
Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
Version: | 5.0 → dev |
Overall, I agree with Simon analysis. Specifically, the docs for db_default
say:
The database-computed default value for this field.
So, when doing val = IntegerField(db_default=10); foo = Foo(); foo.val
, I would expect anything but the value that was set as db_default
(10), since the code "hasn't gone to the db yet". Intuitively I would have expected an exception such as "you can't have a value since DB hasn't been reached yet", but getting a instance of a "db value promise" is even better and clearer.
OTOH, I do agree that we may be lacking docs about this. In particular, I think we should:
- add a small note to the existing
ref/models/fields.txt
docs aboutdb_default
, and - add a richer section to the
topics/db/models.txt
for:attr:~Field.db_default
since most of theField
options are documented there butdb_default
is missing.
Accepting and re-purposing this ticket with that goal in mind.
comment:4 by , 3 months ago
Indeed, the way I solved this problem was setting both default
and db_default
. I'm guessing this is a fairly common use case, especially for BooleanField
, IntegerField
, CharField
/TextField
, etc, where you usually don't need a DB Func
or Python function to set a default value for the field. E.g. I use Django as the SOT for the DB schema, but I don't only write to the DB with the Django ORM, so having both default
and db_default
is useful for me.
Also, I understand that the model instance needs a sentinel value so it knows to set foo.val
after foo
has been written to the DB. My proposal is that the sentinel value not be stored on foo.val
, but rather in some "private" attribute not likely to be touched by client code. Before foo
is written to the DB, I think foo.val
should be None
, not an instance of DatabaseDefault
(which can be stored elsewhere on the model instance).
This probably seems like splitting hairs, and not a good reason for changing the implementation. I like the sentinel living elsewhere because it makes the model's type interface simpler.
If default
is passed to the field, then val
has a type of int
. If it's not, then its type is int | None
. In my proposal above, passing db_default
wouldn't change the type of foo
, whereas the current implementation means its type is int | DatabaseDefault
, int | None
, or int
, depending on what combo of default
and db_default
is passed.
Anyway, I think a change in documentation would be a good outcome for this ticket, and that there should be an example of passing both default
and db_default
in the docs. Thank you for taking the time to look at this =)
comment:5 by , 3 months ago
I think foo.val should be None, not an instance of DatabaseDefault (which can be stored elsewhere on the model instance).
Without getting into all the details there are complications in doing that as None
is already used to denote NULL
and a field with a db_default
could also be marked null=True
and assigned None
before creation to take precedence over db_default
class Author(models.Model): favorite_color = models.CharField(db_default="green", null=True) author = Author() assert isinstance(author.favorite_color, DatabaseDefault) author.favorite_color = None author.save() author.refresh_from_db() assert author.favorite_color is None
In other words we can't use None
as a sentinel denote a fallback to db_default
as it might be explicitly assigned as a desired value.
If default is passed to the field, then val has a type of int. If it's not, then its type is int | None. In my proposal above, passing db_default wouldn't change the type of foo, whereas the current implementation means its type is int | DatabaseDefault, int | None, or int, depending on what combo of default and db_default is passed.
That's a bad assumption unfortunately, every property associated with a field are | Expression[F]
where F
is bound to the field type and represents its output_field
. In other words, IntegerField(null=True)
results in a descriptor that is int | None | Expression[IntegerField]
and not simply int | None
.
comment:6 by , 5 weeks ago
Has patch: | set |
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comment:7 by , 5 weeks ago
added a patch: https://github.com/django/django/pull/18682
open to suggestions!
comment:8 by , 5 weeks ago
Patch needs improvement: | set |
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comment:9 by , 4 weeks ago
Patch needs improvement: | unset |
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comment:10 by , 4 weeks ago
Triage Stage: | Accepted → Ready for checkin |
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I don't agree that this is a change to the model's public interface. Assigning
Expression
like objects to field attributes on model instances has been a documented pattern for a while. See the section about Updating attributes based on existing fields for example.A sentinel object has to be assigned to the attribute to distinguish from
None
until its persisted and I'm afraid there is no way around that. What exactly would you expect the model instance attribute accesses to return whendb_default=TransactionNow()
or any other expression that is not a simple literal value like in your example? I personally don't find that returning a sentinel object that denotes this field's value is meant to be assigned a database expression on creation a surprising behavior when considering non-literal default values.The documentation you linked mentions
Given your report is specific to model instance initialization and includes an example of a
db_default
composed of a literal that can be expressed asdefault
I believe that your expectations are met by defining your field asIntegerField(default=10, db_default=10)
. I suspect that this feature that was specifically designed for the use case you had in mind.I'll let others chime in as I'm unsure if this should be closed as invalid (as specifying
default
achieves what you're after) or accepted as a documentation improvement given documenting the use case for defining both was brought up during the review phase and didn't make the cut.