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Django error. Cannot assign must be an instance

I get the following error when I try to run an insert into one of my tables.

Cannot assign "1": "Team.department_id" must be a "Department" instance

Admittedly I'm slightly unsure if I'm using the foreign key concept correctly. The insert I'm trying to run and a snippet from my models.py are given below.

What I'm trying to do is that when someone wants to create a new team. They have to attach it to a department. Therefore the department ID should be in both sets of tables.

new_team = Team(
    nickname = team_name,
    employee_id = employee_id,
    department_id = int(Department.objects.get(password = password, department_name = department_name).department_id)
)

models.py

class Department(models.Model):  
    department_id = models.AutoField(auto_created=True, primary_key=True, default=1)  
    department_name = models.CharField(max_length=60)
    head_id = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    password = models.CharField(max_length=128)


class Team(models.Model):  
    team_id = models.AutoField(primary_key=True)
    department_id = models.ForeignKey('Department', related_name = 'Department_id')
    employee_id = models.CharField(max_length=30)
    nickname = models.CharField(max_length=60)
    team_image = models.ImageField(upload_to=get_image_path, blank=True, null=True)
like image 497
rahimbah Avatar asked Jun 15 '16 15:06

rahimbah


2 Answers

You don't need to pass the department id, the instance itself is enough. The following should work just fine:

new_team = Team(
    nickname = team_name,
    employee_id = employee_id,
    department_id = Department.objects.get(password = password, department_name = department_name)
)

Just a note, don't ever name your foreign fields something_id. That something is enough. Django is meant to make things easy from the user's perspective and the _id suffix means you're thinking of the database layer. In fact, if you named your column department, django will automatically create department_id column in the database for you. The way things are, you're making django create department_id_id which is rather silly.

like image 167
Anonymous Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 15:11

Anonymous


This came up first on a Google search so offering an alternative for newcomers. You can also do it this way in case you have handy access to the id and don't want to do another query:

new_team = Team(
    nickname = team_name,
    employee_id = employee_id,
    department_id_id = Department.objects.get(password = password, department_name = department_name).department_id
)

In short, {foreign_key_name}_id if you want to assign the id directly.

like image 11
munsu Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 15:11

munsu