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How do I access the child classes of an object in django without knowing the name of the child class?

In Django, when you have a parent class and multiple child classes that inherit from it you would normally access a child through parentclass.childclass1_set or parentclass.childclass2_set, but what if I don't know the name of the specific child class I want?

Is there a way to get the related objects in the parent->child direction without knowing the child class name?

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Gabriel Hurley Avatar asked May 30 '09 04:05

Gabriel Hurley


4 Answers

(Update: For Django 1.2 and newer, which can follow select_related queries across reverse OneToOneField relations (and thus down inheritance hierarchies), there's a better technique available which doesn't require the added real_type field on the parent model. It's available as InheritanceManager in the django-model-utils project.)

The usual way to do this is to add a ForeignKey to ContentType on the Parent model which stores the content type of the proper "leaf" class. Without this, you may have to do quite a number of queries on child tables to find the instance, depending how large your inheritance tree is. Here's how I did it in one project:

from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
from django.db import models

class InheritanceCastModel(models.Model):
    """
    An abstract base class that provides a ``real_type`` FK to ContentType.

    For use in trees of inherited models, to be able to downcast
    parent instances to their child types.

    """
    real_type = models.ForeignKey(ContentType, editable=False)

    def save(self, *args, **kwargs):
        if self._state.adding:
            self.real_type = self._get_real_type()
        super(InheritanceCastModel, self).save(*args, **kwargs)
    
    def _get_real_type(self):
        return ContentType.objects.get_for_model(type(self))
            
    def cast(self):
        return self.real_type.get_object_for_this_type(pk=self.pk)
    
    class Meta:
        abstract = True

This is implemented as an abstract base class to make it reusable; you could also put these methods and the FK directly onto the parent class in your particular inheritance hierarchy.

This solution won't work if you aren't able to modify the parent model. In that case you're pretty much stuck checking all the subclasses manually.

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Carl Meyer Avatar answered Nov 08 '22 02:11

Carl Meyer


In Python, given a ("new-style") class X, you can get its (direct) subclasses with X.__subclasses__(), which returns a list of class objects. (If you want "further descendants", you'll also have to call __subclasses__ on each of the direct subclasses, etc etc -- if you need help on how to do that effectively in Python, just ask!).

Once you have somehow identified a child class of interest (maybe all of them, if you want instances of all child subclasses, etc), getattr(parentclass,'%s_set' % childclass.__name__) should help (if the child class's name is 'foo', this is just like accessing parentclass.foo_set -- no more, no less). Again, if you need clarification or examples, please ask!

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Alex Martelli Avatar answered Nov 08 '22 04:11

Alex Martelli


Carl's solution is a good one, here's one way to do it manually if there are multiple related child classes:

def get_children(self):
    rel_objs = self._meta.get_all_related_objects()
    return [getattr(self, x.get_accessor_name()) for x in rel_objs if x.model != type(self)]

It uses a function out of _meta, which is not guaranteed to be stable as django evolves, but it does the trick and can be used on-the-fly if need be.

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Paul McMillan Avatar answered Nov 08 '22 03:11

Paul McMillan


It turns out that what I really needed was this:

Model inheritance with content type and inheritance-aware manager

That has worked perfectly for me. Thanks to everyone else, though. I learned a lot just reading your answers!

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Gabriel Hurley Avatar answered Nov 08 '22 03:11

Gabriel Hurley