Query Django model trees using adjacency lists and recursive common
table expressions. Supports PostgreSQL, sqlite3 (3.8.3 or higher) and
MariaDB (10.2.2 or higher) and MySQL (8.0 or higher, if running without
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
).
Supports Django 3.2 or better, Python 3.8 or better. See the GitHub actions build for more details.
- Supports only integer and UUID primary keys (for now).
- Allows specifying ordering among siblings.
- Uses the correct definition of depth, where root nodes have a depth of zero.
- The parent foreign key must be named
"parent"
at the moment (but why would you want to name it differently?) - The fields added by the common table expression always are
tree_depth
,tree_path
andtree_ordering
. The names cannot be changed.tree_depth
is an integer,tree_path
an array of primary keys andtree_ordering
an array of values used for ordering nodes within their siblings. Note that the contents of thetree_path
andtree_ordering
are subject to change. You shouldn't rely on their contents. - Besides adding the fields mentioned above the package only adds queryset methods for ordering siblings and filtering ancestors and descendants. Other features may be useful, but will not be added to the package just because it's possible to do so.
- Little code, and relatively simple when compared to other tree
management solutions for Django. No redundant values so the only way
to end up with corrupt data is by introducing a loop in the tree
structure (making it a graph). The
TreeNode
abstract model class has some protection against this. - Supports only trees with max. 50 levels on MySQL/MariaDB, since those
databases do not support arrays and require us to provide a maximum
length for the
tree_path
andtree_ordering
upfront.
Here's a blog post offering some additional insight (hopefully) into the reasons for django-tree-queries' existence.
- Install
django-tree-queries
using pip. - Extend
tree_queries.models.TreeNode
or build your own queryset and/or manager usingtree_queries.query.TreeQuerySet
. TheTreeNode
abstract model already contains aparent
foreign key for your convenience and also uses model validation to protect against loops. - Call the
with_tree_fields()
queryset method if you require the additional fields respectively the CTE. - Call the
order_siblings_by("field_name")
queryset method if you want to order tree siblings by a specific model field. Note that Django's standardorder_by()
method isn't supported -- nodes are returned according to the depth-first search algorithm. - Create a manager using
TreeQuerySet.as_manager(with_tree_fields=True)
if you want to add tree fields to queries by default. - Until documentation is more complete I'll have to refer you to the test suite for additional instructions and usage examples, or check the recipes below.
The following two examples both extend the TreeNode
which offers a few
agreeable utilities and a model validation method that prevents loops in the
tree structure. The common table expression could be hardened against such
loops but this would involve a performance hit which we don't want -- this is a
documented limitation (non-goal) of the library after all.
from tree_queries.models import TreeNode
class Node(TreeNode):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
Nodes with the same parent may be ordered among themselves. The default is to order siblings by their primary key but that's not always very useful.
from tree_queries.models import TreeNode
class Node(TreeNode):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
position = models.PositiveIntegerField(default=0)
class Meta:
ordering = ["position"]
from tree_queries.models import TreeNode
from tree_queries.query import TreeQuerySet
class NodeQuerySet(TreeQuerySet):
def active(self):
return self.filter(is_active=True)
class Node(TreeNode):
is_active = models.BooleanField(default=True)
objects = NodeQuerySet.as_manager()
All examples assume the Node
class from above.
# Basic usage, disregards the tree structure completely.
nodes = Node.objects.all()
# Fetch nodes in depth-first search order. All nodes will have the
# tree_path, tree_ordering and tree_depth attributes.
nodes = Node.objects.with_tree_fields()
# Fetch any node.
node = Node.objects.order_by("?").first()
# Fetch direct children and include tree fields. (The parent ForeignKey
# specifies related_name="children")
children = node.children.with_tree_fields()
# Fetch all ancestors starting from the root.
ancestors = node.ancestors()
# Fetch all ancestors including self, starting from the root.
ancestors_including_self = node.ancestors(include_self=True)
# Fetch all ancestors starting with the node itself.
ancestry = node.ancestors(include_self=True).reverse()
# Fetch all descendants in depth-first search order, including self.
descendants = node.descendants(include_self=True)
# Temporarily override the ordering by siblings.
nodes = Node.objects.order_siblings_by("id")
Note that the tree queryset doesn't support all types of queries Django supports. For example, updating all descendants directly isn't supported. The reason for that is that the recursive CTE isn't added to the UPDATE query correctly. Workarounds often include moving the tree query into a subquery:
# Doesn't work:
node.descendants().update(is_active=False)
# Use this workaround instead:
Node.objects.filter(pk__in=node.descendants()).update(is_active=False)
Nobody wants breadth-first search but if you still want it you can achieve it as follows:
nodes = Node.objects.with_tree_fields().extra(
order_by=["__tree.tree_depth", "__tree.tree_ordering"]
)
If you only want nodes from the top two levels:
nodes = Node.objects.with_tree_fields().extra(
where=["__tree.tree_depth <= %s"],
params=[1],
)
It may be useful to aggregate fields from ancestor nodes, e.g. to collect parts of a path or something similar.
nodes = Node.objects.with_tree_fields().tree_fields(
tree_names="name",
)
All nodes will now have a tree_names
attribute containing a list of all
ancestors' names, including the node itself.
django-tree-queries ships a model field and some form fields which augment the
default foreign key field and the choice fields with a version where the tree
structure is visualized using dashes etc. Those fields are
tree_queries.fields.TreeNodeForeignKey
,
tree_queries.forms.TreeNodeChoiceField
,
tree_queries.forms.TreeNodeMultipleChoiceField
.
django-tree-queries doesn't include any utilities to help rendering trees in
templates at this time. django-tree-query-template exists and includes
a version of the django-mptt tree_info
filter. Feel free to check it out.