This document covers features of the Model
class.
For more information about models, see the complete list of Model
reference guides.
DoesNotExist
¶Model.
DoesNotExist
¶This exception is raised by the ORM when an expected object is not found.
For example, QuerySet.get()
will raise it when no object is found
for the given lookups.
Django provides a DoesNotExist
exception as an attribute of each model
class to identify the class of object that could not be found, allowing you
to catch exceptions for a particular model class. The exception is a
subclass of django.core.exceptions.ObjectDoesNotExist
.
MultipleObjectsReturned
¶Model.
MultipleObjectsReturned
¶This exception is raised by QuerySet.get()
when multiple objects are
found for the given lookups.
Django provides a MultipleObjectsReturned
exception as an attribute of
each model class to identify the class of object for which multiple objects
were found, allowing you to catch exceptions for a particular model class.
The exception is a subclass of
django.core.exceptions.MultipleObjectsReturned
.
objects
¶Model.
objects
¶Each non-abstract Model
class must have a
Manager
instance added to it.
Django ensures that in your model class you have at least a
default Manager
specified. If you don’t add your own Manager
,
Django will add an attribute objects
containing default
Manager
instance. If you add your own
Manager
instance attribute, the default one does
not appear. Consider the following example:
from django.db import models
class Person(models.Model):
# Add manager with another name
people = models.Manager()
For more details on model managers see Managers and Retrieving objects.
Jan 24, 2024