Presumably you want the same object to be able to be a comment on
someone else's post as well as a post in it's own right, that others
could comment on? Looks straightforward enough, though I can't see why
you'd need the generic fields in the model.

Regards
Scott

On May 25, 5:54 am, nameless <xsatelli...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have created a simple project where everyone can create one or more
> Blog. I want to use this models for Post and for Comment:
>
> class Post_comment(models.Model):
>     content_type = models.ForeignKey(ContentType)
>     object_id = models.PositiveIntegerField(_('object ID'))
>     content_object = generic.GenericForeignKey()
>
>     # Hierarchy Field
>     parent = models.ForeignKey('self', null=True, blank=True,
> default=None, related_name='children')
>
>     # User Field
>     user = models.ForeignKey(User)
>
>     # Date Fields
>     date_submitted = models.DateTimeField(_('date/time submitted'),
> default = datetime.now)
>     date_modified = models.DateTimeField(_('date/time modified'),
> default = datetime.now)
>
>     title = models.CharField(_('title'), max_length=60, blank=True,
> null=True)
>     post_comment = models.TextField(_('post_comment'))
>
> if it is a comment the parent is not null. So in most case the text
> field will contain a little bit of text. Can I use this model for both
> Post and Comment ? Is it a good solution ?

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