Since I already have the objects, I don't want to hit the database
again. There are not just two but multiple objects, that's why I want
to avoid unnecessary db calls.

On Aug 8, 9:54 pm, akaariai <akaar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 8 elo, 11:55, chefsmart <moran.cors...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > The objects are coming from mutually exclusive querysets. I need to
> > pass aquerysetof these objects to a function.
>
> "Or" the querysets together?
> In [2]: f1 = Foo1()
> In [3]: f1.save()
> In [4]: f2 = Foo1()
> In [5]: f2.save()
> In [6]: [f.pk for f in Foo1.objects.all()]
> Out[6]: [1, 2]
> In [7]: qs2 = Foo1.objects.filter(pk=1) | Foo1.objects.filter(pk=2) #
> The oring of querysets
> In [8]: [f.pk for f in qs2]
> Out[8]: [1, 2]
>
> - Anssi
>
> > On Aug 8, 1:25 pm, Masklinn <maskl...@masklinn.net> wrote:
>
> > > On 8 août 2010, at 06:15, chefsmart <moran.cors...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > I had asked this on stackoverflow, but I guess I couldn't explain
> > > > myself clearly enough. I'll try to ask again here:
>
> > > > Say I have two objects obj1 and obj2 of the same model (MyModel), now
> > > > I would like to add these objects to a newQuerySet. Can I create a
> > > >QuerySetmanuallylike the following
>
> > > > my_qs =QuerySet(model=MyModel)
>
> > > > and then add obj1 and obj2 to thisQuerySetlike
>
> > > > my_qs.add(obj1)
> > > > my_qs.add(obj2)
>
> > > > Regards,
> > > > CM.
>
> > > What would the use case be, which would prevent you from using a normal 
> > > list?

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