Thanks for your help Daniel, that seems to have fixed my problem...

On May 18, 12:27 pm, Daniel Roseman <dan...@roseman.org.uk> wrote:
> On Wednesday, May 18, 2011 6:46:49 PM UTC+1, wilbur wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > I continue to get errors when I try to view my model tables in Django
> > admin (1.3.0). The errors invariably refer to the name of a foreign
> > key defined in my models, with the '_id' appended to the name of the
> > field. My understanding was that by using a 'related_name' in the
> > column definition of the foreign key, it would override appending the
> > _id to the field name.
>
> > The target table that the foreign key points to:
>
> > class Sample(models.Model):    ..........where id is the primary key
> >     .....
> >     .....
>
> > class Specimen(models.Model):
> >     spec_sample = models.ForeignKey(Sample,verbose_name='Sample
> > Name',related_name='spec_sample')
>
> > and the error:
>
> > column specimen.spec_sample_id does not exist
>
> > How do I get Django to stop looking for spec_sample_id??
>
> related_name has nothing to do with the db column - it controls the field
> the foreign key points to, in the target model. To set the db column, like
> with any other type of field, you use `db_column`.
> --
> DR.

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