On May 4, 3:07 pm, pbzRPA <pbz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 3, 6:52 pm, Malcolm Tredinnick <malc...@pointy-stick.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Sun, 2009-05-03 at 09:03 -0700, Thierry wrote:
> > > I have the following model:
>
> > > class Person(models.Model):
> > > person = models.ForeignKey(User)
> > > age = models.IntegerField()
>
> > > How can I set the above foreign key to be my primary key so that my
> > > Person table only contains two columns (person, age)?
>
> > The same way you set any other model field to be a primary key. Have a
> > look at the model fields documentation for the common options for all
> > fields:http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/fields/#ref-models-fi...
>
> > Regards,
> > Malcolm
>
> class Person(models.Model):
> person = models.ForeignKey(User, primary_key = True)
> age = models.IntegerField()
You should also use the "db_column" option so that the model does not
look for a "person_id" field.
class Person(models.Model):
person = models.ForeignKey(User, primary_key = True, db_column =
'person')
age = models.IntegerField()
Regards
Pbzrpa
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