thanks, that's what I ended up using.
On Mar 30, 11:58 am, Jason Culverhouse wrote:
> You could use values_list and flat as in:
>
> User.objects.filter(username__in =['jason', 'was',
> 'here']).values_list('username', flat=True)
>
> returns a list:
>
> [u'jason', u'was']
>
> After that y
On Mar 30, 2011, at 9:47 AM, Calvin Spealman wrote:
> I think your best bet is
>
> MyModel.objects.filter(some_field__in=ok_values).count() == len(ok_values)
>
> On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 12:44 PM, dmitry b wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> is there a way to check in bulk for record existence and get back a
I think your best bet is
MyModel.objects.filter(some_field__in=ok_values).count() == len(ok_values)
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 12:44 PM, dmitry b wrote:
> Hi,
>
> is there a way to check in bulk for record existence and get back a
> map of results similar to what's returned by in_bulk(). In my cas
Hi,
is there a way to check in bulk for record existence and get back a
map of results similar to what's returned by in_bulk(). In my case, I
need to look up records by a unique field which is not the primary key
and I don't want object instances back, just true or false.
Thanks
Dmitry
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