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Home/ Questions/Q 7926713
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 3, 20262026-06-03T18:53:32+00:00 2026-06-03T18:53:32+00:00

Given the following models: class Module(models.Model): pass class Content(models.Model): module = models.ForeignKey(Module, related_name=’contents’) class

  • 0

Given the following models:

class Module(models.Model):
    pass
class Content(models.Model):
    module = models.ForeignKey(Module, related_name='contents')

class Blog(Module):
    pass
class Post(Content):
    pass

I would like to be able to get all the “post” objects owned by blog doing something like:

b = Blog.objects.get(pk=1)
b.posts.all()

However, I haven’t figured out a good way of doing this. I can’t use b.contents.all() as I need Post instances and not Content instances. I won’t ever have a root content object, every content object is going to be subclassed, but I can’t use abstract classes as I want a central table with all my content in it and then there will be content_blog etc tables for all the unique inherited pieces of content.

I also tried doing this

class Content(models.Model):
    module = models.ForeignKey(Module, related_name='%(class)')

but that failed miserably as far as I could tell.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-03T18:53:36+00:00Added an answer on June 3, 2026 at 6:53 pm

    The simplest way might add a method to Blog model to return a Post queryset, like this:

    class Blog(Module):
        def _get_posts(self):
            return Post.objects.filter(module=self)
        posts = property(_get_posts)
    

    The problem is you have to add method for every sub-model. The related_name seems only works for abstract base class.

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