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Home/ Questions/Q 951499
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T23:44:44+00:00 2026-05-15T23:44:44+00:00

I have a multi model with different OneToOne relationships from various models to a

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I have a multi model with different OneToOne relationships from various models to a single parent. Consider this example:

class Place(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    address = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    ...

class Restaurant(models.Model):
    place = models.OneToOneField(Place)
    ...

class Shop(models.Model):
    place = models.OneToOneField(Place)
    ...

Regardless if the above model makes sense in real life scenario, how can someone identify if an object of Place has a relationship to any of the other models, in django view?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T23:44:45+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:44 pm

    In a template, you can say

    {% if place.restaurant %}
        <!-- stuff goes here -->
    {% endif %}
    

    The reason for this is that OneToOneField entries actually create an attribute in the model they are referencing. In normal Python code, saying place.restaurant where no restaurant is defined will throw an exception, but templates will swallow such exceptions.

    If you do need to do something like this in Python code, the simplest-to-understand way is to wrap it in a try/except block:

    place = Place.objects.all()[0]
    try:
        restaurant = place.restaurant
        # do something with restaurant
    except ObjectDoesNotExist:
        # do something without restaurant
    

    EDIT: As I say in my comment, if you only want a Place to be either a Restaurant or a Shop but never both, then you shouldn’t be using OneToOneField and should instead use model inheritance.

    Assuming that a Place could have two or more other possibilities, I recommend doing something like this:

    class Place(Model):
        # define your fields here
    
        # you could generate this automatically with trickery
        OTHER_MODELS = ["restaurant", "shop"]
    
        @property
        def relationships(self):
            if not hasattr(self, "_relationships"):
                self._relationships = {}
                for attr in OTHER_MODELS:
                    try:
                        self._relationshops[attr] = getattr(self, attr)
                    except ObjectDoesNotExist:
                        pass
            return self._relationships
    

    The above would let you say place.relationships and get back a dictionary that looked like

    {"restaurant": <Restaurant Object>, "shop": <Shop Object>}
    

    although one or both of those might be missing, depending on whether they exist. This would be easier to work with than having to catch a potential exception every time you reverse the OneToOneField relationship.

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