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Home/ Questions/Q 657295
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T22:48:28+00:00 2026-05-13T22:48:28+00:00

I’m trying to create a Django model that handles the following: An Item can

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I’m trying to create a Django model that handles the following:

  • An Item can have several Names.
  • One of the Names for an Item is its primary Name, i.e. the Name displayed given an Item.

(The model names were changed to protect the innocent.)

The models.py I’ve got looks like:

class Item(models.Model):
    primaryName = models.OneToOneField("Name", verbose_name="Primary Name", 
        related_name="_unused")
    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.primaryName.name

class Name(models.Model):
    item = models.ForeignKey(Item)
    name = models.CharField(max_length=32, unique=True)
    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.name

class Meta:
ordering = [ ‘name’ ]

The admin.py looks like:

class NameInline(admin.TabularInline):
    model = Name

class ItemAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    inlines = [ NameInline ]

admin.site.register(Item, ItemAdmin)

It looks like the database schema is working fine, but I’m having trouble with the admin, so I’m not sure of anything at this point. My main questions are:

  • How do I explain to the admin that primaryName needs to be one of the Names of the item being edited?
  • Is there a way to automatically set primaryName to the first Name found, if primaryName is not set, since I’m using inline admin for the names?

EDIT: Dang, I forgot this was still open. Anyway, I wound up redoing the model, replacing primaryName with just name (a CharField) in Item and renaming Name to Alias. This can’t do what I wanted to (just search one table for a name), but I couldn’t make the primaryName work if it didn’t have null=True, since Item gets saved before any Names were created, meaning that any attempt to auto-assign a Name would see an empty QuerySet and fail.

The only way I could see it working was to have Name‘s save routine auto-set itself as its parent’s primaryName if primaryName was NULL, which just didn’t sit well with me.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T22:48:28+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:48 pm
    • How do I explain to the admin that primaryName needs to be one of the
      Names of the item being edited?

    Check out formfield_for_foreignkey() in the ModelAdmin docs.

    class ItemAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
        def formfield_for_foreignkey(self, db_field, request, **kwargs):
            if db_field.name == "primaryName":
                # tweak the filter to your liking.
                kwargs["queryset"] = Name.objects.filter(item=...)
                return db_field.formfield(**kwargs)
            return super(ItemAdmin, self).formfield_for_foreignkey(db_field, request, **kwargs)
    
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