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Home/ Questions/Q 1054617
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T17:26:03+00:00 2026-05-16T17:26:03+00:00

I’ve got a Django model containing various database model fields. One of the manager’s

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I’ve got a Django model containing various database model fields.
One of the manager’s querysets retrieves various aggregations via some annotate calls. Some of those annotations are custom made and retrieve float values from the database. Those annotations are not part of the model’s fields.
However, when the queryset is created, those floats turn out to be integers in the model, I guess because the there’s not a model field to bound them to a float or decimal data type.

Here’s some code to demostrate what I mean:

The custom aggregate classes. Note the database casts the result to a float:

class SqlCTR(aggregates.Sum):
    is_ordinal = True
    sql_function = 'SUM' 
    sql_template= "CASE WHEN sum(campaignmanager_adstats.impressions) > 0 THEN sum(campaignmanager_adstats.clicks)/sum(campaignmanager_adstats.impressions)::float ELSE 0::float END"

class CTR(Sum):
    name='CTR'
    def add_to_query(self, query, alias, col, source, is_summary):
        aggregate = SqlCTR(col, source=source, is_summary=is_summary)
        query.aggregates[alias] = aggregate

And here’s the queryset:

camps =  self.select_related(depth=3).\      
  annotate( impressions=Sum('ad__adstats__impressions'),\      
  clicks=Sum('ad__adstats__clicks'),\      
  ctr=CTR('ad__adstats__clicks'),\      
  exclude(**campaignExclude).\      
  filter(**campaignArgs).order_by(sortBy)

The problem is that although the query itself runs ok and returns CTR as floats, sorts it as a float and filters it just fine (if I run the generated sql in Postgres’s console), the resulting Queryset translates the value to an integer, resulting in 0s…
(Remember CTR is not a model field).

How can I either make sure that the annotated values load in their right datatype to the model? Can I set a non database model field of DecimalField or FloatField which will preserve the type?

Any idea will be highly appreciated!
Thanks
Harel

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T17:26:04+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 5:26 pm

    I’ll answer my own question:
    Turns out (obviously), that going through the django code itself is a lot of help.
    My SqlCTR call had: is_ordinal = True which the comments in the django code state:

    is_ordinal, a boolean indicating if the output of this aggregate
               is an integer (e.g., a count)
    

    while I needed is_computer=True

    is_computed, a boolean indicating if this output of this aggregate
               is a computed float (e.g., an average), regardless of the input
               type.
    
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