When I use extra in a certain way on a Django queryset (call it qs), the result of qs.count() is different than len(qs.all()). To reproduce:
Make an empty Django project and app, then add a trivial model:
class Baz(models.Model):
pass
Now make a few objects:
>>> Baz(id=1).save()
>>> Baz(id=2).save()
>>> Baz(id=3).save()
>>> Baz(id=4).save()
Using the extra method to select only some of them produces the expected count:
>>> Baz.objects.extra(where=['id > 2']).count()
2
>>> Baz.objects.extra(where=['-id < -2']).count()
2
But add a select clause to the extra and refer to it in the where clause, and the count is suddenly wrong, even though the result of all() is correct:
>>> Baz.objects.extra(select={'negid': '0 - id'}, where=['"negid" < -2']).all()
[<Baz: Baz object>, <Baz: Baz object>] # As expected
>>> Baz.objects.extra(select={'negid': '0 - id'}, where=['"negid" < -2']).count()
0 # Should be 2
I think the problem has to do with django.db.models.sql.query.BaseQuery.get_count(). It checks whether the BaseQuery’s select or aggregate_select attributes have been set; if so, it uses a subquery. But django.db.models.sql.query.BaseQuery.add_extra adds only to the BaseQuery’s extra attribute, not select or aggregate_select.
How can I fix the problem? I know I could just use len(qs.all()), but it would be nice to be able to pass the extra‘ed queryset to other parts of the code, and those parts may call count() without knowing that it’s broken.
Redefining
get_count()and monkeypatching appears to fix the problem:Testing:
Updated to work with Django 1.2.1:
I’m not sure if this fix will have other unintended consequences, however.