Yeah, that would work, too.  I was thinking more like if you got the
ringo like this:

ringo = Person.objects.select_related(depth=2).get(name='ringo')

how could you get the data without having to make another DB call.

Ideas?

Thanks,
Nate

On Sep 23, 2:04 pm, akonsu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> hello,
>
> how about
>
> for m in Membership.objects.filter(person=ringo) : print m.date_joined
>
> konstantin
>
> On Sep 23, 4:58 pm, Nate Thelen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > So if I have a Person object "ringo" and I want to get info about the
> > Groups he is a member of, I would do this:
>
> > for group in ringo.group_set.all()
> >     print( group.name )
>
> > My question is, how do I print the "date_joined" without having to do
> > this:
>
> > for group in ringo.group_set.all()
> >     print( Membership.objects.get(person=ringo,
> > group=group).date_joined )
>
> > That seems very DB inefficient.
>
> > Nate
>
> > On Sep 19, 9:43 pm, "Russell Keith-Magee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > wrote:
>
> > > On Sat, Sep 20, 2008 at 8:37 AM, Nate Thelen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > Looking at the docs here:
>
> > > >http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/db/models/#extra-fields-o...
>
> > > > I cannot find any reference to how to access the data in the
> > > > "Membership" table.  For example, if I have a reference to the
> > > > "beatles" object, how do I find the "date_joined" for each of the
> > > > "Person" objects.  I have looked through the other sections of the
> > > > documentation, searched this group, and searched via Google, but
> > > > couldn't find the info.
>
> > > Short version: You access the membership table using the foreign key
> > > relationship that the membership defines.
>
> > > Long version: Your question ("the date_joined for each person object")
> > > is actually ill posed - a person doesn't have a date_joined without a
> > > group to also give context. "The date person X joined group Y" can be
> > > answered as:
>
> > > >>> Membership.objects.get(person=X, group=y).date_joined
>
> > > It might help to think about it like this - m2m-intermediate tables
> > > don't add extra data to an m2m relation, they make a 2-step foreign
> > > key relation behave like an m2m relation.
>
> > > Yours,
> > > Russ Magee %-)
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