difference between objects.create() and object.save() in django orm

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佛祖请我去吃肉 2020-12-24 01:48
u = UserDetails.objects.create(first_name=\'jake\',last_name=\'sullivan\')
u.save()

UserDetails.objects.create() and u.save()

2条回答
  •  旧巷少年郎
    2020-12-24 02:21

    Similar question: Django Model() vs Model.objects.create()

    The difference between Model() vs Model.objects.create() are summarized as below.


    1. .save() perform internally as either INSERT or UPDATE object to db, while .objects.create() perform only INSERT object to db.

      Model.save() perform ....

      UPDATE → If the object’s primary key attribute is set to a value that evaluates to True

      INSERT → If the object’s primary key attribute is not set or if the UPDATE didn’t update anything (e.g. if primary key is set to a value that doesn’t exist in the database).


    1. If primary key attribute is set to a value then Model.save() perform UPDATE but Model.objects.create raise IntegrityError.

      eg.

      models.py

      class Subject(models.Model):
         subject_id = models.PositiveIntegerField(primary_key=True, db_column='subject_id')
         name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
         max_marks = models.PositiveIntegerField()
      

      1) Insert/Update to db with Model.save()

      physics = Subject(subject_id=1, name='Physics', max_marks=100)
      physics.save()
      math = Subject(subject_id=1, name='Math', max_marks=50)  # Case of update
      math.save()
      

      Output:

      Subject.objects.all().values()
      
      

      2) Insert to db with Model.objects.create()

      Subject.objects.create(subject_id=1, name='Chemistry', max_marks=100)
      IntegrityError: UNIQUE constraint failed: m****t.subject_id
      

      Explanation: Above math.save() is case of update since subject_id is primary key and subject_id=1 exists django internally perform UPDATE, name Physics to Math and max_marks from 100 to 50 for this, but objects.create() raise IntegrityError


    1. Model.objects.create() not equivalent to Model.save() however same can be achieved with force_insert=True parameter on save method i.e Model.save(force_insert=True).

    1. Model.save() return None where Model.objects.create() return model instance i.e. package_name.models.Model

    Conclusion: Model.objects.create() internally do model initialization and perform save with force_insert=True.

    source-code block of Model.objects.create()

    def create(self, **kwargs):
        """
        Create a new object with the given kwargs, saving it to the database
        and returning the created object.
        """
        obj = self.model(**kwargs)
        self._for_write = True
        obj.save(force_insert=True, using=self.db)
        return obj
    

    The following links can be followed for more details:

    1. https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/models/querysets/#create

    2. https://github.com/django/django/blob/2d8dcba03aae200aaa103ec1e69f0a0038ec2f85/django/db/models/query.py#L440

    Note: Above answer is from question.

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