Tips and Solutions#

Common problems for declared filters#

Below are some of the common problems that occur when declaring filters. It is recommended that you read this as it provides a more complete understanding of how filters work.

Filter field_name and lookup_expr not configured#

While field_name and lookup_expr are optional, it is recommended that you specify them. By default, if field_name is not specified, the filter’s name on the FilterSet class will be used. Additionally, lookup_expr defaults to exact. The following is an example of a misconfigured price filter:

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    price__gt = django_filters.NumberFilter()

The filter instance will have a field name of price__gt and an exact lookup type. Under the hood, this will incorrectly be resolved as:

Product.objects.filter(price__gt__exact=value)

The above will most likely generate a FieldError. The correct configuration would be:

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    price__gt = django_filters.NumberFilter(field_name='price', lookup_expr='gt')

When using filterset_fields, you can also add the lookup_expr in the dict of fields like so:

# ... ModelViewSet with DjangoFilterBackend in filter_backends ...

filterset_fields = {
    "price": ["gt", "exact"],
}

Missing lookup_expr for text search filters#

It’s quite common to forget to set the lookup expression for CharField and TextField and wonder why a search for “foo” does not return results for “foobar”. This is because the default lookup type is exact, but you probably want to perform an icontains lookup.

Filter and lookup expression mismatch (in, range, isnull)#

It’s not always appropriate to directly match a filter to its model field’s type, as some lookups expect different types of values. This is a commonly found issue with in, range, and isnull lookups. Let’s look at the following product model:

class Product(models.Model):
    category = models.ForeignKey(Category, null=True)

Given that category is optional, it’s reasonable to want to enable a search for uncategorized products. The following is an incorrectly configured isnull filter:

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    uncategorized = django_filters.NumberFilter(field_name='category', lookup_expr='isnull')

So what’s the issue? While the underlying column type for category is an integer, isnull lookups expect a boolean value. A NumberFilter however only validates numbers. Filters are not ‘expression aware’ and won’t change behavior based on their lookup_expr. You should use filters that match the data type of the lookup expression instead of the data type underlying the model field. The following would correctly allow you to search for both uncategorized products and products for a set of categories:

class NumberInFilter(django_filters.BaseInFilter, django_filters.NumberFilter):
    pass

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    categories = NumberInFilter(field_name='category', lookup_expr='in')
    uncategorized = django_filters.BooleanFilter(field_name='category', lookup_expr='isnull')

More info on constructing in and range csv filters.

Filtering by empty values#

There are a number of cases where you may need to filter by empty or null values. The following are some common solutions to these problems:

Filtering by null values#

As explained in the above “Filter and lookup expression mismatch” section, a common problem is how to correctly filter by null values on a field.

Solution 1: Using a BooleanFilter with isnull#

Using BooleanFilter with an isnull lookup is a builtin solution used by the FilterSet’s automatic filter generation. To do this manually, simply add:

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    uncategorized = django_filters.BooleanFilter(field_name='category', lookup_expr='isnull')

Note

Remember that the filter class is validating the input value. The underlying type of the mode field is not relevant here.

You may also reverse the logic with the exclude parameter.

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    has_category = django_filters.BooleanFilter(field_name='category', lookup_expr='isnull', exclude=True)

Solution 2: Using ChoiceFilter’s null choice#

If you’re using a ChoiceFilter, you may also filter by null values by enabling the null_label parameter. More details in the ChoiceFilter reference docs.

class ProductFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    category = django_filters.ModelChoiceFilter(
        field_name='category', lookup_expr='isnull',
        null_label='Uncategorized',
        queryset=Category.objects.all(),
    )

Solution 3: Combining fields w/ MultiValueField#

An alternative approach is to use Django’s MultiValueField to manually add in a BooleanField to handle null values. Proof of concept: https://github.com/carltongibson/django-filter/issues/446

Filtering by an empty string#

It’s not currently possible to filter by an empty string, since empty values are interpreted as a skipped filter.

Solution 1: Magic values#

You can override the filter() method of a filter class to specifically check for magic values. This is similar to the ChoiceFilter’s null value handling.

class MyCharFilter(filters.CharFilter):
    empty_value = 'EMPTY'

    def filter(self, qs, value):
        if value != self.empty_value:
            return super().filter(qs, value)

        qs = self.get_method(qs)(**{'%s__%s' % (self.field_name, self.lookup_expr): ""})
        return qs.distinct() if self.distinct else qs

Solution 2: Empty string filter#

It would also be possible to create an empty value filter that exhibits the same behavior as an isnull filter.

from django.core.validators import EMPTY_VALUES

class EmptyStringFilter(filters.BooleanFilter):
    def filter(self, qs, value):
        if value in EMPTY_VALUES:
            return qs

        exclude = self.exclude ^ (value is False)
        method = qs.exclude if exclude else qs.filter

        return method(**{self.field_name: ""})


class MyFilterSet(filters.FilterSet):
    myfield__isempty = EmptyStringFilter(field_name='myfield')

    class Meta:
        model = MyModel
        fields = []

Filtering by relative times#

Given a model with a timestamp field, it may be useful to filter based on relative times. For instance, perhaps we want to get data from the past n hours. This could be accomplished with a NumberFilter that invokes a custom method.

from django.utils import timezone
from datetime import timedelta
...

class DataModel(models.Model):
    time_stamp = models.DateTimeField()


class DataFilter(django_filters.FilterSet):
    hours = django_filters.NumberFilter(
        field_name='time_stamp', method='get_past_n_hours', label="Past n hours")

    def get_past_n_hours(self, queryset, field_name, value):
        time_threshold = timezone.now() - timedelta(hours=int(value))
        return queryset.filter(time_stamp__gte=time_threshold)

    class Meta:
        model = DataModel
        fields = ('hours',)

Using initial values as defaults#

In pre-1.0 versions of django-filter, a filter field’s initial value was used as a default when no value was submitted. This behavior was not officially supported and has since been removed.

Warning

It is recommended that you do NOT implement the below as it adversely affects usability. Django forms don’t provide this behavior for a reason.

  • Using initial values as defaults is inconsistent with the behavior of Django forms.

  • Default values prevent users from filtering by empty values.

  • Default values prevent users from skipping that filter.

If defaults are necessary though, the following should mimic the pre-1.0 behavior:

class BaseFilterSet(FilterSet):

    def __init__(self, data=None, *args, **kwargs):
        # if filterset is bound, use initial values as defaults
        if data is not None:
            # get a mutable copy of the QueryDict
            data = data.copy()

            for name, f in self.base_filters.items():
                initial = f.extra.get('initial')

                # filter param is either missing or empty, use initial as default
                if not data.get(name) and initial:
                    data[name] = initial

        super().__init__(data, *args, **kwargs)

Adding model field help_text to filters#

Model field help_text is not used by filters by default. It can be added using a simple FilterSet base class:

class HelpfulFilterSet(django_filters.FilterSet):
    @classmethod
    def filter_for_field(cls, f, name, lookup_expr):
        filter = super(HelpfulFilterSet, cls).filter_for_field(f, name, lookup_expr)
        filter.extra['help_text'] = f.help_text
        return filter