11. Relating an object to itself, many-to-one
This example describes Django version 0.95. For the current example, go here.
To define a many-to-one relationship between a model and itself, use ForeignKey('self').
In this example, a Category is related to itself. That is, each Category has a parent Category.
Set related_name to designate what the reverse relationship is called.
Model source code
from django.db import models
class Category(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(maxlength=20)
parent = models.ForeignKey('self', null=True, related_name='child_set')
def __str__(self):
return self.name
API_TESTS = """
# Create a few Category objects.
>>> r = Category(id=None, name='Root category', parent=None)
>>> r.save()
>>> c = Category(id=None, name='Child category', parent=r)
>>> c.save()
>>> r.child_set.all()
[<Category: Child category>]
>>> r.child_set.get(name__startswith='Child')
<Category: Child category>
>>> print r.parent
None
>>> c.child_set.all()
[]
>>> c.parent
<Category: Root category>
"""

