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namlook edited this page Aug 25, 2013 · 1 revision

Query

There are two ways to query a collection: getting raw data or Document instance.

Getting raw data

Getting raw data is useful when you only want to have one value from your data. This is fast as there's no validation or wrapping. There is two methods to query raw data : find() and find_one(), one() and find_random().

find() and find_one()

find(), and find_one() act like the similar pymongo's methods. Please, see the pymongo documentation

one()

one() act like find() but will raise a mongokit.MultipleResultsFound exception if there is more than one result.

>>> bp2 = tutorial.BlogPost()
>>> bp2['title'] = u'my second blog post'
>>> bp2['author'] = u'you'
>>> bp2.save()

>>> tutorial.one()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
MultipleResultsFound: 2 results found

>>> tutorial.one({'title':'my first blog post'})
{u'body': None, u'author': u'myself', u'title': u'my first blog post', u'rank': 0, u'_id':  ObjectId('4b5ec4b690bce73814000000'), u'date_creation': datetime.datetime(2010, 1, 26, 10, 32, 22, 497000)}

If no document is found, one() returns None

find_random()

find_random() will return a random document from the database. This method doesn't take other arguments.

Getting Document instance

There are 4 methods to query your data which return Document instances: find(), find_one(), fetch(), fetch_one and find_random().

find() and fetch() return a cursor of collection. A cursor is a container which lazy evaluate the results. A cursor is acting like an iterator. find_one() and fetch_one() return the document itself.

All theses method can take a query as argument. A query is a simple dict. Please, see the mongodb and the pymongo documentation for further details.

find()

find() without argument will return a cursor of all documents of the collection. If a query is passed, it will return a cursor all documents which match the query.

find() takes the same arguments as the pymongo.collection.find method.

>>> for post in tutorial.BlogPost.find():
...     print post['title']
my first blog post
my second blog post

>>> for post in tutorial.BlogPost.find({'title':'my first blog post'}):
...     print post['title']
my first blog post

find_one()

find_one() acts like find() but will return only the first document found. This method takes the same arguments as pymongo's find_one() method. Please, check the pymongo documentation.

one()

one() acts like find_one() but will raise a mongokit.MultipleResultsFound exception if there is more than one result.

>>> tutorial.BlogPost.one()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
MultipleResultsFound: 2 results found

>>> doc = tutorial.BlogPost.one({'title':'my first blog post'})
>>> doc
{u'body': None, u'title': u'my first blog post', u'author': u'myself', u'rank': 0, u'_id': ObjectId('4b5ec4b690bce73814000000'), u'date_creation': datetime.datetime(2010, 1, 26, 10, 32, 22, 497000)}
>>> isinstance(doc, BlogPost)
True

If no document is found, one() returns None

fetch()

Unlike find(), fetch() will return only documents which match the structure of the Document.

>>> all_blog_posts = tutorial.BlogPost.fetch()

This will return only all blog post (which have 'title', 'body', 'author', 'date_creation', 'rank' as fields). This is an helper for:

>>> all_blog_posts = tutorial.BlogPost.find({'body': {'$exists': True}, 'title': {'$exists': True}, 'date_creation': {'$exists': True}, 'rank': {'$exists': True}, 'author': {'$exists': True}})

Note that like find() and one(), you can pass advanced queries:

>>> my_blog_posts = tutorial.BlogPost.fetch({'author':'myself'})

which is equivalent to:

>>> all_blog_posts = tutorial.BlogPost.find({'body': {'$exists': True}, 'title': {'$exists': True}, 'date_creation': {'$exists': True}, 'rank': {'$exists': True}, 'author': 'myself'})

fetch_one()

Just like fetch() but raise a mongokit.MultipleResultsFound exception if there is more than one result.

find_random()

find_random() will return a random document from the database. This method doesn't take other arguments.