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Description
First Check
- I added a very descriptive title to this issue.
- I used the GitHub search to find a similar issue and didn't find it.
- I searched the SQLModel documentation, with the integrated search.
- I already searched in Google "How to X in SQLModel" and didn't find any information.
- I already read and followed all the tutorial in the docs and didn't find an answer.
- I already checked if it is not related to SQLModel but to Pydantic.
- I already checked if it is not related to SQLModel but to SQLAlchemy.
Commit to Help
- I commit to help with one of those options 👆
Example Code
class Contract(SQLModel):
"""A contract defines the business conditions of a project"""
title: str = Field(description="Short description of the contract.")
client: Client = Relationship(
back_populates="contracts",
)
# Contract n:1 Client
client_id: Optional[int] = Field(
default=None,
foreign_key="client.id",
)
currency: str
term_of_payment: Optional[int] = Field(
description="How many days after receipt of invoice this invoice is due.",
default=31,
)
class TimeContract(Contract, table=True):
"""A time-based contract with a rate per time unit"""
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
rate: condecimal(decimal_places=2) = Field(
description="Rate of remuneration",
)
unit: TimeUnit = Field(
description="Unit of time tracked. The rate applies to this unit.",
sa_column=sqlalchemy.Column(sqlalchemy.Enum(TimeUnit)),
default=TimeUnit.hour,
)
class WorksContract(Contract, table=True):
"""A contract with a fixed price"""
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
price: condecimal(decimal_places=2) = Field(
description="Price of the contract",
)
deliverable: str = Field(description="Description of the deliverable")
class Client(SQLModel, table=True):
"""A client the freelancer has contracted with."""
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str
contracts: List["Contract"] = Relationship(back_populates="client")
Description
I would like to understand inheritance better using the following example:
- There are two types of contracts, a time-based contract with a rate per time unit, and a works contract with a fixed price.
- Every contract is related to a client.
The code example is my first attempt at implementing this. However, It is not yet correct:
InvalidRequestError: One or more mappers failed to initialize - can't proceed with initialization of other mappers. Triggering mapper: 'mapped class Client->client'. Original exception was: When initializing mapper mapped class Client->client, expression 'Contract' failed to locate a name ('Contract'). If this is a class name, consider adding this relationship() to the <class 'tuttle.model.Client'> class after both dependent classes have been defined.
Questions:
- Every
Contract
is related to a client. That makes me thinkclient
should be a member of theContract
base class. However, I don't understand how to properly implement the relationship. Is it necessary to moveclient
to the table classes (thereby duplicating it)? - When using inheritance from a model class, can I still
select
fromContract
(rather than from the different contract types separately)?
Operating System
macOS, Other
Operating System Details
No response
SQLModel Version
0.0.8
Python Version
3.10
Additional Context
No response
delphibets, williamprofit and devamin