Filter Reference ================ This is a reference document with a list of the filters and their arguments. Filters ------- ``CharFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This filter does simple character matches, used with ``CharField`` and ``TextField`` by default. ``BooleanFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This filter matches a boolean, either ``True`` or ``False``, used with ``BooleanField`` and ``NullBooleanField`` by default. ``ChoiceFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This filter matches an item of any type by choices, used with any field that has ``choices``. ``TypedChoiceFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The same as ``ChoiceFilter`` with the added possibility to convert value to match against. This could be done by using `coerce` parameter. An example use-case is limiting boolean choices to match against so only some predefined strings could be used as input of a boolean filter:: import django_filters from distutils.util import strtobool BOOLEAN_CHOICES = (('false', 'False'), ('true', 'True'),) class YourFilterSet(django_filters.FilterSet): ... flag = django_filters.TypedChoiceFilter(choices=BOOLEAN_CHOICES, coerce=strtobool) ``MultipleChoiceFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The same as ``ChoiceFilter`` except the user can select multiple items and it selects the OR of all the choices. Advanced Use: Depending on your application logic, when all or no choices are selected, filtering may be a noop. In this case you may wish to avoid the filtering overhead, particularly of the `distinct` call. Set `always_filter` to False after instantiation to enable the default `is_noop` test. Override `is_noop` if you require a different test for your application. ``DateFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Matches on a date. Used with ``DateField`` by default. ``DateTimeFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Matches on a date and time. Used with ``DateTimeField`` by default. ``TimeFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Matches on a time. Used with ``TimeField`` by default. ``ModelChoiceFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Similar to a ``ChoiceFilter`` except it works with related models, used for ``ForeignKey`` by default. ``ModelMultipleChoiceFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Similar to a ``MultipleChoiceFilter`` except it works with related models, used for ``ManyToManyField`` by default. ``NumberFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Filters based on a numerical value, used with ``IntegerField``, ``FloatField``, and ``DecimalField`` by default. ``RangeFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Filters where a value is between two numerical values, or greater than a minimum or less than a maximum where only one limit value is provided. :: class F(FilterSet): """Filter for Books by Price""" price = RangeFilter() class Meta: model = Book fields = ['price'] qs = Book.objects.all().order_by('title') # Range: Books between 5⬠and 15⬠f = F({'price_0': '5', 'price_1': '15'}, queryset=qs) # Min-Only: Books costing more the 11⬠f = F({'price_0': '11'}, queryset=qs) # Max-Only: Books costing less than 19⬠f = F({'price_1': '19'}, queryset=qs) ``DateRangeFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Filter similar to the admin changelist date one, it has a number of common selections for working with date fields. ``AllValuesFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a ``ChoiceFilter`` whose choices are the current values in the database. So if in the DB for the given field you have values of 5, 7, and 9 each of those is present as an option. This is similar to the default behavior of the admin. ``MethodFilter`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a ``Filter`` that will allow you to run a method that exists on the filter set that this filter is a property of. Set the `action` to a string that will map to a method on the filter set class. Core Arguments -------------- ``name`` ~~~~~~~~ The name of the field this filter is supposed to filter on, if this is not provided it automatically becomes the filter's name on the ``FilterSet``. ``label`` ~~~~~~~~~ The label as it will apear in the HTML, analogous to a form field's label argument. ``widget`` ~~~~~~~~~~ The django.form Widget class which will represent the ``Filter``. In addition to the widgets that are included with Django that you can use there are additional ones that django-filter provides which may be useful: * ``django_filters.widgets.LinkWidget`` -- this displays the options in a mannner similar to the way the Django Admin does, as a series of links. The link for the selected option will have ``class="selected"``. ``action`` ~~~~~~~~~~ An optional callable that tells the filter how to handle the queryset. It recieves a ``QuerySet`` and the value to filter on and should return a ``Queryset`` that is filtered appropriately. ``lookup_type`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The type of lookup that should be performed using the [Django ORM](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/querysets/#field-lookups "Django's ORM Lookups"). All the normal options are allowed, and should be provided as a string. You can also provide either ``None`` or a ``list`` or a ``tuple``. If ``None`` is provided, then the user can select the lookup type from all the ones available in the Django ORM. If a ``list`` or ``tuple`` is provided, then the user can select from those options. ``distinct`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~ A boolean value that specifies whether the Filter will use distinct on the queryset. This option can be used to eliminate duplicate results when using filters that span related models. Defaults to ``False``. ``exclude`` ~~~~~~~~~~~ A boolean value that specifies whether the Filter should use ``filter`` or ``exclude`` on the queryset. Defaults to ``False``. ``**kwargs`` ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Any extra keyword arguments will be provided to the accompanying form Field. This can be used to provide arguments like ``choices`` or ``queryset``.