Some great answers already, but none of them mentions Window functions.
The following example annotates all score objects with the latest score for the corresponding student:
from django.db.models import F, Window
from django.db.models.functions import FirstValue
scores = Score.objects.annotate(
latest_score=Window(
expression=FirstValue('score'),
partition_by=['student'],
order_by=F('date').desc(),
)
)
This results in the following SQL (using Sqlite backend):
SELECT
"score"."id",
"score"."student_id",
"score"."date",
"score"."score",
FIRST_VALUE("score"."score")
OVER (PARTITION BY "score"."student_id" ORDER BY "score"."date" DESC)
AS "latest_score"
FROM "score"
The required information is already there, but we can also reduce this queryset to a set of unique combinations of student_id
and latest_score
.
For example, on PostgreSQL we can use distinct with field names, as in scores.distinct('student')
.
On other db backends we can do something like set(scores.values_list('student_id', 'latest_score'))
, although this evaluates the queryset.
Unfortunately, at the time of writing, it is not yet possible to filter a windowed queryset.
EDIT: as of Django 4.2, windowed querysets can be filtered