I'm setting up a testing environment for work, using fixtures to save and load test data and I got a little stumped by something I ran into. I had exported one of the database tables we use to a json file that I was going to import into a fresh new database to test with. When I imported it everything seemed fine, except when looking at the actual page. So this is what I found: [[!format sql """ SELECT * FROM app_table; """]]
SELECT * FROM app_table;
    => 3 rows of data
from app.models import Table

Table.objects.count()
    => 3

Table.objects.all()
    => []
This is weird. So I looked at the `django.db.connection.queries` property and I realized that it was doing a join since the model subclasses another:
from django.db import models

from app.models import SuperTable

class Table(SuperTable):...
Which, of course, means that in order to get the complete `Table` instance, the related `SuperTable` instance is also required, but in order to do a `COUNT` of `app_table` it isn't necessary. And that's where the inconsistency came from, now that I've also copied the contents of `SuperTable` everything is fine again. [[!meta date="2012-04-24 15:51:00"]] [[!tag python django coding]]