Reader small image

You're reading from  Django 4 By Example - Fourth Edition

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2022
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781801813051
Edition4th Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Antonio Melé
Antonio Melé
author image
Antonio Melé

Antonio Melé has been crafting Django projects since 2006, for clients spanning multiple industries. He is Engineering Director at Backbase, a leading global fintech firm dedicated to facilitating the digital transformation of financial institutions. He co-founded Nucoro, a digital wealth management platform. In 2009 Antonio founded Zenx IT, a company specialized in developing digital products. He has been working as CTO and consultant for several tech-centric startups. He has also managed development teams building projects for large enterprise clients. He has an MSc in Computer Science from Universidad Pontificia Comillas and completed the Advanced Management Program at MIT Sloan. His father inspired his passion for computers and coding.
Read more about Antonio Melé

Right arrow

Using signals for denormalizing counts

There are some cases when you may want to denormalize your data. Denormalization is making data redundant in such a way that it optimizes read performance. For example, you might be copying related data to an object to avoid expensive read queries to the database when retrieving the related data. You have to be careful about denormalization and only start using it when you really need it. The biggest issue you will find with denormalization is that it’s difficult to keep your denormalized data updated.

Let’s take a look at an example of how to improve your queries by denormalizing counts. You will denormalize data from your Image model and use Django signals to keep the data updated.

Working with signals

Django comes with a signal dispatcher that allows receiver functions to get notified when certain actions occur. Signals are very useful when you need your code to do something every time something else happens. Signals...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Django 4 By Example - Fourth Edition
Published in: Aug 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781801813051

Author (1)

author image
Antonio Melé

Antonio Melé has been crafting Django projects since 2006, for clients spanning multiple industries. He is Engineering Director at Backbase, a leading global fintech firm dedicated to facilitating the digital transformation of financial institutions. He co-founded Nucoro, a digital wealth management platform. In 2009 Antonio founded Zenx IT, a company specialized in developing digital products. He has been working as CTO and consultant for several tech-centric startups. He has also managed development teams building projects for large enterprise clients. He has an MSc in Computer Science from Universidad Pontificia Comillas and completed the Advanced Management Program at MIT Sloan. His father inspired his passion for computers and coding.
Read more about Antonio Melé