I didn't found in the Django docs and Source Code the reason for serialize=False on primary key fields. Is there a special reason to set it?
Thanks
Azd325,
it is as simple as it sounds, this field will not be part of the serialized object..
Although, I guess your question concerns to models that are being migrated and have a generated ID with serialize=False, right? such as in here.. There isn't really a documentation on this because it is Django's engine trick to create an intrinsic ID since you decided not to declare an explicit ID for your object..
Some additions of tests I just made
Create a model without an explicit ID
class Model1Test(models.Model):
    justafield = models.CharField(max_length=1000)
Migration results
class Migration(migrations.Migration):
    dependencies = [
    ]
    operations = [
        migrations.CreateModel(
            name='Model1Test',
            fields=[
                ('id', models.AutoField(verbose_name='ID', serialize=False, auto_created=True, primary_key=True)),
                ('justafield', models.CharField(max_length=1000)),
            ],
        ),
    ]
Database-level script
CREATE TABLE public.module1_model1test
(
  id integer NOT NULL DEFAULT nextval('module1_model1test_id_seq'::regclass),
  justafield character varying(1000) NOT NULL,
  CONSTRAINT module1_model1test_pkey PRIMARY KEY (id)
)
Some good reasons to do that from Quassnoi:
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