Hello @kartik,
Concatenating the querysets into a list is the simplest approach. If the database will be hit for all querysets anyway (e.g. because the result needs to be sorted), this won't add further cost.
from itertools import chain
result_list = list(chain(page_list, article_list, post_list))
Using itertools.chain is faster than looping each list and appending elements one by one, since itertools is implemented in C. It also consumes less memory than converting each queryset into a list before concatenating.
Now it's possible to sort the resulting list e.g. by date . The sorted() function conveniently accepts a generator and returns a list:
result_list = sorted(
chain(page_list, article_list, post_list),
key=lambda instance: instance.date_created)
If you're using Python 2.4 or later, you can use attrgetter instead of a lambda.
from operator import attrgetter
result_list = sorted(
chain(page_list, article_list, post_list),
key=attrgetter('date_created'))
Hope this is helpfull!!
Thank You!