Skip to main content

SQLModel, SQL databases in Python, designed for simplicity, compatibility, and robustness.

Project description

SQLModel

SQLModel, SQL databases in Python, designed for simplicity, compatibility, and robustness.

Test Publish Coverage Package version


Documentation: https://sqlmodel.tiangolo.com

Source Code: https://github.com/tiangolo/sqlmodel


SQLModel is a library for interacting with SQL databases from Python code, with Python objects. It is designed to be intuitive, easy to use, highly compatible, and robust.

SQLModel is based on Python type annotations, and powered by Pydantic and SQLAlchemy.

The key features are:

  • Intuitive to write: Great editor support. Completion everywhere. Less time debugging. Designed to be easy to use and learn. Less time reading docs.
  • Easy to use: It has sensible defaults and does a lot of work underneath to simplify the code you write.
  • Compatible: It is designed to be compatible with FastAPI, Pydantic, and SQLAlchemy.
  • Extensible: You have all the power of SQLAlchemy and Pydantic underneath.
  • Short: Minimize code duplication. A single type annotation does a lot of work. No need to duplicate models in SQLAlchemy and Pydantic.

SQL Databases in FastAPI

SQLModel is designed to simplify interacting with SQL databases in FastAPI applications, it was created by the same author. 😁

It combines SQLAlchemy and Pydantic and tries to simplify the code you write as much as possible, allowing you to reduce the code duplication to a minimum, but while getting the best developer experience possible.

SQLModel is, in fact, a thin layer on top of Pydantic and SQLAlchemy, carefully designed to be compatible with both.

Requirements

A recent and currently supported version of Python (right now, Python supports versions 3.6 and above).

As SQLModel is based on Pydantic and SQLAlchemy, it requires them. They will be automatically installed when you install SQLModel.

Installation

$ pip install sqlmodel
---> 100%
Successfully installed sqlmodel

Example

For an introduction to databases, SQL, and everything else, see the SQLModel documentation.

Here's a quick example. ✨

A SQL Table

Imagine you have a SQL table called hero with:

  • id
  • name
  • secret_name
  • age

And you want it to have this data:

id name secret_name age
1 Deadpond Dive Wilson null
2 Spider-Boy Pedro Parqueador null
3 Rusty-Man Tommy Sharp 48

Create a SQLModel Model

Then you could create a SQLModel model like this:

from typing import Optional

from sqlmodel import Field, SQLModel


class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
    id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
    name: str
    secret_name: str
    age: Optional[int] = None

That class Hero is a SQLModel model, the equivalent of a SQL table in Python code.

And each of those class attributes is equivalent to each table column.

Create Rows

Then you could create each row of the table as an instance of the model:

hero_1 = Hero(name="Deadpond", secret_name="Dive Wilson")
hero_2 = Hero(name="Spider-Boy", secret_name="Pedro Parqueador")
hero_3 = Hero(name="Rusty-Man", secret_name="Tommy Sharp", age=48)

This way, you can use conventional Python code with classes and instances that represent tables and rows, and that way communicate with the SQL database.

Editor Support

Everything is designed for you to get the best developer experience possible, with the best editor support.

Including autocompletion:

And inline errors:

Write to the Database

You can learn a lot more about SQLModel by quickly following the tutorial, but if you need a taste right now of how to put all that together and save to the database, you can do this:

from typing import Optional

from sqlmodel import Field, Session, SQLModel, create_engine


class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
    id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
    name: str
    secret_name: str
    age: Optional[int] = None


hero_1 = Hero(name="Deadpond", secret_name="Dive Wilson")
hero_2 = Hero(name="Spider-Boy", secret_name="Pedro Parqueador")
hero_3 = Hero(name="Rusty-Man", secret_name="Tommy Sharp", age=48)


engine = create_engine("sqlite:///database.db")


SQLModel.metadata.create_all(engine)

with Session(engine) as session:
    session.add(hero_1)
    session.add(hero_2)
    session.add(hero_3)
    session.commit()

That will save a SQLite database with the 3 heroes.

Select from the Database

Then you could write queries to select from that same database, for example with:

from typing import Optional

from sqlmodel import Field, Session, SQLModel, create_engine, select


class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
    id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
    name: str
    secret_name: str
    age: Optional[int] = None


engine = create_engine("sqlite:///database.db")

with Session(engine) as session:
    statement = select(Hero).where(Hero.name == "Spider-Boy")
    hero = session.exec(statement).first()
    print(hero)

Editor Support Everywhere

SQLModel was carefully designed to give you the best developer experience and editor support, even after selecting data from the database:

SQLAlchemy and Pydantic

That class Hero is a SQLModel model.

But at the same time, ✨ it is a SQLAlchemy model ✨. So, you can combine it and use it with other SQLAlchemy models, or you could easily migrate applications with SQLAlchemy to SQLModel.

And at the same time, ✨ it is also a Pydantic model ✨. You can use inheritance with it to define all your data models while avoiding code duplication. That makes it very easy to use with FastAPI.

License

This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

sqlmodel-0.0.4.tar.gz (21.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

sqlmodel-0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl (21.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file sqlmodel-0.0.4.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: sqlmodel-0.0.4.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 21.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.2.0a2 CPython/3.7.11 Linux/5.8.0-1039-azure

File hashes

Hashes for sqlmodel-0.0.4.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9503befd4374a8e84e9432b344dc9488e9ca2cc4bd1c944ab6837c1bae0b9837
MD5 5717781b169b8df62e91805de957672d
BLAKE2b-256 6430ab781872738ea4ba34e7e7c753c61e4c3b1363a5868b694f26af95f23dd0

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file sqlmodel-0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: sqlmodel-0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 21.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.2.0a2 CPython/3.7.11 Linux/5.8.0-1039-azure

File hashes

Hashes for sqlmodel-0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 441224eea75ea3799661dad0f9599bbd70322ce7d083f30f6741ebc807bc3ee6
MD5 fa716ad2944e8a680395d7e19aceff7d
BLAKE2b-256 d8b133f30b147c5777ff918a5d662237c9dd04473ff20f8685c09b21b86ca63f

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page