SQL Maps
Project description
Introduce
SQLPhile is a Python styled SQL generator. It looks like Django ORM but it hasn’t any relationship with Django or ORM.
But it is inspired by Django ORM and iBATIS SQL Maps.
SQLPhile might be useful for keeping clean look of your app script. It can make hide SQL statements for your script by using Python functions or/and writing SQL templates to seperated files.
For Example,
conn = psycopg2.connect (...)
cursor = conn.cursor ()
cursor.execute ("""
SELECT type, org, count(*) cnt FROM rc_file
WHERE org = 1 AND filename LIKE '%OCD'
GROUP BY type
ORDER BY org, cnt DESC
LIMIT 10
OFFSET 10
""")
This codes can be written with SQLPhile:
sp = SQLPhile ()
conn = psycopg2.connect (...)
cursor = conn.cursor ()
q = sp.ops.select ("type", "count(*) cnt")
q.filter (org = 1, name__endswith = 'OCD')
q.group_by ("type").order_by ("org", "-cnt")[10:20]
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
Or you can use SQL template file: sqlmaps/file.sql:
<sql name="get_stat">
SELECT type, org, count(*) cnt FROM rc_file
WHERE {filters}
GROUP BY type
ORDER BY org, cnt DESC
{limit} {offset}
</sql>
Your app code is,
sp = SQLPhile ("sqlmaps")
conn = psycopg2.connect (...)
cursor = conn.cursor ()
q = sp.file.get_stat.filter (org = 1, name__endswith = 'OCD')[10:20]
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
SQLPhile
SQLPhile is main class of this package.
from sqlphile import SQLPhile
sp = SQLPhile (dir = None, auto_reload = False, engine = "postgresql")
Once SQLPhile is created, you can reuse it through entire your app.
SQLPhile provide ops object for generic SQL operation.
q = sp.ops.insert (tbl, name = "Hans", created = datetime.date.today ())
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
q = sp.ops.update (tbl, name = "Jenny", modified = datetime.date.today ())
q.filter (...)
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
q = sp.ops.select (tbl, "id", "name", "create", "modified")
q.filter (...)
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
q = sp.ops.delete (tbl)
q.filter (...)
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
If you create SQL templates in specific directory,
from sqlphile import SQLPhile
sp = SQLPhile (dir = "./sqlmaps", auto_reload = True)
SQLPhile will load all of your templates in ./sqlmaps.
Assume there is a template file named ‘file.sql’:
<sqlmap version="1.0">
<sql name="get_stat">
SELECT type, org, count(*) cnt FROM rc_file
WHERE {filters}
GROUP BY type
ORDER BY org, cnt DESC
{limit} {offset}
</sql>
It looks like XML file, BUT IT’S NOT. All tags - <sqlmap>, <sql></sql> should be started at first of line. But SQL of inside is at your own mind but I recommend give some indentation.
Now you can access each sql temnplate via filename without extension and query name attribute:
# filename.query name
q = sp.file.get_stat
q.filter (...).order_by (...)
Note: filename is default.sql, you can ommit filename.
q = sp.get_stat
q.filter (...).order_by (...)
Note 2: SHOULD NOt use “ops.*” as filename.
Filtering & Excluding
filter function is very simailar with Djnago ORM.
q = sp.get_stat
q.filter (id = 1)
>> id = 1
q.filter (id_exact = 1)
>> id = 1
q.filter (id_eq = 1)
>> id = 1
q.exclude (id = 1)
>> NOT (id = 1)
q.filter (id__neq = 1)
>> id <> 1
q.filter (id__gte = 1)
>> id >= 1
q.filter (id__lt = 1)
>> id < 1
q.filter (id__between = (10, 20))
>> id BETWEEN 10 AND 20
q.filter (name__contains = "fire")
>> name LIKE '%fire%'
q.exclude (name__contains = "fire")
>> NOT name LIKE '%fire%'
q.filter (name__startswith = "fire")
>> name LIKE 'fire%'
# escaping %
q.filter (name__startswith = "fire%20ice")
>> name LIKE 'fire\%20ice%'
q.filter (name__endswith = "fire")
>> name LIKE '%fire'
q.filter (name = None)
>> name IS NULL
q.exclude (name = None)
>> NOT name IS NULL
q.filter (name__isnull = True)
>> name IS NULL
q.filter (name__isnull = False)
>> name IS NOT NULL
Also you can add multiple filters:
q.filter (name__isnull = False, id = 4)
>> name IS NOT NULL AND id = 4
All filters will be joined with “AND” operator.
Q object
How can add OR operator?
from sqlphile import Q
q.filter (Q (id = 4) | Q (email__contains = "org"), name__isnull = False)
>> name IS NOT NULL AND (id = 4 OR email LIKE '%org%')
Note that Q objects are first, keywords arguments late. Also you can add seperatly.
q.filter (name__isnull = False)
q.filter (Q (id = 4) | Q (email__contains = "org"))
>> (id = 4 OR email LIKE '%org%') AND name IS NOT NULL
If making excluding filter with Q use tilde(~),
q.filter (Q (id = 4) | ~Q (email__contains = "org"))
>> (id = 4 OR NOT email LIKE '%org%')
F object
All value will be escaped or automatically add single quotes, but for comparing with other fileds use F.
from sqlphile import F
Q (email = F ("b.email"))
>> email = b.email
Q (email__contains = F ("org"))
>> email LIKE '%' || org || '%'
F can be be used for ops.
q = sp.ops.update (tbl, n_view = F ("n_view + 1"))
q.filter (...)
cursor.execute (q.as_sql ())
Ordering & Grouping
For ordering,
q = sp.ops.select (tbl, "id", "name", "create", "modified")
q.filter (...)
q.order_by ("id", "-modified")
>> ORDER BY id, modified DESC
For grouping,
q = sp.ops.select (tbl, "name", "count(*) cnt")
q.filter (...)
q.group_by ("name")
>> GROUP BY name
Offset & Limit
for limiting record set,
q = sp.ops.select (tbl, "id", "name", "create", "modified")
q [:100]
>> LIMIT 100
q [10:30]
>> LIMIT 20 OFFSET 10
Be careful for slicing and limit count.
Using Template
Template is like this,
<sqlmap version="1.0">
<sql name="get_stat">
SELECT type, org, count(*) cnt FROM rc_file
WHERE {filters}
GROUP BY type
ORDER BY org, cnt DESC
{limit} {offset}
</sql>
<sql name="get_file">
SELECT * cnt FROM rc_file
WHERE {filters}
{order_by}
{limit}
{offset}
</sql>
You just fill variables your query reqiures,
q = sp.file.get_file.filter (id__gte = 1000)[:20]
q.order_by ("-id")
Current reserved variables are,
filters
group_by
order_by
limit
offset
having
Variablize Your Query
You can add variable on your sql.
<sql name="get_file">
SELECT {cols} cnt FROM {tbl}
WHERE {filters}
</sql>
Now feed keywords args with feed ():
q = sp.file.get_file.filter (id__gte = 1000)
q.feed (cols = "id, name, created", tbl = "rc_file")
Also you can feed values with similar way,
<sql name="get_file">
INSERT INTO {tbl} (name, create, birth_year)
VALUES ({name}, {created}, {birth_year})
</sql>
q = sp.file.get_file
q.feed (tbl = "rc_file")
q.data (name = "Hans Roh", created = datetime.date.today (), birth_year = 2000)
What differences with feed? data () will escape values for fitting SQL. You needn’t care about sing quotes, escaping or type casting on date time field.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
File details
Details for the file sqlphile-0.1.1.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: sqlphile-0.1.1.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 7.6 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | d62b5f1d68aa2a019028a8227b7b19b4f1a1b0bb4c3bf21208142683e9316826 |
|
MD5 | de4de42fe87bab4e83721ce4ce799f1c |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 0cd30f6fdece2db899526a08bb7fc877ac527a6ae879fe54266a8dd3df01b20b |