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authorErlend E. Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>2022-11-25 13:07:28 (GMT)
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2022-11-25 13:07:28 (GMT)
commit8749121b07f48994ea47f2e7ff75fb13c13953f6 (patch)
tree2ef2d6900adffdec3f83556b97f79cc65781668a /Doc
parentd386115039e75c332c8471c239cf7dc5dee791a7 (diff)
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gh-96168: Add sqlite3 row factory how-to (#99507)
Co-authored-by: C.A.M. Gerlach <CAM.Gerlach@Gerlach.CAM> Co-authored-by: Ezio Melotti <ezio.melotti@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/sqlite3.rst160
1 files changed, 119 insertions, 41 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst b/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
index 1681fc4..0dac231 100644
--- a/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
@@ -239,6 +239,7 @@ inserted data and retrieved values from it in multiple ways.
* :ref:`sqlite3-adapters`
* :ref:`sqlite3-converters`
* :ref:`sqlite3-connection-context-manager`
+ * :ref:`sqlite3-howto-row-factory`
* :ref:`sqlite3-explanation` for in-depth background on transaction control.
@@ -1316,31 +1317,14 @@ Connection objects
.. attribute:: row_factory
- A callable that accepts two arguments,
- a :class:`Cursor` object and the raw row results as a :class:`tuple`,
- and returns a custom object representing an SQLite row.
-
- Example:
+ The initial :attr:`~Cursor.row_factory`
+ for :class:`Cursor` objects created from this connection.
+ Assigning to this attribute does not affect the :attr:`!row_factory`
+ of existing cursors belonging to this connection, only new ones.
+ Is ``None`` by default,
+ meaning each row is returned as a :class:`tuple`.
- .. doctest::
-
- >>> def dict_factory(cursor, row):
- ... col_names = [col[0] for col in cursor.description]
- ... return {key: value for key, value in zip(col_names, row)}
- >>> con = sqlite3.connect(":memory:")
- >>> con.row_factory = dict_factory
- >>> for row in con.execute("SELECT 1 AS a, 2 AS b"):
- ... print(row)
- {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
-
- If returning a tuple doesn't suffice and you want name-based access to
- columns, you should consider setting :attr:`row_factory` to the
- highly optimized :class:`sqlite3.Row` type. :class:`Row` provides both
- index-based and case-insensitive name-based access to columns with almost no
- memory overhead. It will probably be better than your own custom
- dictionary-based approach or even a db_row based solution.
-
- .. XXX what's a db_row-based solution?
+ See :ref:`sqlite3-howto-row-factory` for more details.
.. attribute:: text_factory
@@ -1497,7 +1481,7 @@ Cursor objects
.. method:: fetchone()
- If :attr:`~Connection.row_factory` is ``None``,
+ If :attr:`~Cursor.row_factory` is ``None``,
return the next row query result set as a :class:`tuple`.
Else, pass it to the row factory and return its result.
Return ``None`` if no more data is available.
@@ -1591,6 +1575,22 @@ Cursor objects
including :abbr:`CTE (Common Table Expression)` queries.
It is only updated by the :meth:`execute` and :meth:`executemany` methods.
+ .. attribute:: row_factory
+
+ Control how a row fetched from this :class:`!Cursor` is represented.
+ If ``None``, a row is represented as a :class:`tuple`.
+ Can be set to the included :class:`sqlite3.Row`;
+ or a :term:`callable` that accepts two arguments,
+ a :class:`Cursor` object and the :class:`!tuple` of row values,
+ and returns a custom object representing an SQLite row.
+
+ Defaults to what :attr:`Connection.row_factory` was set to
+ when the :class:`!Cursor` was created.
+ Assigning to this attribute does not affect
+ :attr:`Connection.row_factory` of the parent connection.
+
+ See :ref:`sqlite3-howto-row-factory` for more details.
+
.. The sqlite3.Row example used to be a how-to. It has now been incorporated
into the Row reference. We keep the anchor here in order not to break
@@ -1609,7 +1609,10 @@ Row objects
It supports iteration, equality testing, :func:`len`,
and :term:`mapping` access by column name and index.
- Two row objects compare equal if have equal columns and equal members.
+ Two :class:`!Row` objects compare equal
+ if they have identical column names and values.
+
+ See :ref:`sqlite3-howto-row-factory` for more details.
.. method:: keys
@@ -1620,21 +1623,6 @@ Row objects
.. versionchanged:: 3.5
Added support of slicing.
- Example:
-
- .. doctest::
-
- >>> con = sqlite3.connect(":memory:")
- >>> con.row_factory = sqlite3.Row
- >>> res = con.execute("SELECT 'Earth' AS name, 6378 AS radius")
- >>> row = res.fetchone()
- >>> row.keys()
- ['name', 'radius']
- >>> row[0], row["name"] # Access by index and name.
- ('Earth', 'Earth')
- >>> row["RADIUS"] # Column names are case-insensitive.
- 6378
-
.. _sqlite3-blob-objects:
@@ -2358,6 +2346,96 @@ can be found in the `SQLite URI documentation`_.
.. _SQLite URI documentation: https://www.sqlite.org/uri.html
+.. _sqlite3-howto-row-factory:
+
+How to create and use row factories
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+By default, :mod:`!sqlite3` represents each row as a :class:`tuple`.
+If a :class:`!tuple` does not suit your needs,
+you can use the :class:`sqlite3.Row` class
+or a custom :attr:`~Cursor.row_factory`.
+
+While :attr:`!row_factory` exists as an attribute both on the
+:class:`Cursor` and the :class:`Connection`,
+it is recommended to set :class:`Connection.row_factory`,
+so all cursors created from the connection will use the same row factory.
+
+:class:`!Row` provides indexed and case-insensitive named access to columns,
+with minimal memory overhead and performance impact over a :class:`!tuple`.
+To use :class:`!Row` as a row factory,
+assign it to the :attr:`!row_factory` attribute:
+
+.. doctest::
+
+ >>> con = sqlite3.connect(":memory:")
+ >>> con.row_factory = sqlite3.Row
+
+Queries now return :class:`!Row` objects:
+
+.. doctest::
+
+ >>> res = con.execute("SELECT 'Earth' AS name, 6378 AS radius")
+ >>> row = res.fetchone()
+ >>> row.keys()
+ ['name', 'radius']
+ >>> row[0] # Access by index.
+ 'Earth'
+ >>> row["name"] # Access by name.
+ 'Earth'
+ >>> row["RADIUS"] # Column names are case-insensitive.
+ 6378
+
+You can create a custom :attr:`~Cursor.row_factory`
+that returns each row as a :class:`dict`, with column names mapped to values:
+
+.. testcode::
+
+ def dict_factory(cursor, row):
+ fields = [column[0] for column in cursor.description]
+ return {key: value for key, value in zip(fields, row)}
+
+Using it, queries now return a :class:`!dict` instead of a :class:`!tuple`:
+
+.. doctest::
+
+ >>> con = sqlite3.connect(":memory:")
+ >>> con.row_factory = dict_factory
+ >>> for row in con.execute("SELECT 1 AS a, 2 AS b"):
+ ... print(row)
+ {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
+
+The following row factory returns a :term:`named tuple`:
+
+.. testcode::
+
+ from collections import namedtuple
+
+ def namedtuple_factory(cursor, row):
+ fields = [column[0] for column in cursor.description]
+ cls = namedtuple("Row", fields)
+ return cls._make(row)
+
+:func:`!namedtuple_factory` can be used as follows:
+
+.. doctest::
+
+ >>> con = sqlite3.connect(":memory:")
+ >>> con.row_factory = namedtuple_factory
+ >>> cur = con.execute("SELECT 1 AS a, 2 AS b")
+ >>> row = cur.fetchone()
+ >>> row
+ Row(a=1, b=2)
+ >>> row[0] # Indexed access.
+ 1
+ >>> row.b # Attribute access.
+ 2
+
+With some adjustments, the above recipe can be adapted to use a
+:class:`~dataclasses.dataclass`, or any other custom class,
+instead of a :class:`~collections.namedtuple`.
+
+
.. _sqlite3-explanation:
Explanation