bundled/flask/docs/patterns/sqlite3.rst @ f33efe14bff1

bundled: update flask
author Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com>
date Thu, 27 Jan 2011 18:23:59 -0500
parents (none)
children (none)
.. _sqlite3:

Using SQLite 3 with Flask
=========================

In Flask you can implement the opening of database connections at the
beginning of the request and closing at the end with the
:meth:`~flask.Flask.before_request` and :meth:`~flask.Flask.after_request`
decorators in combination with the special :class:`~flask.g` object.

So here is a simple example of how you can use SQLite 3 with Flask::

    import sqlite3
    from flask import g

    DATABASE = '/path/to/database.db'

    def connect_db():
        return sqlite3.connect(DATABASE)

    @app.before_request
    def before_request():
        g.db = connect_db()

    @app.after_request
    def after_request(response):
        g.db.close()
        return response

.. _easy-querying:

Easy Querying
-------------

Now in each request handling function you can access `g.db` to get the
current open database connection.  To simplify working with SQLite, a
helper function can be useful::

    def query_db(query, args=(), one=False):
        cur = g.db.execute(query, args)
        rv = [dict((cur.description[idx][0], value)
                   for idx, value in enumerate(row)) for row in cur.fetchall()]
        return (rv[0] if rv else None) if one else rv

This handy little function makes working with the database much more
pleasant than it is by just using the raw cursor and connection objects.

Here is how you can use it::

    for user in query_db('select * from users'):
        print user['username'], 'has the id', user['user_id']

Or if you just want a single result::

    user = query_db('select * from users where username = ?',
                    [the_username], one=True)
    if user is None:
        print 'No such user'
    else:
        print the_username, 'has the id', user['user_id']

To pass variable parts to the SQL statement, use a question mark in the
statement and pass in the arguments as a list.  Never directly add them to
the SQL statement with string formatting because this makes it possible
to attack the application using `SQL Injections
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_injection>`_.

Initial Schemas
---------------

Relational databases need schemas, so applications often ship a
`schema.sql` file that creates the database.  It's a good idea to provide
a function that creates the database based on that schema.  This function
can do that for you::

    from contextlib import closing
    
    def init_db():
        with closing(connect_db()) as db:
            with app.open_resource('schema.sql') as f:
                db.cursor().executescript(f.read())
            db.commit()

You can then create such a database from the python shell:

>>> from yourapplication import init_db
>>> init_db()