Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
114 lines (80 loc) · 2.63 KB

File metadata and controls

114 lines (80 loc) · 2.63 KB

Hello!

I'm pleased to announce version 3.11.1a1, the first alpha of the upcoming release of branch 3.11 of SQLObject.

I'm pleased to announce version 3.11.1a2, the second alpha of the upcoming release of branch 3.11 of SQLObject.

I'm pleased to announce version 3.11.1b1, the first beta of the upcoming release of branch 3.11 of SQLObject.

I'm pleased to announce version 3.11.1rc1, the first release candidate of the upcoming release of branch 3.11 of SQLObject.

I'm pleased to announce version 3.11.1, the first bugfix release of branch 3.11 of SQLObject.

What's new in SQLObject

The contributors for this release are ... Thanks!

For a more complete list, please see the news: http://sqlobject.org/News.html

What is SQLObject

SQLObject is a free and open-source (LGPL) Python object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant to be easy to use and quick to get started with.

SQLObject supports a number of backends: MySQL/MariaDB (with a number of DB API drivers: MySQLdb, mysqlclient, mysql-connector, PyMySQL, mariadb), PostgreSQL (psycopg2, PyGreSQL, partially pg8000 and py-postgresql), SQLite (builtin sqlite, pysqlite); connections to other backends - Firebird, Sybase, MSSQL and MaxDB (also known as SAPDB) - are less debugged).

Python 2.7 or 3.4+ is required.

Where is SQLObject

Site: http://sqlobject.org

Download: https://pypi.org/project/SQLObject/3.11.1a0.dev20231112/

News and changes: http://sqlobject.org/News.html

StackOverflow: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/sqlobject

Mailing lists: https://sourceforge.net/p/sqlobject/mailman/

Development: http://sqlobject.org/devel/

Developer Guide: http://sqlobject.org/DeveloperGuide.html

Example

Install:

$ pip install sqlobject

Create a simple class that wraps a table:

>>> from sqlobject import *
>>>
>>> sqlhub.processConnection = connectionForURI('sqlite:/:memory:')
>>>
>>> class Person(SQLObject):
...     fname = StringCol()
...     mi = StringCol(length=1, default=None)
...     lname = StringCol()
...
>>> Person.createTable()

Use the object:

>>> p = Person(fname="John", lname="Doe")
>>> p
<Person 1 fname='John' mi=None lname='Doe'>
>>> p.fname
'John'
>>> p.mi = 'Q'
>>> p2 = Person.get(1)
>>> p2
<Person 1 fname='John' mi='Q' lname='Doe'>
>>> p is p2
True

Queries:

>>> p3 = Person.selectBy(lname="Doe")[0]
>>> p3
<Person 1 fname='John' mi='Q' lname='Doe'>
>>> pc = Person.select(Person.q.lname=="Doe").count()
>>> pc
1