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SQLAlchemy

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Original author(s)Michael Bayer[1][2]
Initial releaseFebruary 14, 2006; 18 years ago (2006-02-14)[3]
Stable release
1.4.29 / December 23, 2021; 2 years ago (2021-12-23)[4]
Repository
Written inPython
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeObject-relational mapping
LicenseMIT License[5]
Websitewww.sqlalchemy.org Edit this on Wikidata
Mike Bayer talking about SQLAlchemy at PyCon 2012

SQLAlchemy is an open-source SQL toolkit and object-relational mapper (ORM) for the Python programming language released under the MIT License.[5]

Description

SQLAlchemy's philosophy is that relational databases behave less like object collections as the scale gets larger and performance starts being a concern, while object collections behave less like tables and rows as more abstraction is designed into them. For this reason it has adopted the data mapper pattern (similar to Hibernate for Java) rather than the active record pattern used by a number of other object-relational mappers.[6] However, optional plugins allow users to develop using declarative syntax.[7]

History

SQLAlchemy was first released in February 2006[3] and has quickly become one of the most widely used object-relational mapping tools in the Python community, alongside Django's ORM.

Example

The following example represents an n-to-1 relationship between movies and their directors. It is shown how user-defined Python classes create corresponding database tables, how instances with relationships are created from either side of the relationship, and finally how the data can be queried—illustrating automatically generated SQL queries for both lazy and eager loading.

Schema definition

Creating two Python classes and according database tables in the DBMS:

from sqlalchemy import *
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
from sqlalchemy.orm import relation, sessionmaker

Base = declarative_base()

class Movie(Base):
    __tablename__ = "movies"

    id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    title = Column(String(255), nullable=False)
    year = Column(Integer)
    directed_by = Column(Integer, ForeignKey("directors.id"))

    director = relation("Director", backref="movies", lazy=False)

    def __init__(self, title=None, year=None):
        self.title = title
        self.year = year

    def __repr__(self):
        return "Movie(%r, %r, %r)" % (self.title, self.year, self.director)

class Director(Base):
    __tablename__ = "directors"

    id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    name = Column(String(50), nullable=False, unique=True)

    def __init__(self, name=None):
        self.name = name

    def __repr__(self):
        return "Director(%r)" % (self.name)

engine = create_engine("dbms://user:pwd@host/dbname")
Base.metadata.create_all(engine)

Data insertion

One can insert a director-movie relationship via either entity:

Session = sessionmaker(bind=engine)
session = Session()

m1 = Movie("Robocop", 1987)
m1.director = Director("Paul Verhoeven")

d2 = Director("George Lucas")
d2.movies = [Movie("Star Wars", 1977), Movie("THX 1138", 1971)]

try:
    session.add(m1)
    session.add(d2)
    session.commit()
except:
    session.rollback()

Querying

alldata = session.query(Movie).all()
for somedata in alldata:
    print(somedata)

SQLAlchemy issues the following query to the DBMS (omitting aliases):

SELECT movies.id, movies.title, movies.year, movies.directed_by, directors.id, directors.name
FROM movies LEFT OUTER JOIN directors ON directors.id = movies.directed_by

The output:

Movie('Robocop', 1987L, Director('Paul Verhoeven'))
Movie('Star Wars', 1977L, Director('George Lucas'))
Movie('THX 1138', 1971L, Director('George Lucas'))

Setting lazy=True (default) instead, SQLAlchemy would first issue a query to get the list of movies and only when needed (lazy) for each director a query to get the name of the according director:

SELECT movies.id, movies.title, movies.year, movies.directed_by
FROM movies

SELECT directors.id, directors.name
FROM directors
WHERE directors.id = %s

See also

References

  1. ^ Mike Bayer is the creator of SQLAlchemy and Mako Templates for Python.
  2. ^ Interview Mike Bayer SQLAlchemy #pydata #python
  3. ^ a b "Download - SQLAlchemy". SQLAlchemy. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  4. ^ "Releases - sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy". Retrieved 19 January 2022 – via GitHub.
  5. ^ a b "zzzeek / sqlalchemy / source / LICENSE". BitBucket. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  6. ^ in The architecture of open source applications
  7. ^ Declarative
Notes