Is there a way to inform SQLAlchemy that it should perform an update if all the objects in a graph do have the PK present?
EDIT:
By PK I mean PK value
I'm a little confused by your use of "graph" here, if you mean table then I think you need something like this:
pk_exists_query = session.query(MyTable).filter(MyTable.id != None).all()
for record in pk_exists_query:
record.foo = #whatever
If you want to update the records to have the same value that's even easier and you can just something like this:
session.query(MyTable).filter(MyTable.id != None).update({'foo':'bar'})
Related
The SQLite JSON1 extension has some really neat capabilities. However, I have not been able to figure out how I can update or insert individual JSON attribute values.
Here is an example
CREATE TABLE keywords
(
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
lang INTEGER NOT NULL,
kwd TEXT NOT NULL,
locs TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT '{}'
);
CREATE INDEX kwd ON keywords(lang,kwd);
I am using this table to store keyword searches and recording the locations from which the search was ininitated in the object locs. A sample entry in this database table would be like the one shown below
id:1,lang:1,kwd:'stackoverflow',locs:'{"1":1,"2":1,"5":1}'
The location object attributes here are indices to the actual locations stored elsewhere.
Now imagine the following scenarios
A search for stackoverflow is initiated from location index "2". In this case I simply want to increment the value at that index so that after the operation the corresponding row reads
id:1,lang:1,kwd:'stackoverflow',locs:'{"1":1,"2":2,"5":1}'
A search for stackoverflow is initiated from a previously unknown location index "7" in which case the corresponding row after the update would have to read
id:1,lang:1,kwd:'stackoverflow',locs:'{"1":1,"2":1,"5":1,"7":1}'
It is not clear to me that this can in fact be done. I tried something along the lines of
UPDATE keywords json_set(locs,'$.2','2') WHERE kwd = 'stackoverflow';
which gave the error message error near json_set. I'd be most obliged to anyone who might be able to tell me how/whether this should/can be done.
It is not necessary to create such complicated SQL with subqueries to do this.
The SQL below would solve your needs.
UPDATE keywords
SET locs = json_set(locs,'$.7', IFNULL(json_extract(locs, '$.7'), 0) + 1)
WHERE kwd = 'stackoverflow';
I know this is old, but it's like the first link when searching, it deserves a better solution.
I could have just deleted this question but given that the SQLite JSON1 extension appears to be relatively poorly understood I felt it would be more useful to provide an answer here for the benefit of others. What I have set out to do here is possible but the SQL syntax is rather more convoluted.
UPDATE keywords set locs =
(select json_set(json(keywords.locs),'$.**N**',
ifnull(
(select json_extract(keywords.locs,'$.**N**') from keywords where id = '1'),
0)
+ 1)
from keywords where id = '1')
where id = '1';
will accomplish both of the updates I have described in my original question above. Given how complicated this looks a few explanations are in order
The UPDATE keywords part does the actual updating, but it needs to know what to updatte
The SELECT json_set part is where we establish the value to be updated
If the relevant value does not exsit in the first place we do not want to do a + 1 on a null value so we do an IFNULL TEST
The WHERE id = bits ensure that we target the right row
Having now worked with JSON1 in SQLite for a while I have a tip to share with others going down the same road. It is easy to waste your time writing extremely convoluted and hard to maintain SQL in an effort to perform in-place JSON manipulation. Consider using SQLite in memory tables - CREATE TEMP TABLE... to store intermediate results and write a sequence of SQL statements instead. This makes the code a whole lot eaiser to understand and to maintain.
Delving into the documentation and the api, I seem to be missing how to update one field in multiple rows at once.
Something like
Table.select(:field).update("update to this").where(id: 4,5,6)
would be nice.
Does something like this exist? It would be much better than having to store everything in an array, set it to a value, and calling save every time.
You can use the update_all method, for example:
Table.update_all("field = 'update to this'", ["id in (?)", ids])
This is a request from my client to tweak an existing Perl script. However, it is the actual database structure on their end that confuses me.
The requirement looks pretty simple:
only pull records where _X begins with 1, 2, or 9.
However, the underlying database is not that simple, here is the guideline from their DBA:
"_X is a custom metadata field. The database stores this data in rows, not columns, within the customData table. In order to query the custom data table in an efficient manner you need to know the Field_ID for the custom field you get that from the fielddef table:
SELECT Field_ID FROM FieldDef WHERE Name = "_X";
This returns:
10012
"Now you can query CustomData. For example:
SELECT Record_ID FROM CustomData where Field_ID="10012" AND StringValue="2012-04";
He also suggests that in my case, probably it would be:
"SELECT Record_ID FROM CustomData where Field_ID="10012" AND (StringValue LIKE '1%' || StringValue LIKE '2%' || StringValue LIKE '9%')
The weird thing is that the existing Perl script doesn't contain anything like "Select Record_ID FROM" but all like "SELECT StringValue FROM".
So that is why I am very confused here: What is "store in rows, not in columns"? Why first query the Field_ID table then CustomData? I would not be able to communicate with any of them during this weekend but really wish to get some idea on the whole thing, hope experts can help me a little on sorting out the whole structure.
More info(Table schema):
http://pastebin.com/ZiDTCCC0
The existing perl script:(focus on lines 72-136)
http://pastebin.com/JHpikTeZ
Thanks in advance.
What they seem to be using is some kind of Entity-Attribute-Value model, with the entities stored as ints and explained in another table (FieldDef).
You explained pretty well how you queried it (although you can do it in one query, with a join or a subquery), and your problem seems to be that you don't know how the Perl script does it. Unfortunately, without us seeing the Perl script, we can't either :]
I have a table that contains two foreign keys that map back to a membership table. They are named "from_member" and "to_member."
I am trying to get the Member object that represents this membership table by doing something like:
$feedbackQuery = FeedbackQuery::create()->findOne();
$fromMember = $feedbackQuery->getFromMember();
So that I can go like this:
$firstName = $fromMember->getFirstName();
The only problem is you can't do that, evidently Propel requires you to call $fedbackQuery->getMember()and who knows what that's going to return in this case.
Is there any easy way to accomplish getting the member data like this?
Assuming that you are using from_member_id and to_member_id as your foreign keys, you should have two methods at your disposal. getMemberRelatedByToMemberId() and getMemberRelatedByFromMemberId().
To find your from_member object and to use it.
$fromMember = $feedbackQuery->getMemberRelatedByToMemberId();
$firstname = $fromMember->getFirstName();
I have a few rows of data pulled into business objects via linq-to-sql from large tables.
Now I want to get a few rows that don't match to test my comparison functions.
Using what I thought would work I get a NotSupportedException:
Local sequence cannot be used in LINQ to SQL implementation of query operators except the Contains() operator.
Here's the code:
//This table has a 2 field primary key, the other has a single
var AllNonMatches = from c in dc.Acaps
where !Matches.Rows.Any((row) => row.Key.Key == c.AppId & row.Key.Value == c.SeqNbr)
select c;
foreach (var item in AllNonMatches.Take(100)) //Exception here
{}
The table has a compound primary key: AppId and SeqNbr.
The Matches.Rows is defined as a dictionary of keyvaluepair(appid,seqnbr).
and the local sequence it is referring to appears to be the local dictionary.
Could you provide more information on the structure and the name(s) of the table(s) plz?
Not sure what you're trying to do...
edit:
Ok.. I think I get it now...
It appears you can't merge/join local tables (dictionary) with a SQL table.
If you can, I'm afraid I don't know how to do it.
The simplest solution I can think of is to put those results in a table ("Match" for instance) with foreign keys related to your table "Acaps" and then use linq-to-sql, like:
var AllNonMatches = dc.Acaps.Where(p=>p.Matchs==null).Take(100).ToList();
Sorry I couldn't come up with any better =(
What about this:
var AllNonMatches = from c in dc.Acaps
where !(Matches.Rows.ContainsKey(c.AppId) && Matches.Rows.ContainsValue(c.SeqNbr))
select c;
That will work fine. I have also used a bitwise AND operator (&&) - I think thats the right term to help improve performance over the standard AND operator.