OpenHome/venv/Lib/site-packages/sqlalchemy/sql/sqltypes.py

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# sql/sqltypes.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2021 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors
# <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
"""SQL specific types.
"""
import codecs
import datetime as dt
import decimal
import json
from . import coercions
from . import elements
from . import operators
from . import roles
from . import type_api
from .base import _bind_or_error
from .base import NO_ARG
from .base import SchemaEventTarget
from .elements import _NONE_NAME
from .elements import quoted_name
from .elements import Slice
from .elements import TypeCoerce as type_coerce # noqa
from .traversals import HasCacheKey
from .traversals import InternalTraversal
from .type_api import Emulated
from .type_api import NativeForEmulated # noqa
from .type_api import to_instance
from .type_api import TypeDecorator
from .type_api import TypeEngine
from .type_api import Variant
from .. import event
from .. import exc
from .. import inspection
from .. import processors
from .. import util
from ..util import compat
from ..util import langhelpers
from ..util import OrderedDict
from ..util import pickle
class _LookupExpressionAdapter(object):
"""Mixin expression adaptations based on lookup tables.
These rules are currently used by the numeric, integer and date types
which have detailed cross-expression coercion rules.
"""
@property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
raise NotImplementedError()
class Comparator(TypeEngine.Comparator):
_blank_dict = util.immutabledict()
def _adapt_expression(self, op, other_comparator):
othertype = other_comparator.type._type_affinity
lookup = self.type._expression_adaptations.get(
op, self._blank_dict
).get(othertype, self.type)
if lookup is othertype:
return (op, other_comparator.type)
elif lookup is self.type._type_affinity:
return (op, self.type)
else:
return (op, to_instance(lookup))
comparator_factory = Comparator
class Concatenable(object):
"""A mixin that marks a type as supporting 'concatenation',
typically strings."""
class Comparator(TypeEngine.Comparator):
def _adapt_expression(self, op, other_comparator):
if op is operators.add and isinstance(
other_comparator,
(Concatenable.Comparator, NullType.Comparator),
):
return operators.concat_op, self.expr.type
else:
return super(Concatenable.Comparator, self)._adapt_expression(
op, other_comparator
)
comparator_factory = Comparator
class Indexable(object):
"""A mixin that marks a type as supporting indexing operations,
such as array or JSON structures.
.. versionadded:: 1.1.0
"""
class Comparator(TypeEngine.Comparator):
def _setup_getitem(self, index):
raise NotImplementedError()
def __getitem__(self, index):
(
adjusted_op,
adjusted_right_expr,
result_type,
) = self._setup_getitem(index)
return self.operate(
adjusted_op, adjusted_right_expr, result_type=result_type
)
comparator_factory = Comparator
class String(Concatenable, TypeEngine):
"""The base for all string and character types.
In SQL, corresponds to VARCHAR. Can also take Python unicode objects
and encode to the database's encoding in bind params (and the reverse for
result sets.)
The `length` field is usually required when the `String` type is
used within a CREATE TABLE statement, as VARCHAR requires a length
on most databases.
"""
__visit_name__ = "string"
RETURNS_UNICODE = util.symbol(
"RETURNS_UNICODE",
"""Indicates that the DBAPI returns Python Unicode for VARCHAR,
NVARCHAR, and other character-based datatypes in all cases.
This is the default value for
:attr:`.DefaultDialect.returns_unicode_strings` under Python 3.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""",
)
RETURNS_BYTES = util.symbol(
"RETURNS_BYTES",
"""Indicates that the DBAPI returns byte objects under Python 3
or non-Unicode string objects under Python 2 for VARCHAR, NVARCHAR,
and other character-based datatypes in all cases.
This may be applied to the
:attr:`.DefaultDialect.returns_unicode_strings` attribute.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""",
)
RETURNS_CONDITIONAL = util.symbol(
"RETURNS_CONDITIONAL",
"""Indicates that the DBAPI may return Unicode or bytestrings for
VARCHAR, NVARCHAR, and other character-based datatypes, and that
SQLAlchemy's default String datatype will need to test on a per-row
basis for Unicode or bytes.
This may be applied to the
:attr:`.DefaultDialect.returns_unicode_strings` attribute.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""",
)
RETURNS_UNKNOWN = util.symbol(
"RETURNS_UNKNOWN",
"""Indicates that the dialect should test on first connect what the
string-returning behavior of character-based datatypes is.
This is the default value for DefaultDialect.unicode_returns under
Python 2.
This may be applied to the
:attr:`.DefaultDialect.returns_unicode_strings` attribute under
Python 2 only. The value is disallowed under Python 3.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. deprecated:: 1.4 This value will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0.
""",
)
@util.deprecated_params(
convert_unicode=(
"1.3",
"The :paramref:`.String.convert_unicode` parameter is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. All modern DBAPIs "
"now support Python Unicode directly and this parameter is "
"unnecessary.",
),
unicode_error=(
"1.3",
"The :paramref:`.String.unicode_errors` parameter is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. This parameter is "
"unnecessary for modern Python DBAPIs and degrades performance "
"significantly.",
),
)
def __init__(
self,
length=None,
collation=None,
convert_unicode=False,
unicode_error=None,
_warn_on_bytestring=False,
_expect_unicode=False,
):
"""
Create a string-holding type.
:param length: optional, a length for the column for use in
DDL and CAST expressions. May be safely omitted if no ``CREATE
TABLE`` will be issued. Certain databases may require a
``length`` for use in DDL, and will raise an exception when
the ``CREATE TABLE`` DDL is issued if a ``VARCHAR``
with no length is included. Whether the value is
interpreted as bytes or characters is database specific.
:param collation: Optional, a column-level collation for
use in DDL and CAST expressions. Renders using the
COLLATE keyword supported by SQLite, MySQL, and PostgreSQL.
E.g.::
>>> from sqlalchemy import cast, select, String
>>> print(select(cast('some string', String(collation='utf8'))))
SELECT CAST(:param_1 AS VARCHAR COLLATE utf8) AS anon_1
:param convert_unicode: When set to ``True``, the
:class:`.String` type will assume that
input is to be passed as Python Unicode objects under Python 2,
and results returned as Python Unicode objects.
In the rare circumstance that the DBAPI does not support
Python unicode under Python 2, SQLAlchemy will use its own
encoder/decoder functionality on strings, referring to the
value of the :paramref:`_sa.create_engine.encoding` parameter
parameter passed to :func:`_sa.create_engine` as the encoding.
For the extremely rare case that Python Unicode
is to be encoded/decoded by SQLAlchemy on a backend
that *does* natively support Python Unicode,
the string value ``"force"`` can be passed here which will
cause SQLAlchemy's encode/decode services to be
used unconditionally.
.. note::
SQLAlchemy's unicode-conversion flags and features only apply
to Python 2; in Python 3, all string objects are Unicode objects.
For this reason, as well as the fact that virtually all modern
DBAPIs now support Unicode natively even under Python 2,
the :paramref:`.String.convert_unicode` flag is inherently a
legacy feature.
.. note::
In the vast majority of cases, the :class:`.Unicode` or
:class:`.UnicodeText` datatypes should be used for a
:class:`_schema.Column` that expects to store non-ascii data.
These
datatypes will ensure that the correct types are used on the
database side as well as set up the correct Unicode behaviors
under Python 2.
.. seealso::
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.convert_unicode` -
:class:`_engine.Engine`-wide parameter
:param unicode_error: Optional, a method to use to handle Unicode
conversion errors. Behaves like the ``errors`` keyword argument to
the standard library's ``string.decode()`` functions, requires
that :paramref:`.String.convert_unicode` is set to
``"force"``
"""
if unicode_error is not None and convert_unicode != "force":
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"convert_unicode must be 'force' " "when unicode_error is set."
)
self.length = length
self.collation = collation
self._expect_unicode = convert_unicode or _expect_unicode
self._expect_unicode_error = unicode_error
self._warn_on_bytestring = _warn_on_bytestring
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
value = value.replace("'", "''")
if dialect.identifier_preparer._double_percents:
value = value.replace("%", "%%")
return "'%s'" % value
return process
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
if self._expect_unicode or dialect.convert_unicode:
if (
dialect.supports_unicode_binds
and self._expect_unicode != "force"
):
if self._warn_on_bytestring:
def process(value):
if isinstance(value, util.binary_type):
util.warn_limited(
"Unicode type received non-unicode "
"bind param value %r.",
(util.ellipses_string(value),),
)
return value
return process
else:
return None
else:
encoder = codecs.getencoder(dialect.encoding)
warn_on_bytestring = self._warn_on_bytestring
def process(value):
if isinstance(value, util.text_type):
return encoder(value, self._expect_unicode_error)[0]
elif warn_on_bytestring and value is not None:
util.warn_limited(
"Unicode type received non-unicode bind "
"param value %r.",
(util.ellipses_string(value),),
)
return value
return process
else:
return None
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
wants_unicode = self._expect_unicode or dialect.convert_unicode
needs_convert = wants_unicode and (
dialect.returns_unicode_strings is not String.RETURNS_UNICODE
or self._expect_unicode in ("force", "force_nocheck")
)
needs_isinstance = (
needs_convert
and dialect.returns_unicode_strings
in (
String.RETURNS_CONDITIONAL,
String.RETURNS_UNICODE,
)
and self._expect_unicode != "force_nocheck"
)
if needs_convert:
if needs_isinstance:
return processors.to_conditional_unicode_processor_factory(
dialect.encoding, self._expect_unicode_error
)
else:
return processors.to_unicode_processor_factory(
dialect.encoding, self._expect_unicode_error
)
else:
return None
@property
def python_type(self):
if self._expect_unicode:
return util.text_type
else:
return str
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.STRING
@classmethod
def _warn_deprecated_unicode(cls):
util.warn_deprecated(
"The convert_unicode on Engine and String as well as the "
"unicode_error flag on String are deprecated. All modern "
"DBAPIs now support Python Unicode natively under Python 2, and "
"under Python 3 all strings are inherently Unicode. These flags "
"will be removed in a future release.",
version="1.3",
)
class Text(String):
"""A variably sized string type.
In SQL, usually corresponds to CLOB or TEXT. Can also take Python
unicode objects and encode to the database's encoding in bind
params (and the reverse for result sets.) In general, TEXT objects
do not have a length; while some databases will accept a length
argument here, it will be rejected by others.
"""
__visit_name__ = "text"
class Unicode(String):
"""A variable length Unicode string type.
The :class:`.Unicode` type is a :class:`.String` subclass that assumes
input and output strings that may contain non-ASCII characters, and for
some backends implies an underlying column type that is explicitly
supporting of non-ASCII data, such as ``NVARCHAR`` on Oracle and SQL
Server. This will impact the output of ``CREATE TABLE`` statements and
``CAST`` functions at the dialect level, and also in some cases will
indicate different behavior in the DBAPI itself in how it handles bound
parameters.
The character encoding used by the :class:`.Unicode` type that is used to
transmit and receive data to the database is usually determined by the
DBAPI itself. All modern DBAPIs accommodate non-ASCII strings but may have
different methods of managing database encodings; if necessary, this
encoding should be configured as detailed in the notes for the target DBAPI
in the :ref:`dialect_toplevel` section.
In modern SQLAlchemy, use of the :class:`.Unicode` datatype does not
typically imply any encoding/decoding behavior within SQLAlchemy itself.
Historically, when DBAPIs did not support Python ``unicode`` objects under
Python 2, SQLAlchemy handled unicode encoding/decoding services itself
which would be controlled by the flag :paramref:`.String.convert_unicode`;
this flag is deprecated as it is no longer needed for Python 3.
When using Python 2, data that is passed to columns that use the
:class:`.Unicode` datatype must be of type ``unicode``, and not ``str``
which in Python 2 is equivalent to ``bytes``. In Python 3, all data
passed to columns that use the :class:`.Unicode` datatype should be
of type ``str``. See the flag :paramref:`.String.convert_unicode` for
more discussion of unicode encode/decode behavior under Python 2.
.. warning:: Some database backends, particularly SQL Server with pyodbc,
are known to have undesirable behaviors regarding data that is noted
as being of ``NVARCHAR`` type as opposed to ``VARCHAR``, including
datatype mismatch errors and non-use of indexes. See the section
on :meth:`.DialectEvents.do_setinputsizes` for background on working
around unicode character issues for backends like SQL Server with
pyodbc as well as cx_Oracle.
.. seealso::
:class:`.UnicodeText` - unlengthed textual counterpart
to :class:`.Unicode`.
:paramref:`.String.convert_unicode`
:meth:`.DialectEvents.do_setinputsizes`
"""
__visit_name__ = "unicode"
def __init__(self, length=None, **kwargs):
"""
Create a :class:`.Unicode` object.
Parameters are the same as that of :class:`.String`,
with the exception that ``convert_unicode``
defaults to ``True``.
"""
kwargs.setdefault("_expect_unicode", True)
kwargs.setdefault("_warn_on_bytestring", True)
super(Unicode, self).__init__(length=length, **kwargs)
class UnicodeText(Text):
"""An unbounded-length Unicode string type.
See :class:`.Unicode` for details on the unicode
behavior of this object.
Like :class:`.Unicode`, usage the :class:`.UnicodeText` type implies a
unicode-capable type being used on the backend, such as
``NCLOB``, ``NTEXT``.
"""
__visit_name__ = "unicode_text"
def __init__(self, length=None, **kwargs):
"""
Create a Unicode-converting Text type.
Parameters are the same as that of :class:`_expression.TextClause`,
with the exception that ``convert_unicode``
defaults to ``True``.
"""
kwargs.setdefault("_expect_unicode", True)
kwargs.setdefault("_warn_on_bytestring", True)
super(UnicodeText, self).__init__(length=length, **kwargs)
def _warn_deprecated_unicode(self):
pass
class Integer(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
"""A type for ``int`` integers."""
__visit_name__ = "integer"
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.NUMBER
@property
def python_type(self):
return int
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
return str(int(value))
return process
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
# TODO: need a dictionary object that will
# handle operators generically here, this is incomplete
return {
operators.add: {
Date: Date,
Integer: self.__class__,
Numeric: Numeric,
},
operators.mul: {
Interval: Interval,
Integer: self.__class__,
Numeric: Numeric,
},
operators.div: {Integer: self.__class__, Numeric: Numeric},
operators.truediv: {Integer: self.__class__, Numeric: Numeric},
operators.sub: {Integer: self.__class__, Numeric: Numeric},
}
class SmallInteger(Integer):
"""A type for smaller ``int`` integers.
Typically generates a ``SMALLINT`` in DDL, and otherwise acts like
a normal :class:`.Integer` on the Python side.
"""
__visit_name__ = "small_integer"
class BigInteger(Integer):
"""A type for bigger ``int`` integers.
Typically generates a ``BIGINT`` in DDL, and otherwise acts like
a normal :class:`.Integer` on the Python side.
"""
__visit_name__ = "big_integer"
class Numeric(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
"""A type for fixed precision numbers, such as ``NUMERIC`` or ``DECIMAL``.
This type returns Python ``decimal.Decimal`` objects by default, unless
the :paramref:`.Numeric.asdecimal` flag is set to False, in which case
they are coerced to Python ``float`` objects.
.. note::
The :class:`.Numeric` type is designed to receive data from a database
type that is explicitly known to be a decimal type
(e.g. ``DECIMAL``, ``NUMERIC``, others) and not a floating point
type (e.g. ``FLOAT``, ``REAL``, others).
If the database column on the server is in fact a floating-point
type, such as ``FLOAT`` or ``REAL``, use the :class:`.Float`
type or a subclass, otherwise numeric coercion between
``float``/``Decimal`` may or may not function as expected.
.. note::
The Python ``decimal.Decimal`` class is generally slow
performing; cPython 3.3 has now switched to use the `cdecimal
<http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cdecimal/>`_ library natively. For
older Python versions, the ``cdecimal`` library can be patched
into any application where it will replace the ``decimal``
library fully, however this needs to be applied globally and
before any other modules have been imported, as follows::
import sys
import cdecimal
sys.modules["decimal"] = cdecimal
Note that the ``cdecimal`` and ``decimal`` libraries are **not
compatible with each other**, so patching ``cdecimal`` at the
global level is the only way it can be used effectively with
various DBAPIs that hardcode to import the ``decimal`` library.
"""
__visit_name__ = "numeric"
_default_decimal_return_scale = 10
def __init__(
self,
precision=None,
scale=None,
decimal_return_scale=None,
asdecimal=True,
):
"""
Construct a Numeric.
:param precision: the numeric precision for use in DDL ``CREATE
TABLE``.
:param scale: the numeric scale for use in DDL ``CREATE TABLE``.
:param asdecimal: default True. Return whether or not
values should be sent as Python Decimal objects, or
as floats. Different DBAPIs send one or the other based on
datatypes - the Numeric type will ensure that return values
are one or the other across DBAPIs consistently.
:param decimal_return_scale: Default scale to use when converting
from floats to Python decimals. Floating point values will typically
be much longer due to decimal inaccuracy, and most floating point
database types don't have a notion of "scale", so by default the
float type looks for the first ten decimal places when converting.
Specifying this value will override that length. Types which
do include an explicit ".scale" value, such as the base
:class:`.Numeric` as well as the MySQL float types, will use the
value of ".scale" as the default for decimal_return_scale, if not
otherwise specified.
.. versionadded:: 0.9.0
When using the ``Numeric`` type, care should be taken to ensure
that the asdecimal setting is appropriate for the DBAPI in use -
when Numeric applies a conversion from Decimal->float or float->
Decimal, this conversion incurs an additional performance overhead
for all result columns received.
DBAPIs that return Decimal natively (e.g. psycopg2) will have
better accuracy and higher performance with a setting of ``True``,
as the native translation to Decimal reduces the amount of floating-
point issues at play, and the Numeric type itself doesn't need
to apply any further conversions. However, another DBAPI which
returns floats natively *will* incur an additional conversion
overhead, and is still subject to floating point data loss - in
which case ``asdecimal=False`` will at least remove the extra
conversion overhead.
"""
self.precision = precision
self.scale = scale
self.decimal_return_scale = decimal_return_scale
self.asdecimal = asdecimal
@property
def _effective_decimal_return_scale(self):
if self.decimal_return_scale is not None:
return self.decimal_return_scale
elif getattr(self, "scale", None) is not None:
return self.scale
else:
return self._default_decimal_return_scale
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.NUMBER
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
return str(value)
return process
@property
def python_type(self):
if self.asdecimal:
return decimal.Decimal
else:
return float
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
if dialect.supports_native_decimal:
return None
else:
return processors.to_float
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
if self.asdecimal:
if dialect.supports_native_decimal:
# we're a "numeric", DBAPI will give us Decimal directly
return None
else:
util.warn(
"Dialect %s+%s does *not* support Decimal "
"objects natively, and SQLAlchemy must "
"convert from floating point - rounding "
"errors and other issues may occur. Please "
"consider storing Decimal numbers as strings "
"or integers on this platform for lossless "
"storage." % (dialect.name, dialect.driver)
)
# we're a "numeric", DBAPI returns floats, convert.
return processors.to_decimal_processor_factory(
decimal.Decimal,
self.scale
if self.scale is not None
else self._default_decimal_return_scale,
)
else:
if dialect.supports_native_decimal:
return processors.to_float
else:
return None
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
return {
operators.mul: {
Interval: Interval,
Numeric: self.__class__,
Integer: self.__class__,
},
operators.div: {Numeric: self.__class__, Integer: self.__class__},
operators.truediv: {
Numeric: self.__class__,
Integer: self.__class__,
},
operators.add: {Numeric: self.__class__, Integer: self.__class__},
operators.sub: {Numeric: self.__class__, Integer: self.__class__},
}
class Float(Numeric):
"""Type representing floating point types, such as ``FLOAT`` or ``REAL``.
This type returns Python ``float`` objects by default, unless the
:paramref:`.Float.asdecimal` flag is set to True, in which case they
are coerced to ``decimal.Decimal`` objects.
.. note::
The :class:`.Float` type is designed to receive data from a database
type that is explicitly known to be a floating point type
(e.g. ``FLOAT``, ``REAL``, others)
and not a decimal type (e.g. ``DECIMAL``, ``NUMERIC``, others).
If the database column on the server is in fact a Numeric
type, such as ``DECIMAL`` or ``NUMERIC``, use the :class:`.Numeric`
type or a subclass, otherwise numeric coercion between
``float``/``Decimal`` may or may not function as expected.
"""
__visit_name__ = "float"
scale = None
def __init__(
self, precision=None, asdecimal=False, decimal_return_scale=None
):
r"""
Construct a Float.
:param precision: the numeric precision for use in DDL ``CREATE
TABLE``.
:param asdecimal: the same flag as that of :class:`.Numeric`, but
defaults to ``False``. Note that setting this flag to ``True``
results in floating point conversion.
:param decimal_return_scale: Default scale to use when converting
from floats to Python decimals. Floating point values will typically
be much longer due to decimal inaccuracy, and most floating point
database types don't have a notion of "scale", so by default the
float type looks for the first ten decimal places when converting.
Specifying this value will override that length. Note that the
MySQL float types, which do include "scale", will use "scale"
as the default for decimal_return_scale, if not otherwise specified.
.. versionadded:: 0.9.0
"""
self.precision = precision
self.asdecimal = asdecimal
self.decimal_return_scale = decimal_return_scale
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
if self.asdecimal:
return processors.to_decimal_processor_factory(
decimal.Decimal, self._effective_decimal_return_scale
)
elif dialect.supports_native_decimal:
return processors.to_float
else:
return None
class DateTime(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
"""A type for ``datetime.datetime()`` objects.
Date and time types return objects from the Python ``datetime``
module. Most DBAPIs have built in support for the datetime
module, with the noted exception of SQLite. In the case of
SQLite, date and time types are stored as strings which are then
converted back to datetime objects when rows are returned.
For the time representation within the datetime type, some
backends include additional options, such as timezone support and
fractional seconds support. For fractional seconds, use the
dialect-specific datatype, such as :class:`.mysql.TIME`. For
timezone support, use at least the :class:`_types.TIMESTAMP` datatype,
if not the dialect-specific datatype object.
"""
__visit_name__ = "datetime"
def __init__(self, timezone=False):
"""Construct a new :class:`.DateTime`.
:param timezone: boolean. Indicates that the datetime type should
enable timezone support, if available on the
**base date/time-holding type only**. It is recommended
to make use of the :class:`_types.TIMESTAMP` datatype directly when
using this flag, as some databases include separate generic
date/time-holding types distinct from the timezone-capable
TIMESTAMP datatype, such as Oracle.
"""
self.timezone = timezone
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.DATETIME
@property
def python_type(self):
return dt.datetime
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
# Based on http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/\
# static/functions-datetime.html.
return {
operators.add: {Interval: self.__class__},
operators.sub: {Interval: self.__class__, DateTime: Interval},
}
class Date(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
"""A type for ``datetime.date()`` objects."""
__visit_name__ = "date"
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.DATETIME
@property
def python_type(self):
return dt.date
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
# Based on http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/\
# static/functions-datetime.html.
return {
operators.add: {
Integer: self.__class__,
Interval: DateTime,
Time: DateTime,
},
operators.sub: {
# date - integer = date
Integer: self.__class__,
# date - date = integer.
Date: Integer,
Interval: DateTime,
# date - datetime = interval,
# this one is not in the PG docs
# but works
DateTime: Interval,
},
}
class Time(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
"""A type for ``datetime.time()`` objects."""
__visit_name__ = "time"
def __init__(self, timezone=False):
self.timezone = timezone
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.DATETIME
@property
def python_type(self):
return dt.time
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
# Based on http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/\
# static/functions-datetime.html.
return {
operators.add: {Date: DateTime, Interval: self.__class__},
operators.sub: {Time: Interval, Interval: self.__class__},
}
class _Binary(TypeEngine):
"""Define base behavior for binary types."""
def __init__(self, length=None):
self.length = length
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
value = value.decode(dialect.encoding).replace("'", "''")
return "'%s'" % value
return process
@property
def python_type(self):
return util.binary_type
# Python 3 - sqlite3 doesn't need the `Binary` conversion
# here, though pg8000 does to indicate "bytea"
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
if dialect.dbapi is None:
return None
DBAPIBinary = dialect.dbapi.Binary
def process(value):
if value is not None:
return DBAPIBinary(value)
else:
return None
return process
# Python 3 has native bytes() type
# both sqlite3 and pg8000 seem to return it,
# psycopg2 as of 2.5 returns 'memoryview'
if util.py2k:
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
return processors.to_str
else:
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
def process(value):
if value is not None:
value = bytes(value)
return value
return process
def coerce_compared_value(self, op, value):
"""See :meth:`.TypeEngine.coerce_compared_value` for a description."""
if isinstance(value, util.string_types):
return self
else:
return super(_Binary, self).coerce_compared_value(op, value)
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.BINARY
class LargeBinary(_Binary):
"""A type for large binary byte data.
The :class:`.LargeBinary` type corresponds to a large and/or unlengthed
binary type for the target platform, such as BLOB on MySQL and BYTEA for
PostgreSQL. It also handles the necessary conversions for the DBAPI.
"""
__visit_name__ = "large_binary"
def __init__(self, length=None):
"""
Construct a LargeBinary type.
:param length: optional, a length for the column for use in
DDL statements, for those binary types that accept a length,
such as the MySQL BLOB type.
"""
_Binary.__init__(self, length=length)
class SchemaType(SchemaEventTarget):
"""Mark a type as possibly requiring schema-level DDL for usage.
Supports types that must be explicitly created/dropped (i.e. PG ENUM type)
as well as types that are complimented by table or schema level
constraints, triggers, and other rules.
:class:`.SchemaType` classes can also be targets for the
:meth:`.DDLEvents.before_parent_attach` and
:meth:`.DDLEvents.after_parent_attach` events, where the events fire off
surrounding the association of the type object with a parent
:class:`_schema.Column`.
.. seealso::
:class:`.Enum`
:class:`.Boolean`
"""
_use_schema_map = True
def __init__(
self,
name=None,
schema=None,
metadata=None,
inherit_schema=False,
quote=None,
_create_events=True,
):
if name is not None:
self.name = quoted_name(name, quote)
else:
self.name = None
self.schema = schema
self.metadata = metadata
self.inherit_schema = inherit_schema
self._create_events = _create_events
if _create_events and self.metadata:
event.listen(
self.metadata,
"before_create",
util.portable_instancemethod(self._on_metadata_create),
)
event.listen(
self.metadata,
"after_drop",
util.portable_instancemethod(self._on_metadata_drop),
)
def _set_parent(self, column, **kw):
column._on_table_attach(util.portable_instancemethod(self._set_table))
def _variant_mapping_for_set_table(self, column):
if isinstance(column.type, Variant):
variant_mapping = column.type.mapping.copy()
variant_mapping["_default"] = column.type.impl
else:
variant_mapping = None
return variant_mapping
def _set_table(self, column, table):
if self.inherit_schema:
self.schema = table.schema
elif self.metadata and self.schema is None and self.metadata.schema:
self.schema = self.metadata.schema
if not self._create_events:
return
variant_mapping = self._variant_mapping_for_set_table(column)
event.listen(
table,
"before_create",
util.portable_instancemethod(
self._on_table_create, {"variant_mapping": variant_mapping}
),
)
event.listen(
table,
"after_drop",
util.portable_instancemethod(
self._on_table_drop, {"variant_mapping": variant_mapping}
),
)
if self.metadata is None:
# TODO: what's the difference between self.metadata
# and table.metadata here ?
event.listen(
table.metadata,
"before_create",
util.portable_instancemethod(
self._on_metadata_create,
{"variant_mapping": variant_mapping},
),
)
event.listen(
table.metadata,
"after_drop",
util.portable_instancemethod(
self._on_metadata_drop,
{"variant_mapping": variant_mapping},
),
)
def copy(self, **kw):
return self.adapt(self.__class__, _create_events=True)
def adapt(self, impltype, **kw):
schema = kw.pop("schema", self.schema)
metadata = kw.pop("metadata", self.metadata)
_create_events = kw.pop("_create_events", False)
return impltype(
name=self.name,
schema=schema,
inherit_schema=self.inherit_schema,
metadata=metadata,
_create_events=_create_events,
**kw
)
@property
def bind(self):
return self.metadata and self.metadata.bind or None
def create(self, bind=None, checkfirst=False):
"""Issue CREATE DDL for this type, if applicable."""
if bind is None:
bind = _bind_or_error(self)
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t.create(bind=bind, checkfirst=checkfirst)
def drop(self, bind=None, checkfirst=False):
"""Issue DROP DDL for this type, if applicable."""
if bind is None:
bind = _bind_or_error(self)
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t.drop(bind=bind, checkfirst=checkfirst)
def _on_table_create(self, target, bind, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(bind.dialect, kw):
return
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t._on_table_create(target, bind, **kw)
def _on_table_drop(self, target, bind, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(bind.dialect, kw):
return
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t._on_table_drop(target, bind, **kw)
def _on_metadata_create(self, target, bind, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(bind.dialect, kw):
return
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t._on_metadata_create(target, bind, **kw)
def _on_metadata_drop(self, target, bind, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(bind.dialect, kw):
return
t = self.dialect_impl(bind.dialect)
if t.__class__ is not self.__class__ and isinstance(t, SchemaType):
t._on_metadata_drop(target, bind, **kw)
def _is_impl_for_variant(self, dialect, kw):
variant_mapping = kw.pop("variant_mapping", None)
if variant_mapping is None:
return True
# since PostgreSQL is the only DB that has ARRAY this can only
# be integration tested by PG-specific tests
def _we_are_the_impl(typ):
return (
typ is self or isinstance(typ, ARRAY) and typ.item_type is self
)
if dialect.name in variant_mapping and _we_are_the_impl(
variant_mapping[dialect.name]
):
return True
elif dialect.name not in variant_mapping:
return _we_are_the_impl(variant_mapping["_default"])
class Enum(Emulated, String, SchemaType):
"""Generic Enum Type.
The :class:`.Enum` type provides a set of possible string values
which the column is constrained towards.
The :class:`.Enum` type will make use of the backend's native "ENUM"
type if one is available; otherwise, it uses a VARCHAR datatype.
An option also exists to automatically produce a CHECK constraint
when the VARCHAR (so called "non-native") variant is produced;
see the :paramref:`.Enum.create_constraint` flag.
The :class:`.Enum` type also provides in-Python validation of string
values during both read and write operations. When reading a value
from the database in a result set, the string value is always checked
against the list of possible values and a ``LookupError`` is raised
if no match is found. When passing a value to the database as a
plain string within a SQL statement, if the
:paramref:`.Enum.validate_strings` parameter is
set to True, a ``LookupError`` is raised for any string value that's
not located in the given list of possible values; note that this
impacts usage of LIKE expressions with enumerated values (an unusual
use case).
.. versionchanged:: 1.1 the :class:`.Enum` type now provides in-Python
validation of input values as well as on data being returned by
the database.
The source of enumerated values may be a list of string values, or
alternatively a PEP-435-compliant enumerated class. For the purposes
of the :class:`.Enum` datatype, this class need only provide a
``__members__`` method.
When using an enumerated class, the enumerated objects are used
both for input and output, rather than strings as is the case with
a plain-string enumerated type::
import enum
class MyEnum(enum.Enum):
one = 1
two = 2
three = 3
t = Table(
'data', MetaData(),
Column('value', Enum(MyEnum))
)
connection.execute(t.insert(), {"value": MyEnum.two})
assert connection.scalar(t.select()) is MyEnum.two
Above, the string names of each element, e.g. "one", "two", "three",
are persisted to the database; the values of the Python Enum, here
indicated as integers, are **not** used; the value of each enum can
therefore be any kind of Python object whether or not it is persistable.
In order to persist the values and not the names, the
:paramref:`.Enum.values_callable` parameter may be used. The value of
this parameter is a user-supplied callable, which is intended to be used
with a PEP-435-compliant enumerated class and returns a list of string
values to be persisted. For a simple enumeration that uses string values,
a callable such as ``lambda x: [e.value for e in x]`` is sufficient.
.. versionadded:: 1.1 - support for PEP-435-style enumerated
classes.
.. seealso::
:class:`_postgresql.ENUM` - PostgreSQL-specific type,
which has additional functionality.
:class:`.mysql.ENUM` - MySQL-specific type
"""
__visit_name__ = "enum"
@util.deprecated_params(
convert_unicode=(
"1.3",
"The :paramref:`.Enum.convert_unicode` parameter is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. All modern DBAPIs "
"now support Python Unicode directly and this parameter is "
"unnecessary.",
)
)
def __init__(self, *enums, **kw):
r"""Construct an enum.
Keyword arguments which don't apply to a specific backend are ignored
by that backend.
:param \*enums: either exactly one PEP-435 compliant enumerated type
or one or more string labels.
.. versionadded:: 1.1 a PEP-435 style enumerated class may be
passed.
:param convert_unicode: Enable unicode-aware bind parameter and
result-set processing for this Enum's data under Python 2 only.
Under Python 2, this is set automatically based on the presence of
unicode label strings. This flag will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0.
:param create_constraint: defaults to False. When creating a
non-native enumerated type, also build a CHECK constraint on the
database against the valid values.
.. note:: it is strongly recommended that the CHECK constraint
have an explicit name in order to support schema-management
concerns. This can be established either by setting the
:paramref:`.Enum.name` parameter or by setting up an
appropriate naming convention; see
:ref:`constraint_naming_conventions` for background.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 - this flag now defaults to False, meaning
no CHECK constraint is generated for a non-native enumerated
type.
:param metadata: Associate this type directly with a ``MetaData``
object. For types that exist on the target database as an
independent schema construct (PostgreSQL), this type will be
created and dropped within ``create_all()`` and ``drop_all()``
operations. If the type is not associated with any ``MetaData``
object, it will associate itself with each ``Table`` in which it is
used, and will be created when any of those individual tables are
created, after a check is performed for its existence. The type is
only dropped when ``drop_all()`` is called for that ``Table``
object's metadata, however.
The value of the :paramref:`_schema.MetaData.schema` parameter of
the :class:`_schema.MetaData` object, if set, will be used as the
default value of the :paramref:`_types.Enum.schema` on this object
if an explicit value is not otherwise supplied.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.12 :class:`_types.Enum` inherits the
:paramref:`_schema.MetaData.schema` parameter of the
:class:`_schema.MetaData` object if present, when passed using
the :paramref:`_types.Enum.metadata` parameter.
:param name: The name of this type. This is required for PostgreSQL
and any future supported database which requires an explicitly
named type, or an explicitly named constraint in order to generate
the type and/or a table that uses it. If a PEP-435 enumerated
class was used, its name (converted to lower case) is used by
default.
:param native_enum: Use the database's native ENUM type when
available. Defaults to True. When False, uses VARCHAR + check
constraint for all backends. The VARCHAR length can be controlled
with :paramref:`.Enum.length`
:param length: Allows specifying a custom length for the VARCHAR
when :paramref:`.Enum.native_enum` is False. By default it uses the
length of the longest value.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.16
:param schema: Schema name of this type. For types that exist on the
target database as an independent schema construct (PostgreSQL),
this parameter specifies the named schema in which the type is
present.
If not present, the schema name will be taken from the
:class:`_schema.MetaData` collection if passed as
:paramref:`_types.Enum.metadata`, for a :class:`_schema.MetaData`
that includes the :paramref:`_schema.MetaData.schema` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.12 :class:`_types.Enum` inherits the
:paramref:`_schema.MetaData.schema` parameter of the
:class:`_schema.MetaData` object if present, when passed using
the :paramref:`_types.Enum.metadata` parameter.
Otherwise, if the :paramref:`_types.Enum.inherit_schema` flag is set
to ``True``, the schema will be inherited from the associated
:class:`_schema.Table` object if any; when
:paramref:`_types.Enum.inherit_schema` is at its default of
``False``, the owning table's schema is **not** used.
:param quote: Set explicit quoting preferences for the type's name.
:param inherit_schema: When ``True``, the "schema" from the owning
:class:`_schema.Table`
will be copied to the "schema" attribute of this
:class:`.Enum`, replacing whatever value was passed for the
``schema`` attribute. This also takes effect when using the
:meth:`_schema.Table.to_metadata` operation.
:param validate_strings: when True, string values that are being
passed to the database in a SQL statement will be checked
for validity against the list of enumerated values. Unrecognized
values will result in a ``LookupError`` being raised.
.. versionadded:: 1.1.0b2
:param values_callable: A callable which will be passed the PEP-435
compliant enumerated type, which should then return a list of string
values to be persisted. This allows for alternate usages such as
using the string value of an enum to be persisted to the database
instead of its name.
.. versionadded:: 1.2.3
:param sort_key_function: a Python callable which may be used as the
"key" argument in the Python ``sorted()`` built-in. The SQLAlchemy
ORM requires that primary key columns which are mapped must
be sortable in some way. When using an unsortable enumeration
object such as a Python 3 ``Enum`` object, this parameter may be
used to set a default sort key function for the objects. By
default, the database value of the enumeration is used as the
sorting function.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.8
:param omit_aliases: A boolean that when true will remove aliases from
pep 435 enums. For backward compatibility it defaults to ``False``.
A deprecation warning is raised if the enum has aliases and this
flag was not set.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.5
.. deprecated:: 1.4 The default will be changed to ``True`` in
SQLAlchemy 2.0.
"""
self._enum_init(enums, kw)
@property
def _enums_argument(self):
if self.enum_class is not None:
return [self.enum_class]
else:
return self.enums
def _enum_init(self, enums, kw):
"""internal init for :class:`.Enum` and subclasses.
friendly init helper used by subclasses to remove
all the Enum-specific keyword arguments from kw. Allows all
other arguments in kw to pass through.
"""
self.native_enum = kw.pop("native_enum", True)
self.create_constraint = kw.pop("create_constraint", False)
self.values_callable = kw.pop("values_callable", None)
self._sort_key_function = kw.pop("sort_key_function", NO_ARG)
length_arg = kw.pop("length", NO_ARG)
self._omit_aliases = kw.pop("omit_aliases", NO_ARG)
values, objects = self._parse_into_values(enums, kw)
self._setup_for_values(values, objects, kw)
convert_unicode = kw.pop("convert_unicode", None)
self.validate_strings = kw.pop("validate_strings", False)
if convert_unicode is None:
for e in self.enums:
# this is all py2k logic that can go away for py3k only,
# "expect unicode" will always be implicitly true
if isinstance(e, util.text_type):
_expect_unicode = True
break
else:
_expect_unicode = False
else:
_expect_unicode = convert_unicode
if self.enums:
length = max(len(x) for x in self.enums)
else:
length = 0
if not self.native_enum and length_arg is not NO_ARG:
if length_arg < length:
raise ValueError(
"When provided, length must be larger or equal"
" than the length of the longest enum value. %s < %s"
% (length_arg, length)
)
length = length_arg
self._valid_lookup[None] = self._object_lookup[None] = None
super(Enum, self).__init__(
length=length, _expect_unicode=_expect_unicode
)
if self.enum_class:
kw.setdefault("name", self.enum_class.__name__.lower())
SchemaType.__init__(
self,
name=kw.pop("name", None),
schema=kw.pop("schema", None),
metadata=kw.pop("metadata", None),
inherit_schema=kw.pop("inherit_schema", False),
quote=kw.pop("quote", None),
_create_events=kw.pop("_create_events", True),
)
def _parse_into_values(self, enums, kw):
if not enums and "_enums" in kw:
enums = kw.pop("_enums")
if len(enums) == 1 and hasattr(enums[0], "__members__"):
self.enum_class = enums[0]
_members = self.enum_class.__members__
aliases = [n for n, v in _members.items() if v.name != n]
if self._omit_aliases is NO_ARG and aliases:
util.warn_deprecated_20(
"The provided enum %s contains the aliases %s. The "
"``omit_aliases`` will default to ``True`` in SQLAlchemy "
"2.0. Specify a value to silence this warning."
% (self.enum_class.__name__, aliases)
)
if self._omit_aliases is True:
# remove aliases
members = OrderedDict(
(n, v) for n, v in _members.items() if v.name == n
)
else:
members = _members
if self.values_callable:
values = self.values_callable(self.enum_class)
else:
values = list(members)
objects = [members[k] for k in members]
return values, objects
else:
self.enum_class = None
return enums, enums
def _setup_for_values(self, values, objects, kw):
self.enums = list(values)
self._valid_lookup = dict(zip(reversed(objects), reversed(values)))
self._object_lookup = dict(zip(values, objects))
self._valid_lookup.update(
[
(value, self._valid_lookup[self._object_lookup[value]])
for value in values
]
)
@property
def sort_key_function(self):
if self._sort_key_function is NO_ARG:
return self._db_value_for_elem
else:
return self._sort_key_function
@property
def native(self):
return self.native_enum
def _db_value_for_elem(self, elem):
try:
return self._valid_lookup[elem]
except KeyError as err:
# for unknown string values, we return as is. While we can
# validate these if we wanted, that does not allow for lesser-used
# end-user use cases, such as using a LIKE comparison with an enum,
# or for an application that wishes to apply string tests to an
# ENUM (see [ticket:3725]). While we can decide to differentiate
# here between an INSERT statement and a criteria used in a SELECT,
# for now we're staying conservative w/ behavioral changes (perhaps
# someone has a trigger that handles strings on INSERT)
if not self.validate_strings and isinstance(
elem, compat.string_types
):
return elem
else:
util.raise_(
LookupError(
"'%s' is not among the defined enum values. "
"Enum name: %s. Possible values: %s"
% (
elem,
self.name,
langhelpers.repr_tuple_names(self.enums),
)
),
replace_context=err,
)
class Comparator(String.Comparator):
def _adapt_expression(self, op, other_comparator):
op, typ = super(Enum.Comparator, self)._adapt_expression(
op, other_comparator
)
if op is operators.concat_op:
typ = String(
self.type.length, _expect_unicode=self.type._expect_unicode
)
return op, typ
comparator_factory = Comparator
def _object_value_for_elem(self, elem):
try:
return self._object_lookup[elem]
except KeyError as err:
util.raise_(
LookupError(
"'%s' is not among the defined enum values. "
"Enum name: %s. Possible values: %s"
% (
elem,
self.name,
langhelpers.repr_tuple_names(self.enums),
)
),
replace_context=err,
)
def __repr__(self):
return util.generic_repr(
self,
additional_kw=[("native_enum", True)],
to_inspect=[Enum, SchemaType],
)
def as_generic(self, allow_nulltype=False):
if hasattr(self, "enums"):
args = self.enums
else:
raise NotImplementedError(
"TypeEngine.as_generic() heuristic "
"is undefined for types that inherit Enum but do not have "
"an `enums` attribute."
)
return util.constructor_copy(self, self._generic_type_affinity, *args)
def adapt_to_emulated(self, impltype, **kw):
kw.setdefault("_expect_unicode", self._expect_unicode)
kw.setdefault("validate_strings", self.validate_strings)
kw.setdefault("name", self.name)
kw.setdefault("schema", self.schema)
kw.setdefault("inherit_schema", self.inherit_schema)
kw.setdefault("metadata", self.metadata)
kw.setdefault("_create_events", False)
kw.setdefault("native_enum", self.native_enum)
kw.setdefault("values_callable", self.values_callable)
kw.setdefault("create_constraint", self.create_constraint)
kw.setdefault("length", self.length)
kw.setdefault("omit_aliases", self._omit_aliases)
assert "_enums" in kw
return impltype(**kw)
def adapt(self, impltype, **kw):
kw["_enums"] = self._enums_argument
return super(Enum, self).adapt(impltype, **kw)
def _should_create_constraint(self, compiler, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(compiler.dialect, kw):
return False
return (
not self.native_enum or not compiler.dialect.supports_native_enum
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.schema")
def _set_table(self, column, table):
schema = util.preloaded.sql_schema
SchemaType._set_table(self, column, table)
if not self.create_constraint:
return
variant_mapping = self._variant_mapping_for_set_table(column)
e = schema.CheckConstraint(
type_coerce(column, self).in_(self.enums),
name=_NONE_NAME if self.name is None else self.name,
_create_rule=util.portable_instancemethod(
self._should_create_constraint,
{"variant_mapping": variant_mapping},
),
_type_bound=True,
)
assert e.table is table
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
parent_processor = super(Enum, self).literal_processor(dialect)
def process(value):
value = self._db_value_for_elem(value)
if parent_processor:
value = parent_processor(value)
return value
return process
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
value = self._db_value_for_elem(value)
if parent_processor:
value = parent_processor(value)
return value
parent_processor = super(Enum, self).bind_processor(dialect)
return process
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
parent_processor = super(Enum, self).result_processor(dialect, coltype)
def process(value):
if parent_processor:
value = parent_processor(value)
value = self._object_value_for_elem(value)
return value
return process
def copy(self, **kw):
return SchemaType.copy(self, **kw)
@property
def python_type(self):
if self.enum_class:
return self.enum_class
else:
return super(Enum, self).python_type
class PickleType(TypeDecorator):
"""Holds Python objects, which are serialized using pickle.
PickleType builds upon the Binary type to apply Python's
``pickle.dumps()`` to incoming objects, and ``pickle.loads()`` on
the way out, allowing any pickleable Python object to be stored as
a serialized binary field.
To allow ORM change events to propagate for elements associated
with :class:`.PickleType`, see :ref:`mutable_toplevel`.
"""
impl = LargeBinary
cache_ok = True
def __init__(
self,
protocol=pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL,
pickler=None,
comparator=None,
impl=None,
):
"""
Construct a PickleType.
:param protocol: defaults to ``pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL``.
:param pickler: defaults to cPickle.pickle or pickle.pickle if
cPickle is not available. May be any object with
pickle-compatible ``dumps`` and ``loads`` methods.
:param comparator: a 2-arg callable predicate used
to compare values of this type. If left as ``None``,
the Python "equals" operator is used to compare values.
:param impl: A binary-storing :class:`_types.TypeEngine` class or
instance to use in place of the default :class:`_types.LargeBinary`.
For example the :class: `_mysql.LONGBLOB` class may be more effective
when using MySQL.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.20
"""
self.protocol = protocol
self.pickler = pickler or pickle
self.comparator = comparator
super(PickleType, self).__init__()
if impl:
self.impl = to_instance(impl)
def __reduce__(self):
return PickleType, (self.protocol, None, self.comparator)
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
impl_processor = self.impl.bind_processor(dialect)
dumps = self.pickler.dumps
protocol = self.protocol
if impl_processor:
def process(value):
if value is not None:
value = dumps(value, protocol)
return impl_processor(value)
else:
def process(value):
if value is not None:
value = dumps(value, protocol)
return value
return process
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
impl_processor = self.impl.result_processor(dialect, coltype)
loads = self.pickler.loads
if impl_processor:
def process(value):
value = impl_processor(value)
if value is None:
return None
return loads(value)
else:
def process(value):
if value is None:
return None
return loads(value)
return process
def compare_values(self, x, y):
if self.comparator:
return self.comparator(x, y)
else:
return x == y
class Boolean(Emulated, TypeEngine, SchemaType):
"""A bool datatype.
:class:`.Boolean` typically uses BOOLEAN or SMALLINT on the DDL side,
and on the Python side deals in ``True`` or ``False``.
The :class:`.Boolean` datatype currently has two levels of assertion
that the values persisted are simple true/false values. For all
backends, only the Python values ``None``, ``True``, ``False``, ``1``
or ``0`` are accepted as parameter values. For those backends that
don't support a "native boolean" datatype, an option exists to
also create a CHECK constraint on the target column
.. versionchanged:: 1.2 the :class:`.Boolean` datatype now asserts that
incoming Python values are already in pure boolean form.
"""
__visit_name__ = "boolean"
native = True
def __init__(
self, create_constraint=False, name=None, _create_events=True
):
"""Construct a Boolean.
:param create_constraint: defaults to False. If the boolean
is generated as an int/smallint, also create a CHECK constraint
on the table that ensures 1 or 0 as a value.
.. note:: it is strongly recommended that the CHECK constraint
have an explicit name in order to support schema-management
concerns. This can be established either by setting the
:paramref:`.Boolean.name` parameter or by setting up an
appropriate naming convention; see
:ref:`constraint_naming_conventions` for background.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 - this flag now defaults to False, meaning
no CHECK constraint is generated for a non-native enumerated
type.
:param name: if a CHECK constraint is generated, specify
the name of the constraint.
"""
self.create_constraint = create_constraint
self.name = name
self._create_events = _create_events
def _should_create_constraint(self, compiler, **kw):
if not self._is_impl_for_variant(compiler.dialect, kw):
return False
return (
not compiler.dialect.supports_native_boolean
and compiler.dialect.non_native_boolean_check_constraint
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.schema")
def _set_table(self, column, table):
schema = util.preloaded.sql_schema
if not self.create_constraint:
return
variant_mapping = self._variant_mapping_for_set_table(column)
e = schema.CheckConstraint(
type_coerce(column, self).in_([0, 1]),
name=_NONE_NAME if self.name is None else self.name,
_create_rule=util.portable_instancemethod(
self._should_create_constraint,
{"variant_mapping": variant_mapping},
),
_type_bound=True,
)
assert e.table is table
@property
def python_type(self):
return bool
_strict_bools = frozenset([None, True, False])
def _strict_as_bool(self, value):
if value not in self._strict_bools:
if not isinstance(value, int):
raise TypeError("Not a boolean value: %r" % value)
else:
raise ValueError(
"Value %r is not None, True, or False" % value
)
return value
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
compiler = dialect.statement_compiler(dialect, None)
true = compiler.visit_true(None)
false = compiler.visit_false(None)
def process(value):
return true if self._strict_as_bool(value) else false
return process
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
_strict_as_bool = self._strict_as_bool
if dialect.supports_native_boolean:
_coerce = bool
else:
_coerce = int
def process(value):
value = _strict_as_bool(value)
if value is not None:
value = _coerce(value)
return value
return process
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
if dialect.supports_native_boolean:
return None
else:
return processors.int_to_boolean
class _AbstractInterval(_LookupExpressionAdapter, TypeEngine):
@util.memoized_property
def _expression_adaptations(self):
# Based on http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/\
# static/functions-datetime.html.
return {
operators.add: {
Date: DateTime,
Interval: self.__class__,
DateTime: DateTime,
Time: Time,
},
operators.sub: {Interval: self.__class__},
operators.mul: {Numeric: self.__class__},
operators.truediv: {Numeric: self.__class__},
operators.div: {Numeric: self.__class__},
}
@property
def _type_affinity(self):
return Interval
def coerce_compared_value(self, op, value):
"""See :meth:`.TypeEngine.coerce_compared_value` for a description."""
return self.impl.coerce_compared_value(op, value)
class Interval(Emulated, _AbstractInterval, TypeDecorator):
"""A type for ``datetime.timedelta()`` objects.
The Interval type deals with ``datetime.timedelta`` objects. In
PostgreSQL, the native ``INTERVAL`` type is used; for others, the
value is stored as a date which is relative to the "epoch"
(Jan. 1, 1970).
Note that the ``Interval`` type does not currently provide date arithmetic
operations on platforms which do not support interval types natively. Such
operations usually require transformation of both sides of the expression
(such as, conversion of both sides into integer epoch values first) which
currently is a manual procedure (such as via
:attr:`~sqlalchemy.sql.expression.func`).
"""
impl = DateTime
epoch = dt.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(0)
cache_ok = True
def __init__(self, native=True, second_precision=None, day_precision=None):
"""Construct an Interval object.
:param native: when True, use the actual
INTERVAL type provided by the database, if
supported (currently PostgreSQL, Oracle).
Otherwise, represent the interval data as
an epoch value regardless.
:param second_precision: For native interval types
which support a "fractional seconds precision" parameter,
i.e. Oracle and PostgreSQL
:param day_precision: for native interval types which
support a "day precision" parameter, i.e. Oracle.
"""
super(Interval, self).__init__()
self.native = native
self.second_precision = second_precision
self.day_precision = day_precision
@property
def python_type(self):
return dt.timedelta
def adapt_to_emulated(self, impltype, **kw):
return _AbstractInterval.adapt(self, impltype, **kw)
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
impl_processor = self.impl.bind_processor(dialect)
epoch = self.epoch
if impl_processor:
def process(value):
if value is not None:
value = epoch + value
return impl_processor(value)
else:
def process(value):
if value is not None:
value = epoch + value
return value
return process
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
impl_processor = self.impl.result_processor(dialect, coltype)
epoch = self.epoch
if impl_processor:
def process(value):
value = impl_processor(value)
if value is None:
return None
return value - epoch
else:
def process(value):
if value is None:
return None
return value - epoch
return process
class JSON(Indexable, TypeEngine):
"""Represent a SQL JSON type.
.. note:: :class:`_types.JSON`
is provided as a facade for vendor-specific
JSON types. Since it supports JSON SQL operations, it only
works on backends that have an actual JSON type, currently:
* PostgreSQL - see :class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSON` and
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSONB` for backend-specific
notes
* MySQL - see
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.mysql.JSON` for backend-specific notes
* SQLite as of version 3.9 - see
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.sqlite.JSON` for backend-specific notes
* Microsoft SQL Server 2016 and later - see
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.mssql.JSON` for backend-specific notes
:class:`_types.JSON` is part of the Core in support of the growing
popularity of native JSON datatypes.
The :class:`_types.JSON` type stores arbitrary JSON format data, e.g.::
data_table = Table('data_table', metadata,
Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True),
Column('data', JSON)
)
with engine.connect() as conn:
conn.execute(
data_table.insert(),
data = {"key1": "value1", "key2": "value2"}
)
**JSON-Specific Expression Operators**
The :class:`_types.JSON`
datatype provides these additional SQL operations:
* Keyed index operations::
data_table.c.data['some key']
* Integer index operations::
data_table.c.data[3]
* Path index operations::
data_table.c.data[('key_1', 'key_2', 5, ..., 'key_n')]
* Data casters for specific JSON element types, subsequent to an index
or path operation being invoked::
data_table.c.data["some key"].as_integer()
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
Additional operations may be available from the dialect-specific versions
of :class:`_types.JSON`, such as
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSON` and
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSONB` which both offer additional
PostgreSQL-specific operations.
**Casting JSON Elements to Other Types**
Index operations, i.e. those invoked by calling upon the expression using
the Python bracket operator as in ``some_column['some key']``, return an
expression object whose type defaults to :class:`_types.JSON` by default,
so that
further JSON-oriented instructions may be called upon the result type.
However, it is likely more common that an index operation is expected
to return a specific scalar element, such as a string or integer. In
order to provide access to these elements in a backend-agnostic way,
a series of data casters are provided:
* :meth:`.JSON.Comparator.as_string` - return the element as a string
* :meth:`.JSON.Comparator.as_boolean` - return the element as a boolean
* :meth:`.JSON.Comparator.as_float` - return the element as a float
* :meth:`.JSON.Comparator.as_integer` - return the element as an integer
These data casters are implemented by supporting dialects in order to
assure that comparisons to the above types will work as expected, such as::
# integer comparison
data_table.c.data["some_integer_key"].as_integer() == 5
# boolean comparison
data_table.c.data["some_boolean"].as_boolean() == True
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11 Added type-specific casters for the basic JSON
data element types.
.. note::
The data caster functions are new in version 1.3.11, and supersede
the previous documented approaches of using CAST; for reference,
this looked like::
from sqlalchemy import cast, type_coerce
from sqlalchemy import String, JSON
cast(
data_table.c.data['some_key'], String
) == type_coerce(55, JSON)
The above case now works directly as::
data_table.c.data['some_key'].as_integer() == 5
For details on the previous comparison approach within the 1.3.x
series, see the documentation for SQLAlchemy 1.2 or the included HTML
files in the doc/ directory of the version's distribution.
**Detecting Changes in JSON columns when using the ORM**
The :class:`_types.JSON` type, when used with the SQLAlchemy ORM, does not
detect in-place mutations to the structure. In order to detect these, the
:mod:`sqlalchemy.ext.mutable` extension must be used. This extension will
allow "in-place" changes to the datastructure to produce events which
will be detected by the unit of work. See the example at :class:`.HSTORE`
for a simple example involving a dictionary.
**Support for JSON null vs. SQL NULL**
When working with NULL values, the :class:`_types.JSON`
type recommends the
use of two specific constants in order to differentiate between a column
that evaluates to SQL NULL, e.g. no value, vs. the JSON-encoded string
of ``"null"``. To insert or select against a value that is SQL NULL,
use the constant :func:`.null`::
from sqlalchemy import null
conn.execute(table.insert(), json_value=null())
To insert or select against a value that is JSON ``"null"``, use the
constant :attr:`_types.JSON.NULL`::
conn.execute(table.insert(), json_value=JSON.NULL)
The :class:`_types.JSON` type supports a flag
:paramref:`_types.JSON.none_as_null` which when set to True will result
in the Python constant ``None`` evaluating to the value of SQL
NULL, and when set to False results in the Python constant
``None`` evaluating to the value of JSON ``"null"``. The Python
value ``None`` may be used in conjunction with either
:attr:`_types.JSON.NULL` and :func:`.null` in order to indicate NULL
values, but care must be taken as to the value of the
:paramref:`_types.JSON.none_as_null` in these cases.
**Customizing the JSON Serializer**
The JSON serializer and deserializer used by :class:`_types.JSON`
defaults to
Python's ``json.dumps`` and ``json.loads`` functions; in the case of the
psycopg2 dialect, psycopg2 may be using its own custom loader function.
In order to affect the serializer / deserializer, they are currently
configurable at the :func:`_sa.create_engine` level via the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.json_serializer` and
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.json_deserializer` parameters. For example,
to turn off ``ensure_ascii``::
engine = create_engine(
"sqlite://",
json_serializer=lambda obj: json.dumps(obj, ensure_ascii=False))
.. versionchanged:: 1.3.7
SQLite dialect's ``json_serializer`` and ``json_deserializer``
parameters renamed from ``_json_serializer`` and
``_json_deserializer``.
.. seealso::
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSON`
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.JSONB`
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.mysql.JSON`
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.sqlite.JSON`
.. versionadded:: 1.1
"""
__visit_name__ = "JSON"
hashable = False
NULL = util.symbol("JSON_NULL")
"""Describe the json value of NULL.
This value is used to force the JSON value of ``"null"`` to be
used as the value. A value of Python ``None`` will be recognized
either as SQL NULL or JSON ``"null"``, based on the setting
of the :paramref:`_types.JSON.none_as_null` flag; the
:attr:`_types.JSON.NULL`
constant can be used to always resolve to JSON ``"null"`` regardless
of this setting. This is in contrast to the :func:`_expression.null`
construct,
which always resolves to SQL NULL. E.g.::
from sqlalchemy import null
from sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql import JSON
# will *always* insert SQL NULL
obj1 = MyObject(json_value=null())
# will *always* insert JSON string "null"
obj2 = MyObject(json_value=JSON.NULL)
session.add_all([obj1, obj2])
session.commit()
In order to set JSON NULL as a default value for a column, the most
transparent method is to use :func:`_expression.text`::
Table(
'my_table', metadata,
Column('json_data', JSON, default=text("'null'"))
)
While it is possible to use :attr:`_types.JSON.NULL` in this context, the
:attr:`_types.JSON.NULL` value will be returned as the value of the
column,
which in the context of the ORM or other repurposing of the default
value, may not be desirable. Using a SQL expression means the value
will be re-fetched from the database within the context of retrieving
generated defaults.
"""
def __init__(self, none_as_null=False):
"""Construct a :class:`_types.JSON` type.
:param none_as_null=False: if True, persist the value ``None`` as a
SQL NULL value, not the JSON encoding of ``null``. Note that
when this flag is False, the :func:`.null` construct can still
be used to persist a NULL value::
from sqlalchemy import null
conn.execute(table.insert(), data=null())
.. note::
:paramref:`_types.JSON.none_as_null` does **not** apply to the
values passed to :paramref:`_schema.Column.default` and
:paramref:`_schema.Column.server_default`; a value of ``None``
passed for these parameters means "no default present".
.. seealso::
:attr:`.types.JSON.NULL`
"""
self.none_as_null = none_as_null
class JSONElementType(TypeEngine):
"""Common function for index / path elements in a JSON expression."""
_integer = Integer()
_string = String()
def string_bind_processor(self, dialect):
return self._string._cached_bind_processor(dialect)
def string_literal_processor(self, dialect):
return self._string._cached_literal_processor(dialect)
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
int_processor = self._integer._cached_bind_processor(dialect)
string_processor = self.string_bind_processor(dialect)
def process(value):
if int_processor and isinstance(value, int):
value = int_processor(value)
elif string_processor and isinstance(value, util.string_types):
value = string_processor(value)
return value
return process
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
int_processor = self._integer._cached_literal_processor(dialect)
string_processor = self.string_literal_processor(dialect)
def process(value):
if int_processor and isinstance(value, int):
value = int_processor(value)
elif string_processor and isinstance(value, util.string_types):
value = string_processor(value)
return value
return process
class JSONIndexType(JSONElementType):
"""Placeholder for the datatype of a JSON index value.
This allows execution-time processing of JSON index values
for special syntaxes.
"""
class JSONIntIndexType(JSONIndexType):
"""Placeholder for the datatype of a JSON index value.
This allows execution-time processing of JSON index values
for special syntaxes.
"""
class JSONStrIndexType(JSONIndexType):
"""Placeholder for the datatype of a JSON index value.
This allows execution-time processing of JSON index values
for special syntaxes.
"""
class JSONPathType(JSONElementType):
"""Placeholder type for JSON path operations.
This allows execution-time processing of a path-based
index value into a specific SQL syntax.
"""
class Comparator(Indexable.Comparator, Concatenable.Comparator):
"""Define comparison operations for :class:`_types.JSON`."""
def _setup_getitem(self, index):
if not isinstance(index, util.string_types) and isinstance(
index, compat.collections_abc.Sequence
):
index = coercions.expect(
roles.BinaryElementRole,
index,
expr=self.expr,
operator=operators.json_path_getitem_op,
bindparam_type=JSON.JSONPathType,
)
operator = operators.json_path_getitem_op
else:
index = coercions.expect(
roles.BinaryElementRole,
index,
expr=self.expr,
operator=operators.json_getitem_op,
bindparam_type=JSON.JSONIntIndexType
if isinstance(index, int)
else JSON.JSONStrIndexType,
)
operator = operators.json_getitem_op
return operator, index, self.type
def as_boolean(self):
"""Cast an indexed value as boolean.
e.g.::
stmt = select(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_boolean()
).where(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_boolean() == True
)
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
"""
return self._binary_w_type(Boolean(), "as_boolean")
def as_string(self):
"""Cast an indexed value as string.
e.g.::
stmt = select(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_string()
).where(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_string() ==
'some string'
)
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
"""
return self._binary_w_type(String(), "as_string")
def as_integer(self):
"""Cast an indexed value as integer.
e.g.::
stmt = select(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_integer()
).where(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_integer() == 5
)
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
"""
return self._binary_w_type(Integer(), "as_integer")
def as_float(self):
"""Cast an indexed value as float.
e.g.::
stmt = select(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_float()
).where(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_float() == 29.75
)
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
"""
return self._binary_w_type(Float(), "as_float")
def as_numeric(self, precision, scale, asdecimal=True):
"""Cast an indexed value as numeric/decimal.
e.g.::
stmt = select(
mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_numeric(10, 6)
).where(
mytable.c.
json_column['some_data'].as_numeric(10, 6) == 29.75
)
.. versionadded:: 1.4.0b2
"""
return self._binary_w_type(
Numeric(precision, scale, asdecimal=asdecimal), "as_numeric"
)
def as_json(self):
"""Cast an indexed value as JSON.
e.g.::
stmt = select(mytable.c.json_column['some_data'].as_json())
This is typically the default behavior of indexed elements in any
case.
Note that comparison of full JSON structures may not be
supported by all backends.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11
"""
return self.expr
def _binary_w_type(self, typ, method_name):
if not isinstance(
self.expr, elements.BinaryExpression
) or self.expr.operator not in (
operators.json_getitem_op,
operators.json_path_getitem_op,
):
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"The JSON cast operator JSON.%s() only works with a JSON "
"index expression e.g. col['q'].%s()"
% (method_name, method_name)
)
expr = self.expr._clone()
expr.type = typ
return expr
comparator_factory = Comparator
@property
def python_type(self):
return dict
@property
def should_evaluate_none(self):
"""Alias of :attr:`_types.JSON.none_as_null`"""
return not self.none_as_null
@should_evaluate_none.setter
def should_evaluate_none(self, value):
self.none_as_null = not value
@util.memoized_property
def _str_impl(self):
return String(_expect_unicode=True)
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
string_process = self._str_impl.bind_processor(dialect)
json_serializer = dialect._json_serializer or json.dumps
def process(value):
if value is self.NULL:
value = None
elif isinstance(value, elements.Null) or (
value is None and self.none_as_null
):
return None
serialized = json_serializer(value)
if string_process:
serialized = string_process(serialized)
return serialized
return process
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
string_process = self._str_impl.result_processor(dialect, coltype)
json_deserializer = dialect._json_deserializer or json.loads
def process(value):
if value is None:
return None
if string_process:
value = string_process(value)
return json_deserializer(value)
return process
class ARRAY(SchemaEventTarget, Indexable, Concatenable, TypeEngine):
"""Represent a SQL Array type.
.. note:: This type serves as the basis for all ARRAY operations.
However, currently **only the PostgreSQL backend has support for SQL
arrays in SQLAlchemy**. It is recommended to use the PostgreSQL-specific
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.ARRAY` type directly when using
ARRAY types with PostgreSQL, as it provides additional operators
specific to that backend.
:class:`_types.ARRAY` is part of the Core in support of various SQL
standard functions such as :class:`_functions.array_agg`
which explicitly involve
arrays; however, with the exception of the PostgreSQL backend and possibly
some third-party dialects, no other SQLAlchemy built-in dialect has support
for this type.
An :class:`_types.ARRAY` type is constructed given the "type"
of element::
mytable = Table("mytable", metadata,
Column("data", ARRAY(Integer))
)
The above type represents an N-dimensional array,
meaning a supporting backend such as PostgreSQL will interpret values
with any number of dimensions automatically. To produce an INSERT
construct that passes in a 1-dimensional array of integers::
connection.execute(
mytable.insert(),
data=[1,2,3]
)
The :class:`_types.ARRAY` type can be constructed given a fixed number
of dimensions::
mytable = Table("mytable", metadata,
Column("data", ARRAY(Integer, dimensions=2))
)
Sending a number of dimensions is optional, but recommended if the
datatype is to represent arrays of more than one dimension. This number
is used:
* When emitting the type declaration itself to the database, e.g.
``INTEGER[][]``
* When translating Python values to database values, and vice versa, e.g.
an ARRAY of :class:`.Unicode` objects uses this number to efficiently
access the string values inside of array structures without resorting
to per-row type inspection
* When used with the Python ``getitem`` accessor, the number of dimensions
serves to define the kind of type that the ``[]`` operator should
return, e.g. for an ARRAY of INTEGER with two dimensions::
>>> expr = table.c.column[5] # returns ARRAY(Integer, dimensions=1)
>>> expr = expr[6] # returns Integer
For 1-dimensional arrays, an :class:`_types.ARRAY` instance with no
dimension parameter will generally assume single-dimensional behaviors.
SQL expressions of type :class:`_types.ARRAY` have support for "index" and
"slice" behavior. The Python ``[]`` operator works normally here, given
integer indexes or slices. Arrays default to 1-based indexing.
The operator produces binary expression
constructs which will produce the appropriate SQL, both for
SELECT statements::
select(mytable.c.data[5], mytable.c.data[2:7])
as well as UPDATE statements when the :meth:`_expression.Update.values`
method
is used::
mytable.update().values({
mytable.c.data[5]: 7,
mytable.c.data[2:7]: [1, 2, 3]
})
The :class:`_types.ARRAY` type also provides for the operators
:meth:`.types.ARRAY.Comparator.any` and
:meth:`.types.ARRAY.Comparator.all`. The PostgreSQL-specific version of
:class:`_types.ARRAY` also provides additional operators.
.. versionadded:: 1.1.0
.. seealso::
:class:`sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.ARRAY`
"""
__visit_name__ = "ARRAY"
_is_array = True
zero_indexes = False
"""If True, Python zero-based indexes should be interpreted as one-based
on the SQL expression side."""
class Comparator(Indexable.Comparator, Concatenable.Comparator):
"""Define comparison operations for :class:`_types.ARRAY`.
More operators are available on the dialect-specific form
of this type. See :class:`.postgresql.ARRAY.Comparator`.
"""
def _setup_getitem(self, index):
if isinstance(index, slice):
return_type = self.type
if self.type.zero_indexes:
index = slice(index.start + 1, index.stop + 1, index.step)
slice_ = Slice(
index.start, index.stop, index.step, _name=self.expr.key
)
return operators.getitem, slice_, return_type
else:
if self.type.zero_indexes:
index += 1
if self.type.dimensions is None or self.type.dimensions == 1:
return_type = self.type.item_type
else:
adapt_kw = {"dimensions": self.type.dimensions - 1}
return_type = self.type.adapt(
self.type.__class__, **adapt_kw
)
return operators.getitem, index, return_type
def contains(self, *arg, **kw):
raise NotImplementedError(
"ARRAY.contains() not implemented for the base "
"ARRAY type; please use the dialect-specific ARRAY type"
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.elements")
def any(self, other, operator=None):
"""Return ``other operator ANY (array)`` clause.
Argument places are switched, because ANY requires array
expression to be on the right hand-side.
E.g.::
from sqlalchemy.sql import operators
conn.execute(
select(table.c.data).where(
table.c.data.any(7, operator=operators.lt)
)
)
:param other: expression to be compared
:param operator: an operator object from the
:mod:`sqlalchemy.sql.operators`
package, defaults to :func:`.operators.eq`.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.any_`
:meth:`.types.ARRAY.Comparator.all`
"""
elements = util.preloaded.sql_elements
operator = operator if operator else operators.eq
# send plain BinaryExpression so that negate remains at None,
# leading to NOT expr for negation.
return elements.BinaryExpression(
coercions.expect(roles.ExpressionElementRole, other),
elements.CollectionAggregate._create_any(self.expr),
operator,
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.elements")
def all(self, other, operator=None):
"""Return ``other operator ALL (array)`` clause.
Argument places are switched, because ALL requires array
expression to be on the right hand-side.
E.g.::
from sqlalchemy.sql import operators
conn.execute(
select(table.c.data).where(
table.c.data.all(7, operator=operators.lt)
)
)
:param other: expression to be compared
:param operator: an operator object from the
:mod:`sqlalchemy.sql.operators`
package, defaults to :func:`.operators.eq`.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.all_`
:meth:`.types.ARRAY.Comparator.any`
"""
elements = util.preloaded.sql_elements
operator = operator if operator else operators.eq
# send plain BinaryExpression so that negate remains at None,
# leading to NOT expr for negation.
return elements.BinaryExpression(
coercions.expect(roles.ExpressionElementRole, other),
elements.CollectionAggregate._create_all(self.expr),
operator,
)
comparator_factory = Comparator
def __init__(
self, item_type, as_tuple=False, dimensions=None, zero_indexes=False
):
"""Construct an :class:`_types.ARRAY`.
E.g.::
Column('myarray', ARRAY(Integer))
Arguments are:
:param item_type: The data type of items of this array. Note that
dimensionality is irrelevant here, so multi-dimensional arrays like
``INTEGER[][]``, are constructed as ``ARRAY(Integer)``, not as
``ARRAY(ARRAY(Integer))`` or such.
:param as_tuple=False: Specify whether return results
should be converted to tuples from lists. This parameter is
not generally needed as a Python list corresponds well
to a SQL array.
:param dimensions: if non-None, the ARRAY will assume a fixed
number of dimensions. This impacts how the array is declared
on the database, how it goes about interpreting Python and
result values, as well as how expression behavior in conjunction
with the "getitem" operator works. See the description at
:class:`_types.ARRAY` for additional detail.
:param zero_indexes=False: when True, index values will be converted
between Python zero-based and SQL one-based indexes, e.g.
a value of one will be added to all index values before passing
to the database.
"""
if isinstance(item_type, ARRAY):
raise ValueError(
"Do not nest ARRAY types; ARRAY(basetype) "
"handles multi-dimensional arrays of basetype"
)
if isinstance(item_type, type):
item_type = item_type()
self.item_type = item_type
self.as_tuple = as_tuple
self.dimensions = dimensions
self.zero_indexes = zero_indexes
@property
def hashable(self):
return self.as_tuple
@property
def python_type(self):
return list
def compare_values(self, x, y):
return x == y
def _set_parent(self, column, outer=False, **kw):
"""Support SchemaEventTarget"""
if not outer and isinstance(self.item_type, SchemaEventTarget):
self.item_type._set_parent(column, **kw)
def _set_parent_with_dispatch(self, parent):
"""Support SchemaEventTarget"""
super(ARRAY, self)._set_parent_with_dispatch(parent, outer=True)
if isinstance(self.item_type, SchemaEventTarget):
self.item_type._set_parent_with_dispatch(parent)
class TupleType(TypeEngine):
"""represent the composite type of a Tuple."""
_is_tuple_type = True
def __init__(self, *types):
self._fully_typed = NULLTYPE not in types
self.types = types
def _resolve_values_to_types(self, value):
if self._fully_typed:
return self
else:
return TupleType(
*[
_resolve_value_to_type(elem) if typ is NULLTYPE else typ
for typ, elem in zip(self.types, value)
]
)
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
raise NotImplementedError(
"The tuple type does not support being fetched "
"as a column in a result row."
)
class REAL(Float):
"""The SQL REAL type."""
__visit_name__ = "REAL"
class FLOAT(Float):
"""The SQL FLOAT type."""
__visit_name__ = "FLOAT"
class NUMERIC(Numeric):
"""The SQL NUMERIC type."""
__visit_name__ = "NUMERIC"
class DECIMAL(Numeric):
"""The SQL DECIMAL type."""
__visit_name__ = "DECIMAL"
class INTEGER(Integer):
"""The SQL INT or INTEGER type."""
__visit_name__ = "INTEGER"
INT = INTEGER
class SMALLINT(SmallInteger):
"""The SQL SMALLINT type."""
__visit_name__ = "SMALLINT"
class BIGINT(BigInteger):
"""The SQL BIGINT type."""
__visit_name__ = "BIGINT"
class TIMESTAMP(DateTime):
"""The SQL TIMESTAMP type.
:class:`_types.TIMESTAMP` datatypes have support for timezone
storage on some backends, such as PostgreSQL and Oracle. Use the
:paramref:`~types.TIMESTAMP.timezone` argument in order to enable
"TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE" for these backends.
"""
__visit_name__ = "TIMESTAMP"
def __init__(self, timezone=False):
"""Construct a new :class:`_types.TIMESTAMP`.
:param timezone: boolean. Indicates that the TIMESTAMP type should
enable timezone support, if available on the target database.
On a per-dialect basis is similar to "TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE".
If the target database does not support timezones, this flag is
ignored.
"""
super(TIMESTAMP, self).__init__(timezone=timezone)
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.TIMESTAMP
class DATETIME(DateTime):
"""The SQL DATETIME type."""
__visit_name__ = "DATETIME"
class DATE(Date):
"""The SQL DATE type."""
__visit_name__ = "DATE"
class TIME(Time):
"""The SQL TIME type."""
__visit_name__ = "TIME"
class TEXT(Text):
"""The SQL TEXT type."""
__visit_name__ = "TEXT"
class CLOB(Text):
"""The CLOB type.
This type is found in Oracle and Informix.
"""
__visit_name__ = "CLOB"
class VARCHAR(String):
"""The SQL VARCHAR type."""
__visit_name__ = "VARCHAR"
class NVARCHAR(Unicode):
"""The SQL NVARCHAR type."""
__visit_name__ = "NVARCHAR"
class CHAR(String):
"""The SQL CHAR type."""
__visit_name__ = "CHAR"
class NCHAR(Unicode):
"""The SQL NCHAR type."""
__visit_name__ = "NCHAR"
class BLOB(LargeBinary):
"""The SQL BLOB type."""
__visit_name__ = "BLOB"
class BINARY(_Binary):
"""The SQL BINARY type."""
__visit_name__ = "BINARY"
class VARBINARY(_Binary):
"""The SQL VARBINARY type."""
__visit_name__ = "VARBINARY"
class BOOLEAN(Boolean):
"""The SQL BOOLEAN type."""
__visit_name__ = "BOOLEAN"
class NullType(TypeEngine):
"""An unknown type.
:class:`.NullType` is used as a default type for those cases where
a type cannot be determined, including:
* During table reflection, when the type of a column is not recognized
by the :class:`.Dialect`
* When constructing SQL expressions using plain Python objects of
unknown types (e.g. ``somecolumn == my_special_object``)
* When a new :class:`_schema.Column` is created,
and the given type is passed
as ``None`` or is not passed at all.
The :class:`.NullType` can be used within SQL expression invocation
without issue, it just has no behavior either at the expression
construction level or at the bind-parameter/result processing level.
:class:`.NullType` will result in a :exc:`.CompileError` if the compiler
is asked to render the type itself, such as if it is used in a
:func:`.cast` operation or within a schema creation operation such as that
invoked by :meth:`_schema.MetaData.create_all` or the
:class:`.CreateTable`
construct.
"""
__visit_name__ = "null"
_isnull = True
hashable = False
def literal_processor(self, dialect):
def process(value):
raise exc.CompileError(
"Don't know how to render literal SQL value: %r" % value
)
return process
class Comparator(TypeEngine.Comparator):
def _adapt_expression(self, op, other_comparator):
if isinstance(
other_comparator, NullType.Comparator
) or not operators.is_commutative(op):
return op, self.expr.type
else:
return other_comparator._adapt_expression(op, self)
comparator_factory = Comparator
class TableValueType(HasCacheKey, TypeEngine):
"""Refers to a table value type."""
_is_table_value = True
_traverse_internals = [
("_elements", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
]
def __init__(self, *elements):
self._elements = [
coercions.expect(roles.StrAsPlainColumnRole, elem)
for elem in elements
]
class MatchType(Boolean):
"""Refers to the return type of the MATCH operator.
As the :meth:`.ColumnOperators.match` is probably the most open-ended
operator in generic SQLAlchemy Core, we can't assume the return type
at SQL evaluation time, as MySQL returns a floating point, not a boolean,
and other backends might do something different. So this type
acts as a placeholder, currently subclassing :class:`.Boolean`.
The type allows dialects to inject result-processing functionality
if needed, and on MySQL will return floating-point values.
.. versionadded:: 1.0.0
"""
NULLTYPE = NullType()
BOOLEANTYPE = Boolean()
STRINGTYPE = String()
INTEGERTYPE = Integer()
MATCHTYPE = MatchType()
TABLEVALUE = TableValueType()
_type_map = {
int: Integer(),
float: Float(),
bool: BOOLEANTYPE,
decimal.Decimal: Numeric(),
dt.date: Date(),
dt.datetime: DateTime(),
dt.time: Time(),
dt.timedelta: Interval(),
util.NoneType: NULLTYPE,
}
if util.py3k:
_type_map[bytes] = LargeBinary() # noqa
_type_map[str] = Unicode()
else:
_type_map[unicode] = Unicode() # noqa
_type_map[str] = String()
_type_map_get = _type_map.get
def _resolve_value_to_type(value):
_result_type = _type_map_get(type(value), False)
if _result_type is False:
# use inspect() to detect SQLAlchemy built-in
# objects.
insp = inspection.inspect(value, False)
if (
insp is not None
and
# foil mock.Mock() and other impostors by ensuring
# the inspection target itself self-inspects
insp.__class__ in inspection._registrars
):
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"Object %r is not legal as a SQL literal value" % value
)
return NULLTYPE
else:
return _result_type
# back-assign to type_api
type_api.BOOLEANTYPE = BOOLEANTYPE
type_api.STRINGTYPE = STRINGTYPE
type_api.INTEGERTYPE = INTEGERTYPE
type_api.NULLTYPE = NULLTYPE
type_api.MATCHTYPE = MATCHTYPE
type_api.INDEXABLE = Indexable
type_api.TABLEVALUE = TABLEVALUE
type_api._resolve_value_to_type = _resolve_value_to_type
TypeEngine.Comparator.BOOLEANTYPE = BOOLEANTYPE