0

Has anybody got pyodbc installed with Python 3.2? I have, and all is well except that the interpreter doesn't recognise "commit()". Anyone else got the same problem? Anyone know if I'm doing something wrong? Thanks, John R

2
  • Could you post the code where you use commit()? This method is called on a Connection object, not in a cursor - it might be the problem.
    – A. Rodas
    Mar 11, 2013 at 23:04
  • pyodbc 3.0.6 added commit and rollback methods for cursors.
    – Bryan
    Mar 26, 2013 at 16:32

2 Answers 2

1

I've found a way round it. Still couldn't get commit() to work but in the pyodbc.connect() function, if "autocommit=True" is included, all the inserts get committed automatically and you don't need to use the commit() function. e.g.

conx = pyodbc.connect("""Driver={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb, *.accdb)};
                         DBQ=C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\My Documents\
                         Database2.accdb;""", autocommit = True)
0

here is an example of my code using commit() :

   cnxn = pyodbc.connect('Driver={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb, *.accdb)}; Dbq=F:\\computing\\Payroll v2 2\\\employees.accdb')
   cursor = cnxn.cursor()
   cursor.execute("insert into Medication(ID, Doctor, NameOfMedication, Dosage, DateStart, DateEnd, Notes, LastUpdated) values (?,?,?,?,?,?,?,?)",self.ui.residentComboBox.currentText().split()[0], self.ui.doctorLineEdit.text(), self.ui.nameOfMedicationLineEdit.text(), self.ui.dosageLineEdit.text(), self.ui.dateStartDateEdit.text(), self.ui.dateEndDateEdit.text(), self.ui.notesTextEdit.document().toPlainText(), self.ui.lastUpdatedDateTimeEdit.dateTime().toString("dd/MM/yyyy, hh:mm:ss")) 
   cursor.execute("update Medication set MedEndMonth=? where ((ID=?)) ",month,resID)                
   cnxn.commit()
   self.close()

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.