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I have a bunch of python methods that follow this pattern:

def delete_session(guid):
    conn = get_conn()
    cur = conn.cursor()

    cur.execute("delete from sessions where guid=%s", guid)

    conn.commit()
    conn.close()

Is there a more pythonic way to execute raw sql. The 2 lines at the beginning and end of every method are starting to bother me.

I'm not looking for an orm, I want to stick with raw sql.

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5 Answers

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You could write a context manager and use the with statement. For example, see this blog post:

http://jessenoller.com/2009/02/03/get-with-the-program-as-contextmanager-completely-different/

Also the python documentation has a sample that pretty much matches your needs. See section 8.1 on this page, in particular the snippet that begins:

db_connection = DatabaseConnection()
with db_connection as cursor:
    cursor.execute('insert into ...')
    cursor.execute('delete from ...')
    # ... more operations ...
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vote up 3 vote down

Careful about that execute, the second argument needs to be [guid] (a list with just one item). As for your question, I normally just use a class encapsulating connection and cursor, but it looks like you may prefer to use an execution context object whose __enter__ method gives you a cursor while __leave__ commits or rollbacks depending on whether the termination was normal or by exception; this would make your code

def delete_session():
    with get_cursor() as cur:
        cur.execute(etc etc)

If you like this style, let us know and I'll show you how to write get_cursor. Others will no doubt propose a decorator instead, so you'd write:

@withcursor
def delete_session(cur):
    cur.execute(etc etc)

but I think this makes commit/rollback, among other issues, a bit murkier. Still, if this is your preference, again let us know and I can show you how to write that form, too.

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It works fine with the guid alone. Is there an issue I'm unaware of? – Ben Noland Jul 10 at 2:05
I think I like the context manager approach. The link given by ars describes it well enough, but thanks for the offer. – Ben Noland Jul 10 at 2:06
@Ben, the 2nd argument to cursor.execute must be a sequence of values (typically a tuple) if you're using positional parameter substitution (like your %s or in other DB API modules ? or :1) or a mapping (typically a dict) if you use named parameter substitution (like :guid in certain DB API modules) -- not sure what DB API module you're using, but it's being pretty weird in letting you get away with other forms such as one isolated, non-sequence, non-mapping 2nd argument. – Alex Martelli Jul 10 at 2:13
vote up 2 vote down

"I have a bunch of python methods that follow this pattern:"

This is confusing.

Either you have a bunch of functions, or you have a bunch of methods of a class.

Bunch of Functions.

Do this instead.

class SQLFunction( object ):
    def __init__( self, connection ):
        self.connection = connection
    def __call__( self, args=None ):
        self.cursor= self.connection.cursor()
        self.run( args )
        self.cursor.commit()
        self.cursor.close()

class DeleteSession( SQLFunction ):
    def run( self, args ):
        self.cursor.execute( "statement" )

delete_session = DeleteSession( connection )

Your function declarations are two lines longer, but essentially the same. You can do func1( args ) because it's a callable object. The rest of your program should remain unchanged.

Bunch of Methods in One Class.

class SomeClass( object ):
    def __init__( self, connection ):
        self.connection= connection
    def sql_execute( self, statement, args= None )
        self.cursor= self.connection.cursor() 
        self.cursor.execute( statement, args if args is not None else [] )
        self.connection.commit()
        self.cursor.close()
    def delete_session( self ):
        self.sql_execute( "statement" )

All your methods can look like delete_session and make use of a common sql_execute method.

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vote up 0 vote down

It doesn't have to be more pythonic, just more structured:

def execSql(statement):
    conn = get_conn()
    cur = conn.cursor()
    cur.execute(statement)
    conn.commit()
    conn.close()

def delete_session(guid):
    execSql("delete from sessions where guid=%s"%(guid))
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Some of the methods I write will need to interact with the results. Seems like it would be awkward with this method. Can you call the fetch methods after the connection is closed? – Ben Noland Jul 10 at 2:08
No, this is useful only for one-shot operations. – paxdiablo Jul 10 at 4:28
vote up 0 vote down

A decorator?

class SqlExec:
   def __init__ (self, f):
      self.f = f
   def __call__ (self, *args):
      conn = get_conn() 
      cur = conn.cursor()
      cur.execute(self.f (*args))
      conn.commit()
      conn.close()

@SqlExec
def delete_session(guid):
      return "delete from sessions where guid=%s" % guid
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