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My goal is to check if an e-mail already exists in the mysql database. I am pulling the information into the variable from a webform (string). I currently have the following code:

import MySQLdb

db = MySQLdb.connect("localhost","username","password","databasename")
cursor = db.cursor()
if cursor.execute("select count(*) from registrants where email = " + "'"emailvar"'") == 0:
    print "it doesn't exist"

When I attempt to access the page I get an internal server error. I narrowed down the error to the "'"emailvar"'", and the code works fine, but e-mails have "@" and "." which cause SQL syntax errors. I attempt to escape them utilizing "'" "'" opening and closing parenthesis, but it does not work and crashes the web page.

1 Answer 1

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You want:

query = 'select count(*) from registrants where email=%s'
cursor.execute(query, emailvar)
if next(cursor, None) is None:
    # whatever

But would look at .fetchone() which should work, and also EXISTS in SQL (whereby it should have a unique constraint and let the DB work it out) and return a boolean-esque empty result.

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  • I get the error: builtin next = <built-in function next>, cursor = <MySQLdb.cursors.Cursor object>, builtin None = None <type 'exceptions.TypeError'>: Cursor object is not an iterator args = ('Cursor object is not an iterator',) message = 'Cursor object is not an iterator' Dec 3, 2012 at 17:11
  • @MichaelRocca oh - I forgot it works that way - try fetchone instead on the cursor object Dec 3, 2012 at 17:33
  • @JonClements: I corrected the code. I think you might want to pad the answer out with something about prepared statements too. Dec 3, 2012 at 17:52
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    @KeithGaughan Thank you - however, please feel free to offer your own answer - I'm rolling this back so that things stay in order - no offense intended (but your edit is a complete change to my original intention) Dec 3, 2012 at 17:55
  • No problem. I don't really feel like answering it myself as, except for the whole result fetching thing, your answer's just fine. Dec 3, 2012 at 18:03

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