58

Suppose I have table tags which has a field count that indicates how many items have been tagged with the given tag.

How do I increase this counter in SQLAlchemy after I add a new item with an existing tag?

With plain SQL I would do the following:

INSERT INTO `items` VALUES (...)
UPDATE `tags` SET count=count+1 WHERE tag_id=5

But how do I express count=count+1 in SQLAlchemy?

3 Answers 3

93

If you have something like:

mytable = Table('mytable', db.metadata,
    Column('id', db.Integer, primary_key=True),
    Column('counter', db.Integer)
)

You can increment fields like this:

m = mytable.query.first()
m.counter = mytable.c.counter + 1

Or, if you have some mapped Models, you can write alternatively:

m = Model.query.first()
m.counter = Model.counter + 1

Both versions will return the sql statement you have asked for. But if you don't include the column and just write m.counter += 1, then the new value would be calculated in Python (and race conditions are likely to happen). So always include a column as shown in the two examples above in such counter queries.

8
  • 4
    Thanks. But can you explain about race condition more? Did I understand you correctly that the first version would be safer than the second?
    – bodacydo
    Feb 25, 2010 at 15:10
  • 5
    No. Both versions I've showed you are exactly the same (one uses mapped objects and the other tables). But the third statement with += would result in SET counter=4 instead of SET counter=counter+1. So you shouldnt use the third +=` version.
    – tux21b
    Feb 25, 2010 at 15:54
  • 3
    Can you explain where mytable.c.counter comes from? That's a syntax I'm not familiar with, and it seems like it refers to the table definition instead of the selected row 'm'... so I'm not clear on how the math works.
    – mpounsett
    Dec 10, 2013 at 3:41
  • 22
    if you increment the actual value (e.g. 3 of type int) in Python, you will get a new integer (e.g. 4). If more clients do this concurrently, you might loose some updates. SqlAlchemy's column type has an overloaded add operator, so writing "column + 1" would result in an object that tells the database (and not Python!) to increment the column by one.
    – tux21b
    Dec 11, 2013 at 21:40
  • 2
    Excellent point about the race condition - that's an easy one to get wrong.
    – SuperShoot
    Nov 25, 2018 at 12:01
55

If you are using the SQL layer, then you can use arbitrary SQL expressions in the update statement:

conn.execute(tags.update(tags.c.tag_id == 5).values(count=tags.c.count + 1))

The ORM Query object also has an update method:

session.query(Tag).filter_by(tag_id=5).update({'count': Tag.count + 1})

The ORM version is smart enough to also update the count attribute on the object itself if it's in the session.

2
  • 1
    So sqlalchemy compiles everything in one query? or it sends a 'SELECT' and then an 'UPDATE'?
    – Rutrus
    Nov 2, 2020 at 9:18
  • 1
    @Rutrus to be extra sure you can use a transaction session with with session.begin(): and execute all commands in that code block. It commits or rollbacks automatically - docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/14/orm/session_transaction.html
    – dodancs
    Apr 24, 2022 at 9:21
1

Regarding @Leon comment you can rewrite code a little to avoid race condition.

async def inc_counter(id_: int):
    query = items.update(items.c.id==id_)
    return await db.execute(query, values={'counter': items.c.counter + 1})

P.S. If you a creating tables in class way you will need to access table attribute for that:

from sqlalchemy import update

async def inc_counter(id_: int):
    query = update(Items).filter(Items.id==id_)
    return await db.execute(query, values={'counter': Items.__table__.c.counter + 1})
1
  • I've deleted my post with the race condition to make it easier to find a better solution. Maybe you can edit your solution accordingly.
    – Leon
    Apr 20, 2023 at 14:07

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