I'm attempting to perform a query in the form of...
SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (val1, val2, val3...)
...where the values are stored in a Python list/tuple of arbitrary length. I can't seem to find a "clean" way to do it.
>>> db = connect(":memory:")
>>> db.execute("CREATE TABLE tab (col1 INTEGER, col2 TEXT)")
>>> db.execute("INSERT INTO tab VALUES(1,'one')")
>>> db.execute("INSERT INTO tab VALUES(2,'two')")
>>> db.execute("INSERT INTO tab VALUES(3,'three')")
>>> db.execute("INSERT INTO tab VALUES(4,'four')")
>>> db.execute("INSERT INTO tab VALUES(5,'five')")
>>> db.commit()
# Expected result
>>> db.execute("SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (1,3,4)").fetchall()
[(u'one',), (u'three',), (u'four',)]
>>> vals = (1,3,4)
>>> db.execute("SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (?)", vals).fetchall()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
sqlite3.ProgrammingError: Incorrect number of bindings supplied. The current statement uses 1, and there are 3 supplied.
>>> db.execute("SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (?)", (vals,)).fetchall()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
sqlite3.InterfaceError: Error binding parameter 0 - probably unsupported type.
>>> db.execute("SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (?)", (','.join(str(val) for val in vals),)).fetchall()
[]
>>>
Now I can do the following, which (I think... please correct me if I'm wrong) retains the security of the built-in parameter substitution, but it's still a bit ugly:
>>> db.execute("SELECT col2 FROM tab WHERE col1 IN (" + ",".join("?"*len(vals)) + ")", vals).fetchall()
[(u'one',), (u'three',), (u'four',)]
>>>
Is that my best option, or is there a nicer way around this?