I would like to create a nullable, self-referencing relationship which can be deleted using SQLAlchemy. An example model is as follows (note, using Flask-SQLAlchemy):
class Person(db.Model):
__tablename__ = 'person'
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
partner_id = db.Column(db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('person.id'), nullable=True)
partner = db.relationship('Person', uselist=False)
So think of this as a table of cops who have only a single partner, but that partner may turn out to have been in the mafia all along, so they lose their partner for a while. A cop without a partner is fine, at least in database terms - but I assume over the course of the show their partnerless status means a lot of property damage.
Needless to say, this question: sqlalchemy: one-to-one relationship with declarative discusses how to set up this relationship. The question is how do you remove the relationship? Normally with a different foreign key you'd do this as follows:
joe.partner.remove(larry)
Where joe
and larry
are both Person
objects. However, via the uselist
argument, joe.partner
is now actually a Person
with no remove
method.
larry
got caught in the cross fire when the family had a civil war, so he needs to be out of the database. Will that delete the larry record?person
table that iscascade="all, delete, delete-orphan"
on the relationship. can't test it at the moment though, me computer is fscked