21

I know sqlite3 has

data = {'test_col': 012345679}
sqlite3_conn.execute("""
    UPDATE test_db SET test_col = :test_col
    ;""", data)

and mysql-connector-python has

data = {'test_col': 012345679}
mysql_conn.execute("""
    UPDATE test_db SET test_col = %(test_col)s
    ;""", data)

but does pyodbc support any form of named parameters? I like being able to just pass a dict to the execute method. It is very convenient, and with some of my queries, such as INSERT INTO ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE, it is needed.

1
  • 1
    The short answer is "No" (ref: here). In some cases a workaround is possible, e.g., with EXEC for stored procedures in T-SQL, as explained in the answer here. Dec 9, 2015 at 13:14

1 Answer 1

18

It doesn't support named parameters, but bound parameters passed in the correct order are fairly straightforward:

x = "This"
y = 345

mssql_cur.execute("SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE colx = ? AND coly = ?", x, y)

or

mssql_cur.execute("SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE colx = ? AND coly = ?", (x, y))

More details and options here, such as passing executemany parameters:

https://github.com/mkleehammer/pyodbc/wiki/Cursor

Good luck!

2
  • Those are qmark style placeholders. I am talking about named style placeholders, or named parameters: sqlite3 --> :colname; mysql-connector --> %(colname)s
    – randomdev2
    Sep 23, 2015 at 21:45
  • 1
    I haven't been in the code in a while, but last I was, they were not supported. You can pass as x, y or (x, y). With executemany, you can pass as ((x, y), (a, b)). You can make a feature request here, it would be nice to have: github.com/mkleehammer/pyodbc/issues
    – FlipperPA
    Sep 24, 2015 at 0:37

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