12

I know there's a way to print an actual sql query from any sqlalchemy query object. However, I want to use a query as a parameterized form without parameters's value being rendered.

For instance, printed query looks like below.

SELECT "user".id AS user_id, "user".hashed_pw AS user_hashed_pw, 
"user".name AS user_name, "user".tel AS user_tel, "user".email AS user_email, 
"user".created_time AS user_created_time FROM "user" 
WHERE "user".name = :name_1 AND "user".age < :age_1

I passed name_1 as 'john' and age_1 as 30, but I don't know how to get the values of name_1 and age_1. I want to get a dictionary like {'name_1':'john', 'age_1':30}.

How can I do this?

1

1 Answer 1

6

When an ORM query is compiled, it's turned into sqlalchemy.engine.Compiled. It has statement attribute which is a sqlalchemy.sql.expression.ClauseElement which has params attribute.

In [3]: query = session.query(User).filter(User.age > 18, User.name == 'joe')
   ...: query.statement.compile().params
Out[3]: {'age_1': 18, 'name_1': 'joe'}

And typical SQLAlchemy ORM boilerplate for completeness.

In [1]: import sqlalchemy as sa
   ...: from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
   ...: from sqlalchemy.sql import func
   ...:
   ...: Base = declarative_base()
   ...:
   ...: class User(Base):
   ...:
   ...:     __tablename__ = 'user'
   ...:
   ...:     id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True)
   ...:     age = sa.Column(sa.Integer)
   ...:     hashed_pw = sa.Column(sa.String)
   ...:     name = sa.Column(sa.String)
   ...:     tel = sa.Column(sa.String)
   ...:     email = sa.Column(sa.String)
   ...:     created_time = sa.Column(sa.DateTime, server_default=func.now())

In [2]: engine = sa.create_engine('sqlite://')
   ...: Base.metadata.create_all(engine)
   ...: Session = sa.orm.sessionmaker(bind=engine)
   ...: session = Session()
   ...:
   ...: user1 = User(age=20, name='joe')
   ...: user2 = User(age=22, name='jon')
   ...: session.add_all([user1, user2])
   ...: session.commit()

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.