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I am trying to execute the below query in SQLite from Python.

conn = sqlite3.connect('test.db')
c = conn.cursor()
names = ['name1','name2']
ids = ['id1','id2']
query = 'SELECT * FROM STUDENT_DETAILS WHERE NAME IN (%s)' % ','.join('?'*len(names)) + ' AND ID IN (%s)' % ','.join('?'*len(ids))
c.execute(query,(names, ids))
conn.close()

When I execute the above code, I am getting this below error.

sqlite3.ProgrammingError: Incorrect number of bindings supplied. The current statement uses 4, and there are 2 supplied.

I am able to execute the query with single IN clause in the query as shown below.

conn = sqlite3.connect('test.db')
c = conn.cursor()
names = ['name1','name2']
query = 'SELECT * FROM STUDENT_DETAILS WHERE NAME IN (%s)' % ','.join('?'*len(names))
c.execute(query,names)
conn.close()

I would like to know, how to substitute values, If I use multiple IN clause in the query.

1 Answer 1

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The number of ?s in the SQL query needs to match the number of items in the parameters tuple. In your first example there are two items in the tuple: names and ids. But there are four question marks. Try tuple(names) + tuple(ids), or define the variables as tuples using round brackets and then just use names + ids.

In the second example it's one tuple names containing two names, hence it works.

2
  • Thank you. If I want to add STATUS=? to the where condition in the query, how should I substitute the values. Mar 24, 2018 at 12:01
  • 1
    Assuming the status is at the end of the SQL, then tuple(names) + tuple(ids) + (status,).
    – Alex Hall
    Mar 24, 2018 at 12:08

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