Is it possible to get a row with all column names of a table like this?
|id|foo|bar|age|street|address|
I don't like to use Pragma table_info(bla)
.
Is it possible to get a row with all column names of a table like this?
|id|foo|bar|age|street|address|
I don't like to use Pragma table_info(bla)
.
SELECT sql FROM sqlite_master
WHERE tbl_name = 'table_name' AND type = 'table'
Then parse this value with Reg Exp (it's easy) which could looks similar to this: [(.*?)]
Alternatively you can use:
PRAGMA table_info(table_name)
Then parse this value with Reg Exp (it's easy)...
is really vague, a full example of a query with the regex to get the column defs would have gone a long way here.
Jul 3, 2017 at 9:46
"([^"]+)" (?!\()
seems to work.
Aug 26, 2017 at 13:14
If you are using the command line shell to SQLite then .headers on
before you perform your query. You only need to do this once in a given session.
.mode column
and .headers on
for those who want to get the typical SELECT output format they're used to seeing with other SQL shells.
Sep 16, 2016 at 15:56
Yes, you can achieve this by using the following commands:
sqlite> .headers on
sqlite> .mode column
The result of a select on your table will then look like:
id foo bar age street address
---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
1 val1 val2 val3 val4 val5
2 val6 val7 val8 val9 val10
You can use pragma related commands in sqlite like below
pragma table_info("table_name")
--Alternatively
select * from pragma_table_info("table_name")
If you require column names like id|foo|bar|age|street|address
, basically your answer is in below query.
select group_concat(name,'|') from pragma_table_info("table_name")
This helps for HTML5 SQLite:
tx.executeSql('SELECT name, sql FROM sqlite_master WHERE type="table" AND name = "your_table_name";', [], function (tx, results) {
var columnParts = results.rows.item(0).sql.replace(/^[^\(]+\(([^\)]+)\)/g, '$1').split(','); ///// RegEx
var columnNames = [];
for(i in columnParts) {
if(typeof columnParts[i] === 'string')
columnNames.push(columnParts[i].split(" ")[0]);
}
console.log(columnNames);
///// Your code which uses the columnNames;
});
You can reuse the regex in your language to get the column names.
Shorter Alternative:
tx.executeSql('SELECT name, sql FROM sqlite_master WHERE type="table" AND name = "your_table_name";', [], function (tx, results) {
var columnNames = results.rows.item(0).sql.replace(/^[^\(]+\(([^\)]+)\)/g, '$1').replace(/ [^,]+/g, '').split(',');
console.log(columnNames);
///// Your code which uses the columnNames;
});
sql
field of the SQLITE_MASTER table. since this field contains literal query text used to create the table, this is not always true. I'm also thinking it won't correctly handle field names that contain spaces.
Use a recursive query. Given
create table t (a int, b int, c int);
Run:
with recursive
a (cid, name) as (select cid, name from pragma_table_info('t')),
b (cid, name) as (
select cid, '|' || name || '|' from a where cid = 0
union all
select a.cid, b.name || a.name || '|' from a join b on a.cid = b.cid + 1
)
select name
from b
order by cid desc
limit 1;
Alternatively, just use group_concat
:
select '|' || group_concat(name, '|') || '|' from pragma_table_info('t')
Both yield:
|a|b|c|
The result set of a query in PHP offers a couple of functions allowing just that:
numCols()
columnName(int $column_number )
Example
$db = new SQLIte3('mysqlite.db');
$table = 'mytable';
$tableCol = getColName($db, $table);
for ($i=0; $i<count($tableCol); $i++){
echo "Column $i = ".$tableCol[$i]."\n";
}
function getColName($db, $table){
$qry = "SELECT * FROM $table LIMIT 1";
$result = $db->query($qry);
$nCols = $result->numCols();
for ($i = 0; $i < $ncols; $i++) {
$colName[$i] = $result->columnName($i);
}
return $colName;
}
$<?
$db = sqlite_open('mysqlitedb');
$cols = sqlite_fetch_column_types('form name'$db, SQLITE_ASSOC);
foreach ($cols as $column => $type) {
echo "Column: $column Type: $type\n";
}
Using @Tarkus's answer, here are the regexes I used in R:
getColNames <- function(conn, tableName) {
x <- dbGetQuery( conn, paste0("SELECT sql FROM sqlite_master WHERE tbl_name = '",tableName,"' AND type = 'table'") )[1,1]
x <- str_split(x,"\\n")[[1]][-1]
x <- sub("[()]","",x)
res <- gsub( '"',"",str_extract( x[1], '".+"' ) )
x <- x[-1]
x <- x[-length(x)]
res <- c( res, gsub( "\\t", "", str_extract( x, "\\t[0-9a-zA-Z_]+" ) ) )
res
}
Code is somewhat sloppy, but it appears to work.
Try this sqlite table schema parser, I implemented the sqlite table parser for parsing the table definitions in PHP.
It returns the full definitions (unique, primary key, type, precision, not null, references, table constraints... etc)
Easiest way to get the column names of the most recently executed SELECT is to use the cursor's description
property. A Python example:
print_me = "("
for description in cursor.description:
print_me += description[0] + ", "
print(print_me[0:-2] + ')')
# Example output: (inp, output, reason, cond_cnt, loop_likely)