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Python

# sql/selectable.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2022 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors
# <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: https://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
"""The :class:`_expression.FromClause` class of SQL expression elements,
representing
SQL tables and derived rowsets.
"""
import collections
import itertools
from operator import attrgetter
from . import coercions
from . import operators
from . import roles
from . import traversals
from . import type_api
from . import visitors
from .annotation import Annotated
from .annotation import SupportsCloneAnnotations
from .base import _clone
from .base import _cloned_difference
from .base import _cloned_intersection
from .base import _entity_namespace_key
from .base import _expand_cloned
from .base import _from_objects
from .base import _generative
from .base import _select_iterables
from .base import CacheableOptions
from .base import ColumnCollection
from .base import ColumnSet
from .base import CompileState
from .base import DedupeColumnCollection
from .base import Executable
from .base import Generative
from .base import HasCompileState
from .base import HasMemoized
from .base import Immutable
from .base import prefix_anon_map
from .coercions import _document_text_coercion
from .elements import _anonymous_label
from .elements import and_
from .elements import BindParameter
from .elements import BooleanClauseList
from .elements import ClauseElement
from .elements import ClauseList
from .elements import ColumnClause
from .elements import GroupedElement
from .elements import Grouping
from .elements import literal_column
from .elements import TableValuedColumn
from .elements import UnaryExpression
from .visitors import InternalTraversal
from .. import exc
from .. import util
from ..inspection import inspect
class _OffsetLimitParam(BindParameter):
inherit_cache = True
@property
def _limit_offset_value(self):
return self.effective_value
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The standalone :func:`.subquery` function is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use select().subquery().",
)
def subquery(alias, *args, **kwargs):
r"""Return an :class:`.Subquery` object derived
from a :class:`_expression.Select`.
:param alias: the alias name for the subquery
:param \*args, \**kwargs: all other arguments are passed through to the
:func:`_expression.select` function.
"""
return Select.create_legacy_select(*args, **kwargs).subquery(alias)
class ReturnsRows(roles.ReturnsRowsRole, ClauseElement):
"""The base-most class for Core constructs that have some concept of
columns that can represent rows.
While the SELECT statement and TABLE are the primary things we think
of in this category, DML like INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE can also specify
RETURNING which means they can be used in CTEs and other forms, and
PostgreSQL has functions that return rows also.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
_is_returns_rows = True
# sub-elements of returns_rows
_is_from_clause = False
_is_select_statement = False
_is_lateral = False
@property
def selectable(self):
return self
@property
def _all_selected_columns(self):
"""A sequence of column expression objects that represents the
"selected" columns of this :class:`_expression.ReturnsRows`.
This is typically equivalent to .exported_columns except it is
delivered in the form of a straight sequence and not keyed
:class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`.
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
@property
def exported_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
that represents the "exported"
columns of this :class:`_expression.ReturnsRows`.
The "exported" columns represent the collection of
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
expressions that are rendered by this SQL
construct. There are primary varieties which are the
"FROM clause columns" of a FROM clause, such as a table, join,
or subquery, the "SELECTed columns", which are the columns in
the "columns clause" of a SELECT statement, and the RETURNING
columns in a DML statement..
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. seealso::
:attr:`_expression.FromClause.exported_columns`
:attr:`_expression.SelectBase.exported_columns`
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
class Selectable(ReturnsRows):
"""Mark a class as being selectable."""
__visit_name__ = "selectable"
is_selectable = True
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
raise NotImplementedError()
def lateral(self, name=None):
"""Return a LATERAL alias of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`.
The return value is the :class:`_expression.Lateral` construct also
provided by the top-level :func:`_expression.lateral` function.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_lateral_correlation` - overview of usage.
"""
return Lateral._construct(self, name)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
message="The :meth:`.Selectable.replace_selectable` method is "
"deprecated, and will be removed in a future release. Similar "
"functionality is available via the sqlalchemy.sql.visitors module.",
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def replace_selectable(self, old, alias):
"""Replace all occurrences of :class:`_expression.FromClause`
'old' with the given :class:`_expression.Alias`
object, returning a copy of this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
"""
return util.preloaded.sql_util.ClauseAdapter(alias).traverse(self)
def corresponding_column(self, column, require_embedded=False):
"""Given a :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`, return the exported
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement` object from the
:attr:`_expression.Selectable.exported_columns`
collection of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`
which corresponds to that
original :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` via a common ancestor
column.
:param column: the target :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
to be matched.
:param require_embedded: only return corresponding columns for
the given :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`, if the given
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
is actually present within a sub-element
of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`.
Normally the column will match if
it merely shares a common ancestor with one of the exported
columns of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`.
.. seealso::
:attr:`_expression.Selectable.exported_columns` - the
:class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
that is used for the operation.
:meth:`_expression.ColumnCollection.corresponding_column`
- implementation
method.
"""
return self.exported_columns.corresponding_column(
column, require_embedded
)
class HasPrefixes(object):
_prefixes = ()
_has_prefixes_traverse_internals = [
("_prefixes", InternalTraversal.dp_prefix_sequence)
]
@_generative
@_document_text_coercion(
"expr",
":meth:`_expression.HasPrefixes.prefix_with`",
":paramref:`.HasPrefixes.prefix_with.*expr`",
)
def prefix_with(self, *expr, **kw):
r"""Add one or more expressions following the statement keyword, i.e.
SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE. Generative.
This is used to support backend-specific prefix keywords such as those
provided by MySQL.
E.g.::
stmt = table.insert().prefix_with("LOW_PRIORITY", dialect="mysql")
# MySQL 5.7 optimizer hints
stmt = select(table).prefix_with(
"/*+ BKA(t1) */", dialect="mysql")
Multiple prefixes can be specified by multiple calls
to :meth:`_expression.HasPrefixes.prefix_with`.
:param \*expr: textual or :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
construct which
will be rendered following the INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
keyword.
:param \**kw: A single keyword 'dialect' is accepted. This is an
optional string dialect name which will
limit rendering of this prefix to only that dialect.
"""
dialect = kw.pop("dialect", None)
if kw:
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"Unsupported argument(s): %s" % ",".join(kw)
)
self._setup_prefixes(expr, dialect)
def _setup_prefixes(self, prefixes, dialect=None):
self._prefixes = self._prefixes + tuple(
[
(coercions.expect(roles.StatementOptionRole, p), dialect)
for p in prefixes
]
)
class HasSuffixes(object):
_suffixes = ()
_has_suffixes_traverse_internals = [
("_suffixes", InternalTraversal.dp_prefix_sequence)
]
@_generative
@_document_text_coercion(
"expr",
":meth:`_expression.HasSuffixes.suffix_with`",
":paramref:`.HasSuffixes.suffix_with.*expr`",
)
def suffix_with(self, *expr, **kw):
r"""Add one or more expressions following the statement as a whole.
This is used to support backend-specific suffix keywords on
certain constructs.
E.g.::
stmt = select(col1, col2).cte().suffix_with(
"cycle empno set y_cycle to 1 default 0", dialect="oracle")
Multiple suffixes can be specified by multiple calls
to :meth:`_expression.HasSuffixes.suffix_with`.
:param \*expr: textual or :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
construct which
will be rendered following the target clause.
:param \**kw: A single keyword 'dialect' is accepted. This is an
optional string dialect name which will
limit rendering of this suffix to only that dialect.
"""
dialect = kw.pop("dialect", None)
if kw:
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"Unsupported argument(s): %s" % ",".join(kw)
)
self._setup_suffixes(expr, dialect)
def _setup_suffixes(self, suffixes, dialect=None):
self._suffixes = self._suffixes + tuple(
[
(coercions.expect(roles.StatementOptionRole, p), dialect)
for p in suffixes
]
)
class HasHints(object):
_hints = util.immutabledict()
_statement_hints = ()
_has_hints_traverse_internals = [
("_statement_hints", InternalTraversal.dp_statement_hint_list),
("_hints", InternalTraversal.dp_table_hint_list),
]
def with_statement_hint(self, text, dialect_name="*"):
"""Add a statement hint to this :class:`_expression.Select` or
other selectable object.
This method is similar to :meth:`_expression.Select.with_hint`
except that
it does not require an individual table, and instead applies to the
statement as a whole.
Hints here are specific to the backend database and may include
directives such as isolation levels, file directives, fetch directives,
etc.
.. versionadded:: 1.0.0
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.with_hint`
:meth:`_expression.Select.prefix_with` - generic SELECT prefixing
which also can suit some database-specific HINT syntaxes such as
MySQL optimizer hints
"""
return self.with_hint(None, text, dialect_name)
@_generative
def with_hint(self, selectable, text, dialect_name="*"):
r"""Add an indexing or other executional context hint for the given
selectable to this :class:`_expression.Select` or other selectable
object.
The text of the hint is rendered in the appropriate
location for the database backend in use, relative
to the given :class:`_schema.Table` or :class:`_expression.Alias`
passed as the
``selectable`` argument. The dialect implementation
typically uses Python string substitution syntax
with the token ``%(name)s`` to render the name of
the table or alias. E.g. when using Oracle, the
following::
select(mytable).\
with_hint(mytable, "index(%(name)s ix_mytable)")
Would render SQL as::
select /*+ index(mytable ix_mytable) */ ... from mytable
The ``dialect_name`` option will limit the rendering of a particular
hint to a particular backend. Such as, to add hints for both Oracle
and Sybase simultaneously::
select(mytable).\
with_hint(mytable, "index(%(name)s ix_mytable)", 'oracle').\
with_hint(mytable, "WITH INDEX ix_mytable", 'sybase')
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.with_statement_hint`
"""
if selectable is None:
self._statement_hints += ((dialect_name, text),)
else:
self._hints = self._hints.union(
{
(
coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, selectable),
dialect_name,
): text
}
)
class FromClause(roles.AnonymizedFromClauseRole, Selectable):
"""Represent an element that can be used within the ``FROM``
clause of a ``SELECT`` statement.
The most common forms of :class:`_expression.FromClause` are the
:class:`_schema.Table` and the :func:`_expression.select` constructs. Key
features common to all :class:`_expression.FromClause` objects include:
* a :attr:`.c` collection, which provides per-name access to a collection
of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects.
* a :attr:`.primary_key` attribute, which is a collection of all those
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
objects that indicate the ``primary_key`` flag.
* Methods to generate various derivations of a "from" clause, including
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`,
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`,
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.select`.
"""
__visit_name__ = "fromclause"
named_with_column = False
_hide_froms = []
schema = None
"""Define the 'schema' attribute for this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
This is typically ``None`` for most objects except that of
:class:`_schema.Table`, where it is taken as the value of the
:paramref:`_schema.Table.schema` argument.
"""
is_selectable = True
_is_from_clause = True
_is_join = False
_use_schema_map = False
@util.deprecated_params(
whereclause=(
"2.0",
"The :paramref:`_sql.FromClause.select().whereclause` parameter "
"is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.0. "
"Please make use of "
"the :meth:`.Select.where` "
"method to add WHERE criteria to the SELECT statement.",
),
kwargs=(
"2.0",
"The :meth:`_sql.FromClause.select` method will no longer accept "
"keyword arguments in version 2.0. Please use generative methods "
"from the "
":class:`_sql.Select` construct in order to apply additional "
"modifications.",
),
)
def select(self, whereclause=None, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SELECT of this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
e.g.::
stmt = some_table.select().where(some_table.c.id == 5)
:param whereclause: a WHERE clause, equivalent to calling the
:meth:`_sql.Select.where` method.
:param \**kwargs: additional keyword arguments are passed to the
legacy constructor for :class:`_sql.Select` described at
:meth:`_sql.Select.create_legacy_select`.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.select` - general purpose
method which allows for arbitrary column lists.
"""
if whereclause is not None:
kwargs["whereclause"] = whereclause
return Select._create_select_from_fromclause(self, [self], **kwargs)
def join(self, right, onclause=None, isouter=False, full=False):
"""Return a :class:`_expression.Join` from this
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
to another :class:`FromClause`.
E.g.::
from sqlalchemy import join
j = user_table.join(address_table,
user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id)
stmt = select(user_table).select_from(j)
would emit SQL along the lines of::
SELECT user.id, user.name FROM user
JOIN address ON user.id = address.user_id
:param right: the right side of the join; this is any
:class:`_expression.FromClause` object such as a
:class:`_schema.Table` object, and
may also be a selectable-compatible object such as an ORM-mapped
class.
:param onclause: a SQL expression representing the ON clause of the
join. If left at ``None``, :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
will attempt to
join the two tables based on a foreign key relationship.
:param isouter: if True, render a LEFT OUTER JOIN, instead of JOIN.
:param full: if True, render a FULL OUTER JOIN, instead of LEFT OUTER
JOIN. Implies :paramref:`.FromClause.join.isouter`.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.join` - standalone function
:class:`_expression.Join` - the type of object produced
"""
return Join(self, right, onclause, isouter, full)
def outerjoin(self, right, onclause=None, full=False):
"""Return a :class:`_expression.Join` from this
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
to another :class:`FromClause`, with the "isouter" flag set to
True.
E.g.::
from sqlalchemy import outerjoin
j = user_table.outerjoin(address_table,
user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id)
The above is equivalent to::
j = user_table.join(
address_table,
user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id,
isouter=True)
:param right: the right side of the join; this is any
:class:`_expression.FromClause` object such as a
:class:`_schema.Table` object, and
may also be a selectable-compatible object such as an ORM-mapped
class.
:param onclause: a SQL expression representing the ON clause of the
join. If left at ``None``, :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
will attempt to
join the two tables based on a foreign key relationship.
:param full: if True, render a FULL OUTER JOIN, instead of
LEFT OUTER JOIN.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
:class:`_expression.Join`
"""
return Join(self, right, onclause, True, full)
def alias(self, name=None, flat=False):
"""Return an alias of this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
E.g.::
a2 = some_table.alias('a2')
The above code creates an :class:`_expression.Alias`
object which can be used
as a FROM clause in any SELECT statement.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_using_aliases`
:func:`_expression.alias`
"""
return Alias._construct(self, name)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.sqltypes")
def table_valued(self):
"""Return a :class:`_sql.TableValuedColumn` object for this
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
A :class:`_sql.TableValuedColumn` is a :class:`_sql.ColumnElement` that
represents a complete row in a table. Support for this construct is
backend dependent, and is supported in various forms by backends
such as PostgreSQL, Oracle and SQL Server.
E.g.::
>>> from sqlalchemy import select, column, func, table
>>> a = table("a", column("id"), column("x"), column("y"))
>>> stmt = select(func.row_to_json(a.table_valued()))
>>> print(stmt)
SELECT row_to_json(a) AS row_to_json_1
FROM a
.. versionadded:: 1.4.0b2
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_functions` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
"""
return TableValuedColumn(self, type_api.TABLEVALUE)
def tablesample(self, sampling, name=None, seed=None):
"""Return a TABLESAMPLE alias of this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
The return value is the :class:`_expression.TableSample`
construct also
provided by the top-level :func:`_expression.tablesample` function.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.tablesample` - usage guidelines and parameters
"""
return TableSample._construct(self, sampling, name, seed)
def is_derived_from(self, fromclause):
"""Return ``True`` if this :class:`_expression.FromClause` is
'derived' from the given ``FromClause``.
An example would be an Alias of a Table is derived from that Table.
"""
# this is essentially an "identity" check in the base class.
# Other constructs override this to traverse through
# contained elements.
return fromclause in self._cloned_set
def _is_lexical_equivalent(self, other):
"""Return ``True`` if this :class:`_expression.FromClause` and
the other represent the same lexical identity.
This tests if either one is a copy of the other, or
if they are the same via annotation identity.
"""
return self._cloned_set.intersection(other._cloned_set)
@property
def description(self):
"""A brief description of this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
Used primarily for error message formatting.
"""
return getattr(self, "name", self.__class__.__name__ + " object")
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, fromclause):
fromclause._columns._populate_separate_keys(
col._make_proxy(fromclause) for col in self.c
)
@property
def exported_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
that represents the "exported"
columns of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`.
The "exported" columns for a :class:`_expression.FromClause`
object are synonymous
with the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.columns` collection.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. seealso::
:attr:`_expression.Selectable.exported_columns`
:attr:`_expression.SelectBase.exported_columns`
"""
return self.columns
@util.memoized_property
def columns(self):
"""A named-based collection of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
objects maintained by this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
The :attr:`.columns`, or :attr:`.c` collection, is the gateway
to the construction of SQL expressions using table-bound or
other selectable-bound columns::
select(mytable).where(mytable.c.somecolumn == 5)
:return: a :class:`.ColumnCollection` object.
"""
if "_columns" not in self.__dict__:
self._init_collections()
self._populate_column_collection()
return self._columns.as_immutable()
@property
def entity_namespace(self):
"""Return a namespace used for name-based access in SQL expressions.
This is the namespace that is used to resolve "filter_by()" type
expressions, such as::
stmt.filter_by(address='some address')
It defaults to the ``.c`` collection, however internally it can
be overridden using the "entity_namespace" annotation to deliver
alternative results.
"""
return self.columns
@util.memoized_property
def primary_key(self):
"""Return the iterable collection of :class:`_schema.Column` objects
which comprise the primary key of this :class:`_selectable.FromClause`.
For a :class:`_schema.Table` object, this collection is represented
by the :class:`_schema.PrimaryKeyConstraint` which itself is an
iterable collection of :class:`_schema.Column` objects.
"""
self._init_collections()
self._populate_column_collection()
return self.primary_key
@util.memoized_property
def foreign_keys(self):
"""Return the collection of :class:`_schema.ForeignKey` marker objects
which this FromClause references.
Each :class:`_schema.ForeignKey` is a member of a
:class:`_schema.Table`-wide
:class:`_schema.ForeignKeyConstraint`.
.. seealso::
:attr:`_schema.Table.foreign_key_constraints`
"""
self._init_collections()
self._populate_column_collection()
return self.foreign_keys
def _reset_column_collection(self):
"""Reset the attributes linked to the ``FromClause.c`` attribute.
This collection is separate from all the other memoized things
as it has shown to be sensitive to being cleared out in situations
where enclosing code, typically in a replacement traversal scenario,
has already established strong relationships
with the exported columns.
The collection is cleared for the case where a table is having a
column added to it as well as within a Join during copy internals.
"""
for key in ["_columns", "columns", "primary_key", "foreign_keys"]:
self.__dict__.pop(key, None)
c = property(
attrgetter("columns"),
doc="""
A named-based collection of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
objects maintained by this :class:`_expression.FromClause`.
The :attr:`_sql.FromClause.c` attribute is an alias for the
:attr:`_sql.FromClause.columns` attribute.
:return: a :class:`.ColumnCollection`
""",
)
_select_iterable = property(attrgetter("columns"))
def _init_collections(self):
assert "_columns" not in self.__dict__
assert "primary_key" not in self.__dict__
assert "foreign_keys" not in self.__dict__
self._columns = ColumnCollection()
self.primary_key = ColumnSet()
self.foreign_keys = set()
@property
def _cols_populated(self):
return "_columns" in self.__dict__
def _populate_column_collection(self):
"""Called on subclasses to establish the .c collection.
Each implementation has a different way of establishing
this collection.
"""
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
"""Given a column added to the .c collection of an underlying
selectable, produce the local version of that column, assuming this
selectable ultimately should proxy this column.
this is used to "ping" a derived selectable to add a new column
to its .c. collection when a Column has been added to one of the
Table objects it ultimately derives from.
If the given selectable hasn't populated its .c. collection yet,
it should at least pass on the message to the contained selectables,
but it will return None.
This method is currently used by Declarative to allow Table
columns to be added to a partially constructed inheritance
mapping that may have already produced joins. The method
isn't public right now, as the full span of implications
and/or caveats aren't yet clear.
It's also possible that this functionality could be invoked by
default via an event, which would require that
selectables maintain a weak referencing collection of all
derivations.
"""
self._reset_column_collection()
def _anonymous_fromclause(self, name=None, flat=False):
return self.alias(name=name)
LABEL_STYLE_NONE = util.symbol(
"LABEL_STYLE_NONE",
"""Label style indicating no automatic labeling should be applied to the
columns clause of a SELECT statement.
Below, the columns named ``columna`` are both rendered as is, meaning that
the name ``columna`` can only refer to the first occurrence of this name
within a result set, as well as if the statement were used as a subquery::
>>> from sqlalchemy import table, column, select, true, LABEL_STYLE_NONE
>>> table1 = table("table1", column("columna"), column("columnb"))
>>> table2 = table("table2", column("columna"), column("columnc"))
>>> print(select(table1, table2).join(table2, true()).set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_NONE))
SELECT table1.columna, table1.columnb, table2.columna, table2.columnc
FROM table1 JOIN table2 ON true
Used with the :meth:`_sql.Select.set_label_style` method.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""", # noqa: E501
)
LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL = util.symbol(
"LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL",
"""Label style indicating all columns should be labeled as
``<tablename>_<columnname>`` when generating the columns clause of a SELECT
statement, to disambiguate same-named columns referenced from different
tables, aliases, or subqueries.
Below, all column names are given a label so that the two same-named
columns ``columna`` are disambiguated as ``table1_columna`` and
``table2_columna``::
>>> from sqlalchemy import table, column, select, true, LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL
>>> table1 = table("table1", column("columna"), column("columnb"))
>>> table2 = table("table2", column("columna"), column("columnc"))
>>> print(select(table1, table2).join(table2, true()).set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL))
SELECT table1.columna AS table1_columna, table1.columnb AS table1_columnb, table2.columna AS table2_columna, table2.columnc AS table2_columnc
FROM table1 JOIN table2 ON true
Used with the :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.set_label_style` method.
Equivalent to the legacy method ``Select.apply_labels()``;
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL` is SQLAlchemy's legacy
auto-labeling style. :data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY` provides a
less intrusive approach to disambiguation of same-named column expressions.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""", # noqa: E501
)
LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY = util.symbol(
"LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY",
"""Label style indicating that columns with a name that conflicts with
an existing name should be labeled with a semi-anonymizing label
when generating the columns clause of a SELECT statement.
Below, most column names are left unaffected, except for the second
occurrence of the name ``columna``, which is labeled using the
label ``columna_1`` to disambiguate it from that of ``tablea.columna``::
>>> from sqlalchemy import table, column, select, true, LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY
>>> table1 = table("table1", column("columna"), column("columnb"))
>>> table2 = table("table2", column("columna"), column("columnc"))
>>> print(select(table1, table2).join(table2, true()).set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY))
SELECT table1.columna, table1.columnb, table2.columna AS columna_1, table2.columnc
FROM table1 JOIN table2 ON true
Used with the :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.set_label_style` method,
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY` is the default labeling style
for all SELECT statements outside of :term:`1.x style` ORM queries.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
""", # noqa: E501,
)
LABEL_STYLE_DEFAULT = LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY
"""The default label style, refers to
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
class Join(roles.DMLTableRole, FromClause):
"""Represent a ``JOIN`` construct between two
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
elements.
The public constructor function for :class:`_expression.Join`
is the module-level
:func:`_expression.join()` function, as well as the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.join` method
of any :class:`_expression.FromClause` (e.g. such as
:class:`_schema.Table`).
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.join`
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
"""
__visit_name__ = "join"
_traverse_internals = [
("left", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("right", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("onclause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("isouter", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("full", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
]
_is_join = True
def __init__(self, left, right, onclause=None, isouter=False, full=False):
"""Construct a new :class:`_expression.Join`.
The usual entrypoint here is the :func:`_expression.join`
function or the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join` method of any
:class:`_expression.FromClause` object.
"""
self.left = coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, left, deannotate=True
)
self.right = coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, right, deannotate=True
).self_group()
if onclause is None:
self.onclause = self._match_primaries(self.left, self.right)
else:
# note: taken from If91f61527236fd4d7ae3cad1f24c38be921c90ba
# not merged yet
self.onclause = coercions.expect(
roles.OnClauseRole, onclause
).self_group(against=operators._asbool)
self.isouter = isouter
self.full = full
@classmethod
def _create_outerjoin(cls, left, right, onclause=None, full=False):
"""Return an ``OUTER JOIN`` clause element.
The returned object is an instance of :class:`_expression.Join`.
Similar functionality is also available via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.outerjoin` method on any
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
:param left: The left side of the join.
:param right: The right side of the join.
:param onclause: Optional criterion for the ``ON`` clause, is
derived from foreign key relationships established between
left and right otherwise.
To chain joins together, use the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
or
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.outerjoin` methods on the resulting
:class:`_expression.Join` object.
"""
return cls(left, right, onclause, isouter=True, full=full)
@classmethod
def _create_join(
cls, left, right, onclause=None, isouter=False, full=False
):
"""Produce a :class:`_expression.Join` object, given two
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
expressions.
E.g.::
j = join(user_table, address_table,
user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id)
stmt = select(user_table).select_from(j)
would emit SQL along the lines of::
SELECT user.id, user.name FROM user
JOIN address ON user.id = address.user_id
Similar functionality is available given any
:class:`_expression.FromClause` object (e.g. such as a
:class:`_schema.Table`) using
the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join` method.
:param left: The left side of the join.
:param right: the right side of the join; this is any
:class:`_expression.FromClause` object such as a
:class:`_schema.Table` object, and
may also be a selectable-compatible object such as an ORM-mapped
class.
:param onclause: a SQL expression representing the ON clause of the
join. If left at ``None``, :meth:`_expression.FromClause.join`
will attempt to
join the two tables based on a foreign key relationship.
:param isouter: if True, render a LEFT OUTER JOIN, instead of JOIN.
:param full: if True, render a FULL OUTER JOIN, instead of JOIN.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.join` - method form,
based on a given left side.
:class:`_expression.Join` - the type of object produced.
"""
return cls(left, right, onclause, isouter, full)
@property
def description(self):
return "Join object on %s(%d) and %s(%d)" % (
self.left.description,
id(self.left),
self.right.description,
id(self.right),
)
def is_derived_from(self, fromclause):
return (
# use hash() to ensure direct comparison to annotated works
# as well
hash(fromclause) == hash(self)
or self.left.is_derived_from(fromclause)
or self.right.is_derived_from(fromclause)
)
def self_group(self, against=None):
return FromGrouping(self)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def _populate_column_collection(self):
sqlutil = util.preloaded.sql_util
columns = [c for c in self.left.columns] + [
c for c in self.right.columns
]
self.primary_key.extend(
sqlutil.reduce_columns(
(c for c in columns if c.primary_key), self.onclause
)
)
self._columns._populate_separate_keys(
(col._tq_key_label, col) for col in columns
)
self.foreign_keys.update(
itertools.chain(*[col.foreign_keys for col in columns])
)
def _copy_internals(self, clone=_clone, **kw):
# see Select._copy_internals() for similar concept
# here we pre-clone "left" and "right" so that we can
# determine the new FROM clauses
all_the_froms = set(
itertools.chain(
_from_objects(self.left),
_from_objects(self.right),
)
)
# run the clone on those. these will be placed in the
# cache used by the clone function
new_froms = {f: clone(f, **kw) for f in all_the_froms}
# set up a special replace function that will replace for
# ColumnClause with parent table referring to those
# replaced FromClause objects
def replace(obj, **kw):
if isinstance(obj, ColumnClause) and obj.table in new_froms:
newelem = new_froms[obj.table].corresponding_column(obj)
return newelem
kw["replace"] = replace
# run normal _copy_internals. the clones for
# left and right will come from the clone function's
# cache
super(Join, self)._copy_internals(clone=clone, **kw)
self._reset_memoizations()
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
super(Join, self)._refresh_for_new_column(column)
self.left._refresh_for_new_column(column)
self.right._refresh_for_new_column(column)
def _match_primaries(self, left, right):
if isinstance(left, Join):
left_right = left.right
else:
left_right = None
return self._join_condition(left, right, a_subset=left_right)
@classmethod
def _join_condition(
cls, a, b, a_subset=None, consider_as_foreign_keys=None
):
"""Create a join condition between two tables or selectables.
e.g.::
join_condition(tablea, tableb)
would produce an expression along the lines of::
tablea.c.id==tableb.c.tablea_id
The join is determined based on the foreign key relationships
between the two selectables. If there are multiple ways
to join, or no way to join, an error is raised.
:param a_subset: An optional expression that is a sub-component
of ``a``. An attempt will be made to join to just this sub-component
first before looking at the full ``a`` construct, and if found
will be successful even if there are other ways to join to ``a``.
This allows the "right side" of a join to be passed thereby
providing a "natural join".
"""
constraints = cls._joincond_scan_left_right(
a, a_subset, b, consider_as_foreign_keys
)
if len(constraints) > 1:
cls._joincond_trim_constraints(
a, b, constraints, consider_as_foreign_keys
)
if len(constraints) == 0:
if isinstance(b, FromGrouping):
hint = (
" Perhaps you meant to convert the right side to a "
"subquery using alias()?"
)
else:
hint = ""
raise exc.NoForeignKeysError(
"Can't find any foreign key relationships "
"between '%s' and '%s'.%s"
% (a.description, b.description, hint)
)
crit = [(x == y) for x, y in list(constraints.values())[0]]
if len(crit) == 1:
return crit[0]
else:
return and_(*crit)
@classmethod
def _can_join(cls, left, right, consider_as_foreign_keys=None):
if isinstance(left, Join):
left_right = left.right
else:
left_right = None
constraints = cls._joincond_scan_left_right(
a=left,
b=right,
a_subset=left_right,
consider_as_foreign_keys=consider_as_foreign_keys,
)
return bool(constraints)
@classmethod
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def _joincond_scan_left_right(
cls, a, a_subset, b, consider_as_foreign_keys
):
sql_util = util.preloaded.sql_util
a = coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, a)
b = coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, b)
constraints = collections.defaultdict(list)
for left in (a_subset, a):
if left is None:
continue
for fk in sorted(
b.foreign_keys, key=lambda fk: fk.parent._creation_order
):
if (
consider_as_foreign_keys is not None
and fk.parent not in consider_as_foreign_keys
):
continue
try:
col = fk.get_referent(left)
except exc.NoReferenceError as nrte:
table_names = {t.name for t in sql_util.find_tables(left)}
if nrte.table_name in table_names:
raise
else:
continue
if col is not None:
constraints[fk.constraint].append((col, fk.parent))
if left is not b:
for fk in sorted(
left.foreign_keys, key=lambda fk: fk.parent._creation_order
):
if (
consider_as_foreign_keys is not None
and fk.parent not in consider_as_foreign_keys
):
continue
try:
col = fk.get_referent(b)
except exc.NoReferenceError as nrte:
table_names = {t.name for t in sql_util.find_tables(b)}
if nrte.table_name in table_names:
raise
else:
continue
if col is not None:
constraints[fk.constraint].append((col, fk.parent))
if constraints:
break
return constraints
@classmethod
def _joincond_trim_constraints(
cls, a, b, constraints, consider_as_foreign_keys
):
# more than one constraint matched. narrow down the list
# to include just those FKCs that match exactly to
# "consider_as_foreign_keys".
if consider_as_foreign_keys:
for const in list(constraints):
if set(f.parent for f in const.elements) != set(
consider_as_foreign_keys
):
del constraints[const]
# if still multiple constraints, but
# they all refer to the exact same end result, use it.
if len(constraints) > 1:
dedupe = set(tuple(crit) for crit in constraints.values())
if len(dedupe) == 1:
key = list(constraints)[0]
constraints = {key: constraints[key]}
if len(constraints) != 1:
raise exc.AmbiguousForeignKeysError(
"Can't determine join between '%s' and '%s'; "
"tables have more than one foreign key "
"constraint relationship between them. "
"Please specify the 'onclause' of this "
"join explicitly." % (a.description, b.description)
)
@util.deprecated_params(
whereclause=(
"2.0",
"The :paramref:`_sql.Join.select().whereclause` parameter "
"is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.0. "
"Please make use of "
"the :meth:`.Select.where` "
"method to add WHERE criteria to the SELECT statement.",
),
kwargs=(
"2.0",
"The :meth:`_sql.Join.select` method will no longer accept "
"keyword arguments in version 2.0. Please use generative "
"methods from the "
":class:`_sql.Select` construct in order to apply additional "
"modifications.",
),
)
def select(self, whereclause=None, **kwargs):
r"""Create a :class:`_expression.Select` from this
:class:`_expression.Join`.
E.g.::
stmt = table_a.join(table_b, table_a.c.id == table_b.c.a_id)
stmt = stmt.select()
The above will produce a SQL string resembling::
SELECT table_a.id, table_a.col, table_b.id, table_b.a_id
FROM table_a JOIN table_b ON table_a.id = table_b.a_id
:param whereclause: WHERE criteria, same as calling
:meth:`_sql.Select.where` on the resulting statement
:param \**kwargs: additional keyword arguments are passed to the
legacy constructor for :class:`_sql.Select` described at
:meth:`_sql.Select.create_legacy_select`.
"""
collist = [self.left, self.right]
if whereclause is not None:
kwargs["whereclause"] = whereclause
return Select._create_select_from_fromclause(
self, collist, **kwargs
).select_from(self)
@property
@util.deprecated_20(
":attr:`.Executable.bind`",
alternative="Bound metadata is being removed as of SQLAlchemy 2.0.",
enable_warnings=False,
)
def bind(self):
"""Return the bound engine associated with either the left or right
side of this :class:`_sql.Join`.
"""
return self.left.bind or self.right.bind
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def _anonymous_fromclause(self, name=None, flat=False):
sqlutil = util.preloaded.sql_util
if flat:
if name is not None:
raise exc.ArgumentError("Can't send name argument with flat")
left_a, right_a = (
self.left._anonymous_fromclause(flat=True),
self.right._anonymous_fromclause(flat=True),
)
adapter = sqlutil.ClauseAdapter(left_a).chain(
sqlutil.ClauseAdapter(right_a)
)
return left_a.join(
right_a,
adapter.traverse(self.onclause),
isouter=self.isouter,
full=self.full,
)
else:
return (
self.select()
.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL)
.correlate(None)
.alias(name)
)
@util.deprecated_20(
":meth:`_sql.Join.alias`",
alternative="Create a select + subquery, or alias the "
"individual tables inside the join, instead.",
)
def alias(self, name=None, flat=False):
r"""Return an alias of this :class:`_expression.Join`.
The default behavior here is to first produce a SELECT
construct from this :class:`_expression.Join`, then to produce an
:class:`_expression.Alias` from that. So given a join of the form::
j = table_a.join(table_b, table_a.c.id == table_b.c.a_id)
The JOIN by itself would look like::
table_a JOIN table_b ON table_a.id = table_b.a_id
Whereas the alias of the above, ``j.alias()``, would in a
SELECT context look like::
(SELECT table_a.id AS table_a_id, table_b.id AS table_b_id,
table_b.a_id AS table_b_a_id
FROM table_a
JOIN table_b ON table_a.id = table_b.a_id) AS anon_1
The equivalent long-hand form, given a :class:`_expression.Join`
object ``j``, is::
from sqlalchemy import select, alias
j = alias(
select(j.left, j.right).\
select_from(j).\
set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL).\
correlate(False),
name=name
)
The selectable produced by :meth:`_expression.Join.alias`
features the same
columns as that of the two individual selectables presented under
a single name - the individual columns are "auto-labeled", meaning
the ``.c.`` collection of the resulting :class:`_expression.Alias`
represents
the names of the individual columns using a
``<tablename>_<columname>`` scheme::
j.c.table_a_id
j.c.table_b_a_id
:meth:`_expression.Join.alias` also features an alternate
option for aliasing joins which produces no enclosing SELECT and
does not normally apply labels to the column names. The
``flat=True`` option will call :meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
against the left and right sides individually.
Using this option, no new ``SELECT`` is produced;
we instead, from a construct as below::
j = table_a.join(table_b, table_a.c.id == table_b.c.a_id)
j = j.alias(flat=True)
we get a result like this::
table_a AS table_a_1 JOIN table_b AS table_b_1 ON
table_a_1.id = table_b_1.a_id
The ``flat=True`` argument is also propagated to the contained
selectables, so that a composite join such as::
j = table_a.join(
table_b.join(table_c,
table_b.c.id == table_c.c.b_id),
table_b.c.a_id == table_a.c.id
).alias(flat=True)
Will produce an expression like::
table_a AS table_a_1 JOIN (
table_b AS table_b_1 JOIN table_c AS table_c_1
ON table_b_1.id = table_c_1.b_id
) ON table_a_1.id = table_b_1.a_id
The standalone :func:`_expression.alias` function as well as the
base :meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
method also support the ``flat=True``
argument as a no-op, so that the argument can be passed to the
``alias()`` method of any selectable.
:param name: name given to the alias.
:param flat: if True, produce an alias of the left and right
sides of this :class:`_expression.Join` and return the join of those
two selectables. This produces join expression that does not
include an enclosing SELECT.
.. seealso::
:ref:`core_tutorial_aliases`
:func:`_expression.alias`
"""
return self._anonymous_fromclause(flat=flat, name=name)
@property
def _hide_froms(self):
return itertools.chain(
*[_from_objects(x.left, x.right) for x in self._cloned_set]
)
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return [self] + self.left._from_objects + self.right._from_objects
class NoInit(object):
def __init__(self, *arg, **kw):
raise NotImplementedError(
"The %s class is not intended to be constructed "
"directly. Please use the %s() standalone "
"function or the %s() method available from appropriate "
"selectable objects."
% (
self.__class__.__name__,
self.__class__.__name__.lower(),
self.__class__.__name__.lower(),
)
)
# FromClause ->
# AliasedReturnsRows
# -> Alias only for FromClause
# -> Subquery only for SelectBase
# -> CTE only for HasCTE -> SelectBase, DML
# -> Lateral -> FromClause, but we accept SelectBase
# w/ non-deprecated coercion
# -> TableSample -> only for FromClause
class AliasedReturnsRows(NoInit, FromClause):
"""Base class of aliases against tables, subqueries, and other
selectables."""
_is_from_container = True
named_with_column = True
_supports_derived_columns = False
_traverse_internals = [
("element", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("name", InternalTraversal.dp_anon_name),
]
@classmethod
def _construct(cls, *arg, **kw):
obj = cls.__new__(cls)
obj._init(*arg, **kw)
return obj
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, returnsrows, name=None):
"""Base factory method. Subclasses need to provide this."""
raise NotImplementedError()
def _init(self, selectable, name=None):
self.element = coercions.expect(
roles.ReturnsRowsRole, selectable, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
self.element = selectable
self._orig_name = name
if name is None:
if (
isinstance(selectable, FromClause)
and selectable.named_with_column
):
name = getattr(selectable, "name", None)
if isinstance(name, _anonymous_label):
name = None
name = _anonymous_label.safe_construct(id(self), name or "anon")
self.name = name
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
super(AliasedReturnsRows, self)._refresh_for_new_column(column)
self.element._refresh_for_new_column(column)
@property
def description(self):
name = self.name
if isinstance(name, _anonymous_label):
name = "anon_1"
if util.py3k:
return name
else:
return name.encode("ascii", "backslashreplace")
@property
def original(self):
"""Legacy for dialects that are referring to Alias.original."""
return self.element
def is_derived_from(self, fromclause):
if fromclause in self._cloned_set:
return True
return self.element.is_derived_from(fromclause)
def _populate_column_collection(self):
self.element._generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self)
def _copy_internals(self, clone=_clone, **kw):
existing_element = self.element
super(AliasedReturnsRows, self)._copy_internals(clone=clone, **kw)
# the element clone is usually against a Table that returns the
# same object. don't reset exported .c. collections and other
# memoized details if it was not changed. this saves a lot on
# performance.
if existing_element is not self.element:
self._reset_column_collection()
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return [self]
@property
def bind(self):
return self.element.bind
class Alias(roles.DMLTableRole, AliasedReturnsRows):
"""Represents an table or selectable alias (AS).
Represents an alias, as typically applied to any table or
sub-select within a SQL statement using the ``AS`` keyword (or
without the keyword on certain databases such as Oracle).
This object is constructed from the :func:`_expression.alias` module
level function as well as the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
method available
on all :class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
"""
__visit_name__ = "alias"
inherit_cache = True
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, selectable, name=None, flat=False):
"""Return an :class:`_expression.Alias` object.
An :class:`_expression.Alias` represents any
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
with an alternate name assigned within SQL, typically using the ``AS``
clause when generated, e.g. ``SELECT * FROM table AS aliasname``.
Similar functionality is available via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
method available on all :class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
In terms of
a SELECT object as generated from the :func:`_expression.select`
function, the :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.alias` method returns an
:class:`_expression.Alias` or similar object which represents a named,
parenthesized subquery.
When an :class:`_expression.Alias` is created from a
:class:`_schema.Table` object,
this has the effect of the table being rendered
as ``tablename AS aliasname`` in a SELECT statement.
For :func:`_expression.select` objects, the effect is that of
creating a named subquery, i.e. ``(select ...) AS aliasname``.
The ``name`` parameter is optional, and provides the name
to use in the rendered SQL. If blank, an "anonymous" name
will be deterministically generated at compile time.
Deterministic means the name is guaranteed to be unique against
other constructs used in the same statement, and will also be the
same name for each successive compilation of the same statement
object.
:param selectable: any :class:`_expression.FromClause` subclass,
such as a table, select statement, etc.
:param name: string name to be assigned as the alias.
If ``None``, a name will be deterministically generated
at compile time.
:param flat: Will be passed through to if the given selectable
is an instance of :class:`_expression.Join` - see
:meth:`_expression.Join.alias`
for details.
"""
return coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, selectable, allow_select=True
).alias(name=name, flat=flat)
class TableValuedAlias(Alias):
"""An alias against a "table valued" SQL function.
This construct provides for a SQL function that returns columns
to be used in the FROM clause of a SELECT statement. The
object is generated using the :meth:`_functions.FunctionElement.table_valued`
method, e.g.::
>>> from sqlalchemy import select, func
>>> fn = func.json_array_elements_text('["one", "two", "three"]').table_valued("value")
>>> print(select(fn.c.value))
SELECT anon_1.value
FROM json_array_elements_text(:json_array_elements_text_1) AS anon_1
.. versionadded:: 1.4.0b2
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_functions_table_valued` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
""" # noqa: E501
__visit_name__ = "table_valued_alias"
_supports_derived_columns = True
_render_derived = False
_render_derived_w_types = False
joins_implicitly = False
_traverse_internals = [
("element", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("name", InternalTraversal.dp_anon_name),
("_tableval_type", InternalTraversal.dp_type),
("_render_derived", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("_render_derived_w_types", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
]
def _init(
self,
selectable,
name=None,
table_value_type=None,
joins_implicitly=False,
):
super(TableValuedAlias, self)._init(selectable, name=name)
self.joins_implicitly = joins_implicitly
self._tableval_type = (
type_api.TABLEVALUE
if table_value_type is None
else table_value_type
)
@HasMemoized.memoized_attribute
def column(self):
"""Return a column expression representing this
:class:`_sql.TableValuedAlias`.
This accessor is used to implement the
:meth:`_functions.FunctionElement.column_valued` method. See that
method for further details.
E.g.::
>>> print(select(func.some_func().table_valued("value").column))
SELECT anon_1 FROM some_func() AS anon_1
.. seealso::
:meth:`_functions.FunctionElement.column_valued`
"""
return TableValuedColumn(self, self._tableval_type)
def alias(self, name=None):
"""Return a new alias of this :class:`_sql.TableValuedAlias`.
This creates a distinct FROM object that will be distinguished
from the original one when used in a SQL statement.
"""
tva = TableValuedAlias._construct(
self,
name=name,
table_value_type=self._tableval_type,
joins_implicitly=self.joins_implicitly,
)
if self._render_derived:
tva._render_derived = True
tva._render_derived_w_types = self._render_derived_w_types
return tva
def lateral(self, name=None):
"""Return a new :class:`_sql.TableValuedAlias` with the lateral flag
set, so that it renders as LATERAL.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.lateral`
"""
tva = self.alias(name=name)
tva._is_lateral = True
return tva
def render_derived(self, name=None, with_types=False):
"""Apply "render derived" to this :class:`_sql.TableValuedAlias`.
This has the effect of the individual column names listed out
after the alias name in the "AS" sequence, e.g.::
>>> print(
... select(
... func.unnest(array(["one", "two", "three"])).
table_valued("x", with_ordinality="o").render_derived()
... )
... )
SELECT anon_1.x, anon_1.o
FROM unnest(ARRAY[%(param_1)s, %(param_2)s, %(param_3)s]) WITH ORDINALITY AS anon_1(x, o)
The ``with_types`` keyword will render column types inline within
the alias expression (this syntax currently applies to the
PostgreSQL database)::
>>> print(
... select(
... func.json_to_recordset(
... '[{"a":1,"b":"foo"},{"a":"2","c":"bar"}]'
... )
... .table_valued(column("a", Integer), column("b", String))
... .render_derived(with_types=True)
... )
... )
SELECT anon_1.a, anon_1.b FROM json_to_recordset(:json_to_recordset_1)
AS anon_1(a INTEGER, b VARCHAR)
:param name: optional string name that will be applied to the alias
generated. If left as None, a unique anonymizing name will be used.
:param with_types: if True, the derived columns will include the
datatype specification with each column. This is a special syntax
currently known to be required by PostgreSQL for some SQL functions.
""" # noqa: E501
# note: don't use the @_generative system here, keep a reference
# to the original object. otherwise you can have re-use of the
# python id() of the original which can cause name conflicts if
# a new anon-name grabs the same identifier as the local anon-name
# (just saw it happen on CI)
# construct against original to prevent memory growth
# for repeated generations
new_alias = TableValuedAlias._construct(
self.element,
name=name,
table_value_type=self._tableval_type,
joins_implicitly=self.joins_implicitly,
)
new_alias._render_derived = True
new_alias._render_derived_w_types = with_types
return new_alias
class Lateral(AliasedReturnsRows):
"""Represent a LATERAL subquery.
This object is constructed from the :func:`_expression.lateral` module
level function as well as the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.lateral`
method available
on all :class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
While LATERAL is part of the SQL standard, currently only more recent
PostgreSQL versions provide support for this keyword.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_lateral_correlation` - overview of usage.
"""
__visit_name__ = "lateral"
_is_lateral = True
inherit_cache = True
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, selectable, name=None):
"""Return a :class:`_expression.Lateral` object.
:class:`_expression.Lateral` is an :class:`_expression.Alias`
subclass that represents
a subquery with the LATERAL keyword applied to it.
The special behavior of a LATERAL subquery is that it appears in the
FROM clause of an enclosing SELECT, but may correlate to other
FROM clauses of that SELECT. It is a special case of subquery
only supported by a small number of backends, currently more recent
PostgreSQL versions.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_lateral_correlation` - overview of usage.
"""
return coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, selectable, explicit_subquery=True
).lateral(name=name)
class TableSample(AliasedReturnsRows):
"""Represent a TABLESAMPLE clause.
This object is constructed from the :func:`_expression.tablesample` module
level function as well as the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.tablesample`
method
available on all :class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.tablesample`
"""
__visit_name__ = "tablesample"
_traverse_internals = AliasedReturnsRows._traverse_internals + [
("sampling", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("seed", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
]
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, selectable, sampling, name=None, seed=None):
"""Return a :class:`_expression.TableSample` object.
:class:`_expression.TableSample` is an :class:`_expression.Alias`
subclass that represents
a table with the TABLESAMPLE clause applied to it.
:func:`_expression.tablesample`
is also available from the :class:`_expression.FromClause`
class via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.tablesample` method.
The TABLESAMPLE clause allows selecting a randomly selected approximate
percentage of rows from a table. It supports multiple sampling methods,
most commonly BERNOULLI and SYSTEM.
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import func
selectable = people.tablesample(
func.bernoulli(1),
name='alias',
seed=func.random())
stmt = select(selectable.c.people_id)
Assuming ``people`` with a column ``people_id``, the above
statement would render as::
SELECT alias.people_id FROM
people AS alias TABLESAMPLE bernoulli(:bernoulli_1)
REPEATABLE (random())
.. versionadded:: 1.1
:param sampling: a ``float`` percentage between 0 and 100 or
:class:`_functions.Function`.
:param name: optional alias name
:param seed: any real-valued SQL expression. When specified, the
REPEATABLE sub-clause is also rendered.
"""
return coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, selectable).tablesample(
sampling, name=name, seed=seed
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.functions")
def _init(self, selectable, sampling, name=None, seed=None):
functions = util.preloaded.sql_functions
if not isinstance(sampling, functions.Function):
sampling = functions.func.system(sampling)
self.sampling = sampling
self.seed = seed
super(TableSample, self)._init(selectable, name=name)
def _get_method(self):
return self.sampling
class CTE(
roles.DMLTableRole,
roles.IsCTERole,
Generative,
HasPrefixes,
HasSuffixes,
AliasedReturnsRows,
):
"""Represent a Common Table Expression.
The :class:`_expression.CTE` object is obtained using the
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.cte` method from any SELECT statement. A less often
available syntax also allows use of the :meth:`_sql.HasCTE.cte` method
present on :term:`DML` constructs such as :class:`_sql.Insert`,
:class:`_sql.Update` and
:class:`_sql.Delete`. See the :meth:`_sql.HasCTE.cte` method for
usage details on CTEs.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_subqueries_ctes` - in the 2.0 tutorial
:meth:`_sql.HasCTE.cte` - examples of calling styles
"""
__visit_name__ = "cte"
_traverse_internals = (
AliasedReturnsRows._traverse_internals
+ [
("_cte_alias", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_restates", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("recursive", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("nesting", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
]
+ HasPrefixes._has_prefixes_traverse_internals
+ HasSuffixes._has_suffixes_traverse_internals
)
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, selectable, name=None, recursive=False):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.CTE`,
or Common Table Expression instance.
Please see :meth:`_expression.HasCTE.cte` for detail on CTE usage.
"""
return coercions.expect(roles.HasCTERole, selectable).cte(
name=name, recursive=recursive
)
def _init(
self,
selectable,
name=None,
recursive=False,
nesting=False,
_cte_alias=None,
_restates=None,
_prefixes=None,
_suffixes=None,
):
self.recursive = recursive
self.nesting = nesting
self._cte_alias = _cte_alias
# Keep recursivity reference with union/union_all
self._restates = _restates
if _prefixes:
self._prefixes = _prefixes
if _suffixes:
self._suffixes = _suffixes
super(CTE, self)._init(selectable, name=name)
def _populate_column_collection(self):
if self._cte_alias is not None:
self._cte_alias._generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self)
else:
self.element._generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self)
def alias(self, name=None, flat=False):
"""Return an :class:`_expression.Alias` of this
:class:`_expression.CTE`.
This method is a CTE-specific specialization of the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias` method.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_using_aliases`
:func:`_expression.alias`
"""
return CTE._construct(
self.element,
name=name,
recursive=self.recursive,
nesting=self.nesting,
_cte_alias=self,
_prefixes=self._prefixes,
_suffixes=self._suffixes,
)
def union(self, *other):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.CTE` with a SQL ``UNION``
of the original CTE against the given selectables provided
as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28 multiple elements are now accepted.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.HasCTE.cte` - examples of calling styles
"""
return CTE._construct(
self.element.union(*other),
name=self.name,
recursive=self.recursive,
nesting=self.nesting,
_restates=self,
_prefixes=self._prefixes,
_suffixes=self._suffixes,
)
def union_all(self, *other):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.CTE` with a SQL ``UNION ALL``
of the original CTE against the given selectables provided
as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28 multiple elements are now accepted.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.HasCTE.cte` - examples of calling styles
"""
return CTE._construct(
self.element.union_all(*other),
name=self.name,
recursive=self.recursive,
nesting=self.nesting,
_restates=self,
_prefixes=self._prefixes,
_suffixes=self._suffixes,
)
def _get_reference_cte(self):
"""
A recursive CTE is updated to attach the recursive part.
Updated CTEs should still refer to the original CTE.
This function returns this reference identifier.
"""
return self._restates if self._restates is not None else self
class HasCTE(roles.HasCTERole):
"""Mixin that declares a class to include CTE support.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
"""
_has_ctes_traverse_internals = [
("_independent_ctes", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
]
_independent_ctes = ()
@_generative
def add_cte(self, cte):
"""Add a :class:`_sql.CTE` to this statement object that will be
independently rendered even if not referenced in the statement
otherwise.
This feature is useful for the use case of embedding a DML statement
such as an INSERT or UPDATE as a CTE inline with a primary statement
that may draw from its results indirectly; while PostgreSQL is known
to support this usage, it may not be supported by other backends.
E.g.::
from sqlalchemy import table, column, select
t = table('t', column('c1'), column('c2'))
ins = t.insert().values({"c1": "x", "c2": "y"}).cte()
stmt = select(t).add_cte(ins)
Would render::
WITH anon_1 AS
(INSERT INTO t (c1, c2) VALUES (:param_1, :param_2))
SELECT t.c1, t.c2
FROM t
Above, the "anon_1" CTE is not referred towards in the SELECT
statement, however still accomplishes the task of running an INSERT
statement.
Similarly in a DML-related context, using the PostgreSQL
:class:`_postgresql.Insert` construct to generate an "upsert"::
from sqlalchemy import table, column
from sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql import insert
t = table("t", column("c1"), column("c2"))
delete_statement_cte = (
t.delete().where(t.c.c1 < 1).cte("deletions")
)
insert_stmt = insert(t).values({"c1": 1, "c2": 2})
update_statement = insert_stmt.on_conflict_do_update(
index_elements=[t.c.c1],
set_={
"c1": insert_stmt.excluded.c1,
"c2": insert_stmt.excluded.c2,
},
).add_cte(delete_statement_cte)
print(update_statement)
The above statement renders as::
WITH deletions AS
(DELETE FROM t WHERE t.c1 < %(c1_1)s)
INSERT INTO t (c1, c2) VALUES (%(c1)s, %(c2)s)
ON CONFLICT (c1) DO UPDATE SET c1 = excluded.c1, c2 = excluded.c2
.. versionadded:: 1.4.21
"""
cte = coercions.expect(roles.IsCTERole, cte)
self._independent_ctes += (cte,)
def cte(self, name=None, recursive=False, nesting=False):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.CTE`,
or Common Table Expression instance.
Common table expressions are a SQL standard whereby SELECT
statements can draw upon secondary statements specified along
with the primary statement, using a clause called "WITH".
Special semantics regarding UNION can also be employed to
allow "recursive" queries, where a SELECT statement can draw
upon the set of rows that have previously been selected.
CTEs can also be applied to DML constructs UPDATE, INSERT
and DELETE on some databases, both as a source of CTE rows
when combined with RETURNING, as well as a consumer of
CTE rows.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1 Added support for UPDATE/INSERT/DELETE as
CTE, CTEs added to UPDATE/INSERT/DELETE.
SQLAlchemy detects :class:`_expression.CTE` objects, which are treated
similarly to :class:`_expression.Alias` objects, as special elements
to be delivered to the FROM clause of the statement as well
as to a WITH clause at the top of the statement.
For special prefixes such as PostgreSQL "MATERIALIZED" and
"NOT MATERIALIZED", the :meth:`_expression.CTE.prefix_with`
method may be
used to establish these.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3.13 Added support for prefixes.
In particular - MATERIALIZED and NOT MATERIALIZED.
:param name: name given to the common table expression. Like
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`, the name can be left as
``None`` in which case an anonymous symbol will be used at query
compile time.
:param recursive: if ``True``, will render ``WITH RECURSIVE``.
A recursive common table expression is intended to be used in
conjunction with UNION ALL in order to derive rows
from those already selected.
:param nesting: if ``True``, will render the CTE locally to the
actual statement.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.24
The following examples include two from PostgreSQL's documentation at
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/queries-with.html,
as well as additional examples.
Example 1, non recursive::
from sqlalchemy import (Table, Column, String, Integer,
MetaData, select, func)
metadata = MetaData()
orders = Table('orders', metadata,
Column('region', String),
Column('amount', Integer),
Column('product', String),
Column('quantity', Integer)
)
regional_sales = select(
orders.c.region,
func.sum(orders.c.amount).label('total_sales')
).group_by(orders.c.region).cte("regional_sales")
top_regions = select(regional_sales.c.region).\
where(
regional_sales.c.total_sales >
select(
func.sum(regional_sales.c.total_sales) / 10
)
).cte("top_regions")
statement = select(
orders.c.region,
orders.c.product,
func.sum(orders.c.quantity).label("product_units"),
func.sum(orders.c.amount).label("product_sales")
).where(orders.c.region.in_(
select(top_regions.c.region)
)).group_by(orders.c.region, orders.c.product)
result = conn.execute(statement).fetchall()
Example 2, WITH RECURSIVE::
from sqlalchemy import (Table, Column, String, Integer,
MetaData, select, func)
metadata = MetaData()
parts = Table('parts', metadata,
Column('part', String),
Column('sub_part', String),
Column('quantity', Integer),
)
included_parts = select(\
parts.c.sub_part, parts.c.part, parts.c.quantity\
).\
where(parts.c.part=='our part').\
cte(recursive=True)
incl_alias = included_parts.alias()
parts_alias = parts.alias()
included_parts = included_parts.union_all(
select(
parts_alias.c.sub_part,
parts_alias.c.part,
parts_alias.c.quantity
).\
where(parts_alias.c.part==incl_alias.c.sub_part)
)
statement = select(
included_parts.c.sub_part,
func.sum(included_parts.c.quantity).
label('total_quantity')
).\
group_by(included_parts.c.sub_part)
result = conn.execute(statement).fetchall()
Example 3, an upsert using UPDATE and INSERT with CTEs::
from datetime import date
from sqlalchemy import (MetaData, Table, Column, Integer,
Date, select, literal, and_, exists)
metadata = MetaData()
visitors = Table('visitors', metadata,
Column('product_id', Integer, primary_key=True),
Column('date', Date, primary_key=True),
Column('count', Integer),
)
# add 5 visitors for the product_id == 1
product_id = 1
day = date.today()
count = 5
update_cte = (
visitors.update()
.where(and_(visitors.c.product_id == product_id,
visitors.c.date == day))
.values(count=visitors.c.count + count)
.returning(literal(1))
.cte('update_cte')
)
upsert = visitors.insert().from_select(
[visitors.c.product_id, visitors.c.date, visitors.c.count],
select(literal(product_id), literal(day), literal(count))
.where(~exists(update_cte.select()))
)
connection.execute(upsert)
Example 4, Nesting CTE (SQLAlchemy 1.4.24 and above)::
value_a = select(
literal("root").label("n")
).cte("value_a")
# A nested CTE with the same name as the root one
value_a_nested = select(
literal("nesting").label("n")
).cte("value_a", nesting=True)
# Nesting CTEs takes ascendency locally
# over the CTEs at a higher level
value_b = select(value_a_nested.c.n).cte("value_b")
value_ab = select(value_a.c.n.label("a"), value_b.c.n.label("b"))
The above query will render the second CTE nested inside the first,
shown with inline parameters below as::
WITH
value_a AS
(SELECT 'root' AS n),
value_b AS
(WITH value_a AS
(SELECT 'nesting' AS n)
SELECT value_a.n AS n FROM value_a)
SELECT value_a.n AS a, value_b.n AS b
FROM value_a, value_b
Example 5, Non-Linear CTE (SQLAlchemy 1.4.28 and above)::
edge = Table(
"edge",
metadata,
Column("id", Integer, primary_key=True),
Column("left", Integer),
Column("right", Integer),
)
root_node = select(literal(1).label("node")).cte(
"nodes", recursive=True
)
left_edge = select(edge.c.left).join(
root_node, edge.c.right == root_node.c.node
)
right_edge = select(edge.c.right).join(
root_node, edge.c.left == root_node.c.node
)
subgraph_cte = root_node.union(left_edge, right_edge)
subgraph = select(subgraph_cte)
The above query will render 2 UNIONs inside the recursive CTE::
WITH RECURSIVE nodes(node) AS (
SELECT 1 AS node
UNION
SELECT edge."left" AS "left"
FROM edge JOIN nodes ON edge."right" = nodes.node
UNION
SELECT edge."right" AS "right"
FROM edge JOIN nodes ON edge."left" = nodes.node
)
SELECT nodes.node FROM nodes
.. seealso::
:meth:`_orm.Query.cte` - ORM version of
:meth:`_expression.HasCTE.cte`.
"""
return CTE._construct(
self, name=name, recursive=recursive, nesting=nesting
)
class Subquery(AliasedReturnsRows):
"""Represent a subquery of a SELECT.
A :class:`.Subquery` is created by invoking the
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery` method, or for convenience the
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.alias` method, on any
:class:`_expression.SelectBase` subclass
which includes :class:`_expression.Select`,
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`, and
:class:`_expression.TextualSelect`. As rendered in a FROM clause,
it represents the
body of the SELECT statement inside of parenthesis, followed by the usual
"AS <somename>" that defines all "alias" objects.
The :class:`.Subquery` object is very similar to the
:class:`_expression.Alias`
object and can be used in an equivalent way. The difference between
:class:`_expression.Alias` and :class:`.Subquery` is that
:class:`_expression.Alias` always
contains a :class:`_expression.FromClause` object whereas
:class:`.Subquery`
always contains a :class:`_expression.SelectBase` object.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 The :class:`.Subquery` class was added which now
serves the purpose of providing an aliased version of a SELECT
statement.
"""
__visit_name__ = "subquery"
_is_subquery = True
inherit_cache = True
@classmethod
def _factory(cls, selectable, name=None):
"""Return a :class:`.Subquery` object."""
return coercions.expect(
roles.SelectStatementRole, selectable
).subquery(name=name)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`.Subquery.as_scalar` method, which was previously "
"``Alias.as_scalar()`` prior to version 1.4, is deprecated and "
"will be removed in a future release; Please use the "
":meth:`_expression.Select.scalar_subquery` method of the "
":func:`_expression.select` "
"construct before constructing a subquery object, or with the ORM "
"use the :meth:`_query.Query.scalar_subquery` method.",
)
def as_scalar(self):
return self.element.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_NONE).scalar_subquery()
def _execute_on_connection(
self,
connection,
multiparams,
params,
execution_options,
):
util.warn_deprecated(
"Executing a subquery object is deprecated and will raise "
"ObjectNotExecutableError in an upcoming release. Please "
"execute the underlying select() statement directly.",
"1.4",
)
return self.element._execute_on_connection(
connection, multiparams, params, execution_options, _force=True
)
class FromGrouping(GroupedElement, FromClause):
"""Represent a grouping of a FROM clause"""
_traverse_internals = [("element", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement)]
def __init__(self, element):
self.element = coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, element)
def _init_collections(self):
pass
@property
def columns(self):
return self.element.columns
@property
def primary_key(self):
return self.element.primary_key
@property
def foreign_keys(self):
return self.element.foreign_keys
def is_derived_from(self, element):
return self.element.is_derived_from(element)
def alias(self, **kw):
return FromGrouping(self.element.alias(**kw))
def _anonymous_fromclause(self, **kw):
return FromGrouping(self.element._anonymous_fromclause(**kw))
@property
def _hide_froms(self):
return self.element._hide_froms
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return self.element._from_objects
def __getstate__(self):
return {"element": self.element}
def __setstate__(self, state):
self.element = state["element"]
class TableClause(roles.DMLTableRole, Immutable, FromClause):
"""Represents a minimal "table" construct.
This is a lightweight table object that has only a name, a
collection of columns, which are typically produced
by the :func:`_expression.column` function, and a schema::
from sqlalchemy import table, column
user = table("user",
column("id"),
column("name"),
column("description"),
)
The :class:`_expression.TableClause` construct serves as the base for
the more commonly used :class:`_schema.Table` object, providing
the usual set of :class:`_expression.FromClause` services including
the ``.c.`` collection and statement generation methods.
It does **not** provide all the additional schema-level services
of :class:`_schema.Table`, including constraints, references to other
tables, or support for :class:`_schema.MetaData`-level services.
It's useful
on its own as an ad-hoc construct used to generate quick SQL
statements when a more fully fledged :class:`_schema.Table`
is not on hand.
"""
__visit_name__ = "table"
_traverse_internals = [
(
"columns",
InternalTraversal.dp_fromclause_canonical_column_collection,
),
("name", InternalTraversal.dp_string),
("schema", InternalTraversal.dp_string),
]
named_with_column = True
implicit_returning = False
""":class:`_expression.TableClause`
doesn't support having a primary key or column
-level defaults, so implicit returning doesn't apply."""
_autoincrement_column = None
"""No PK or default support so no autoincrement column."""
def __init__(self, name, *columns, **kw):
"""Produce a new :class:`_expression.TableClause`.
The object returned is an instance of
:class:`_expression.TableClause`, which
represents the "syntactical" portion of the schema-level
:class:`_schema.Table` object.
It may be used to construct lightweight table constructs.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0.0 :func:`_expression.table` can now
be imported from the plain ``sqlalchemy`` namespace like any
other SQL element.
:param name: Name of the table.
:param columns: A collection of :func:`_expression.column` constructs.
:param schema: The schema name for this table.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.18 :func:`_expression.table` can now
accept a ``schema`` argument.
"""
super(TableClause, self).__init__()
self.name = name
self._columns = DedupeColumnCollection()
self.primary_key = ColumnSet()
self.foreign_keys = set()
for c in columns:
self.append_column(c)
schema = kw.pop("schema", None)
if schema is not None:
self.schema = schema
if self.schema is not None:
self.fullname = "%s.%s" % (self.schema, self.name)
else:
self.fullname = self.name
if kw:
raise exc.ArgumentError("Unsupported argument(s): %s" % list(kw))
def __str__(self):
if self.schema is not None:
return self.schema + "." + self.name
else:
return self.name
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
pass
def _init_collections(self):
pass
@util.memoized_property
def description(self):
if util.py3k:
return self.name
else:
return self.name.encode("ascii", "backslashreplace")
def append_column(self, c, **kw):
existing = c.table
if existing is not None and existing is not self:
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"column object '%s' already assigned to table '%s'"
% (c.key, existing)
)
self._columns.add(c)
c.table = self
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.dml")
def insert(self, values=None, inline=False, **kwargs):
"""Generate an :func:`_expression.insert` construct against this
:class:`_expression.TableClause`.
E.g.::
table.insert().values(name='foo')
See :func:`_expression.insert` for argument and usage information.
"""
return util.preloaded.sql_dml.Insert(
self, values=values, inline=inline, **kwargs
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.dml")
def update(self, whereclause=None, values=None, inline=False, **kwargs):
"""Generate an :func:`_expression.update` construct against this
:class:`_expression.TableClause`.
E.g.::
table.update().where(table.c.id==7).values(name='foo')
See :func:`_expression.update` for argument and usage information.
"""
return util.preloaded.sql_dml.Update(
self,
whereclause=whereclause,
values=values,
inline=inline,
**kwargs
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.dml")
def delete(self, whereclause=None, **kwargs):
"""Generate a :func:`_expression.delete` construct against this
:class:`_expression.TableClause`.
E.g.::
table.delete().where(table.c.id==7)
See :func:`_expression.delete` for argument and usage information.
"""
return util.preloaded.sql_dml.Delete(self, whereclause, **kwargs)
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return [self]
class ForUpdateArg(ClauseElement):
_traverse_internals = [
("of", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("nowait", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("read", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("skip_locked", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
]
@classmethod
def _from_argument(cls, with_for_update):
if isinstance(with_for_update, ForUpdateArg):
return with_for_update
elif with_for_update in (None, False):
return None
elif with_for_update is True:
return ForUpdateArg()
else:
return ForUpdateArg(**with_for_update)
def __eq__(self, other):
return (
isinstance(other, ForUpdateArg)
and other.nowait == self.nowait
and other.read == self.read
and other.skip_locked == self.skip_locked
and other.key_share == self.key_share
and other.of is self.of
)
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self.__eq__(other)
def __hash__(self):
return id(self)
def __init__(
self,
nowait=False,
read=False,
of=None,
skip_locked=False,
key_share=False,
):
"""Represents arguments specified to
:meth:`_expression.Select.for_update`.
"""
self.nowait = nowait
self.read = read
self.skip_locked = skip_locked
self.key_share = key_share
if of is not None:
self.of = [
coercions.expect(roles.ColumnsClauseRole, elem)
for elem in util.to_list(of)
]
else:
self.of = None
class Values(Generative, FromClause):
"""Represent a ``VALUES`` construct that can be used as a FROM element
in a statement.
The :class:`_expression.Values` object is created from the
:func:`_expression.values` function.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
named_with_column = True
__visit_name__ = "values"
_data = ()
_traverse_internals = [
("_column_args", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_data", InternalTraversal.dp_dml_multi_values),
("name", InternalTraversal.dp_string),
("literal_binds", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
]
def __init__(self, *columns, **kw):
r"""Construct a :class:`_expression.Values` construct.
The column expressions and the actual data for
:class:`_expression.Values` are given in two separate steps. The
constructor receives the column expressions typically as
:func:`_expression.column` constructs,
and the data is then passed via the
:meth:`_expression.Values.data` method as a list,
which can be called multiple
times to add more data, e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import column
from sqlalchemy import values
value_expr = values(
column('id', Integer),
column('name', String),
name="my_values"
).data(
[(1, 'name1'), (2, 'name2'), (3, 'name3')]
)
:param \*columns: column expressions, typically composed using
:func:`_expression.column` objects.
:param name: the name for this VALUES construct. If omitted, the
VALUES construct will be unnamed in a SQL expression. Different
backends may have different requirements here.
:param literal_binds: Defaults to False. Whether or not to render
the data values inline in the SQL output, rather than using bound
parameters.
"""
super(Values, self).__init__()
self._column_args = columns
self.name = kw.pop("name", None)
self.literal_binds = kw.pop("literal_binds", False)
self.named_with_column = self.name is not None
@property
def _column_types(self):
return [col.type for col in self._column_args]
@_generative
def alias(self, name, **kw):
"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Values`
construct that is a copy of this
one with the given name.
This method is a VALUES-specific specialization of the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias` method.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_using_aliases`
:func:`_expression.alias`
"""
self.name = name
self.named_with_column = self.name is not None
@_generative
def lateral(self, name=None):
"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Values` with the lateral flag set,
so that
it renders as LATERAL.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.lateral`
"""
self._is_lateral = True
if name is not None:
self.name = name
@_generative
def data(self, values):
"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Values` construct,
adding the given data
to the data list.
E.g.::
my_values = my_values.data([(1, 'value 1'), (2, 'value2')])
:param values: a sequence (i.e. list) of tuples that map to the
column expressions given in the :class:`_expression.Values`
constructor.
"""
self._data += (values,)
def _populate_column_collection(self):
for c in self._column_args:
self._columns.add(c)
c.table = self
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return [self]
class SelectBase(
roles.SelectStatementRole,
roles.DMLSelectRole,
roles.CompoundElementRole,
roles.InElementRole,
HasCTE,
Executable,
SupportsCloneAnnotations,
Selectable,
):
"""Base class for SELECT statements.
This includes :class:`_expression.Select`,
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect` and
:class:`_expression.TextualSelect`.
"""
_is_select_statement = True
is_select = True
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, fromclause):
raise NotImplementedError()
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
self._reset_memoizations()
@property
def selected_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
representing the columns that
this SELECT statement or similar construct returns in its result set.
This collection differs from the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.columns`
collection of a :class:`_expression.FromClause` in that the columns
within this collection cannot be directly nested inside another SELECT
statement; a subquery must be applied first which provides for the
necessary parenthesization required by SQL.
.. note::
The :attr:`_sql.SelectBase.selected_columns` collection does not
include expressions established in the columns clause using the
:func:`_sql.text` construct; these are silently omitted from the
collection. To use plain textual column expressions inside of a
:class:`_sql.Select` construct, use the :func:`_sql.literal_column`
construct.
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.Select.selected_columns`
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
@property
def _all_selected_columns(self):
"""A sequence of expressions that correspond to what is rendered
in the columns clause, including :class:`_sql.TextClause`
constructs.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.12
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.SelectBase.exported_columns`
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
@property
def exported_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
that represents the "exported"
columns of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`, not including
:class:`_sql.TextClause` constructs.
The "exported" columns for a :class:`_expression.SelectBase`
object are synonymous
with the :attr:`_expression.SelectBase.selected_columns` collection.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. seealso::
:attr:`_expression.Select.exported_columns`
:attr:`_expression.Selectable.exported_columns`
:attr:`_expression.FromClause.exported_columns`
"""
return self.selected_columns
@property
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :attr:`_expression.SelectBase.c` and "
":attr:`_expression.SelectBase.columns` attributes "
"are deprecated and will be removed in a future release; these "
"attributes implicitly create a subquery that should be explicit. "
"Please call :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery` "
"first in order to create "
"a subquery, which then contains this attribute. To access the "
"columns that this SELECT object SELECTs "
"from, use the :attr:`_expression.SelectBase.selected_columns` "
"attribute.",
)
def c(self):
return self._implicit_subquery.columns
@property
def columns(self):
return self.c
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.select` method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release; this method implicitly "
"creates a subquery that should be explicit. "
"Please call :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery` "
"first in order to create "
"a subquery, which then can be selected.",
)
def select(self, *arg, **kw):
return self._implicit_subquery.select(*arg, **kw)
@HasMemoized.memoized_attribute
def _implicit_subquery(self):
return self.subquery()
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.as_scalar` "
"method is deprecated and will be "
"removed in a future release. Please refer to "
":meth:`_expression.SelectBase.scalar_subquery`.",
)
def as_scalar(self):
return self.scalar_subquery()
def exists(self):
"""Return an :class:`_sql.Exists` representation of this selectable,
which can be used as a column expression.
The returned object is an instance of :class:`_sql.Exists`.
.. seealso::
:func:`_sql.exists`
:ref:`tutorial_exists` - in the :term:`2.0 style` tutorial.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return Exists(self)
def scalar_subquery(self):
"""Return a 'scalar' representation of this selectable, which can be
used as a column expression.
The returned object is an instance of :class:`_sql.ScalarSelect`.
Typically, a select statement which has only one column in its columns
clause is eligible to be used as a scalar expression. The scalar
subquery can then be used in the WHERE clause or columns clause of
an enclosing SELECT.
Note that the scalar subquery differentiates from the FROM-level
subquery that can be produced using the
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery`
method.
.. versionchanged: 1.4 - the ``.as_scalar()`` method was renamed to
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.scalar_subquery`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery` - in the 2.0 tutorial
"""
if self._label_style is not LABEL_STYLE_NONE:
self = self.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_NONE)
return ScalarSelect(self)
def label(self, name):
"""Return a 'scalar' representation of this selectable, embedded as a
subquery with a label.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.as_scalar`.
"""
return self.scalar_subquery().label(name)
def lateral(self, name=None):
"""Return a LATERAL alias of this :class:`_expression.Selectable`.
The return value is the :class:`_expression.Lateral` construct also
provided by the top-level :func:`_expression.lateral` function.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_lateral_correlation` - overview of usage.
"""
return Lateral._factory(self, name)
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return [self]
def subquery(self, name=None):
"""Return a subquery of this :class:`_expression.SelectBase`.
A subquery is from a SQL perspective a parenthesized, named
construct that can be placed in the FROM clause of another
SELECT statement.
Given a SELECT statement such as::
stmt = select(table.c.id, table.c.name)
The above statement might look like::
SELECT table.id, table.name FROM table
The subquery form by itself renders the same way, however when
embedded into the FROM clause of another SELECT statement, it becomes
a named sub-element::
subq = stmt.subquery()
new_stmt = select(subq)
The above renders as::
SELECT anon_1.id, anon_1.name
FROM (SELECT table.id, table.name FROM table) AS anon_1
Historically, :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery`
is equivalent to calling
the :meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`
method on a FROM object; however,
as a :class:`_expression.SelectBase`
object is not directly FROM object,
the :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery`
method provides clearer semantics.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return Subquery._construct(self._ensure_disambiguated_names(), name)
def _ensure_disambiguated_names(self):
"""Ensure that the names generated by this selectbase will be
disambiguated in some way, if possible.
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
def alias(self, name=None, flat=False):
"""Return a named subquery against this
:class:`_expression.SelectBase`.
For a :class:`_expression.SelectBase` (as opposed to a
:class:`_expression.FromClause`),
this returns a :class:`.Subquery` object which behaves mostly the
same as the :class:`_expression.Alias` object that is used with a
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 The :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.alias`
method is now
a synonym for the :meth:`_expression.SelectBase.subquery` method.
"""
return self.subquery(name=name)
class SelectStatementGrouping(GroupedElement, SelectBase):
"""Represent a grouping of a :class:`_expression.SelectBase`.
This differs from :class:`.Subquery` in that we are still
an "inner" SELECT statement, this is strictly for grouping inside of
compound selects.
"""
__visit_name__ = "select_statement_grouping"
_traverse_internals = [("element", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement)]
_is_select_container = True
def __init__(self, element):
self.element = coercions.expect(roles.SelectStatementRole, element)
def _ensure_disambiguated_names(self):
new_element = self.element._ensure_disambiguated_names()
if new_element is not self.element:
return SelectStatementGrouping(new_element)
else:
return self
def get_label_style(self):
return self._label_style
def set_label_style(self, label_style):
return SelectStatementGrouping(
self.element.set_label_style(label_style)
)
@property
def _label_style(self):
return self.element._label_style
@property
def select_statement(self):
return self.element
def self_group(self, against=None):
return self
def _generate_columns_plus_names(self, anon_for_dupe_key):
return self.element._generate_columns_plus_names(anon_for_dupe_key)
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, subquery):
self.element._generate_fromclause_column_proxies(subquery)
def _generate_proxy_for_new_column(self, column, subquery):
return self.element._generate_proxy_for_new_column(subquery)
@property
def _all_selected_columns(self):
return self.element._all_selected_columns
@property
def selected_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
representing the columns that
the embedded SELECT statement returns in its result set, not including
:class:`_sql.TextClause` constructs.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.Select.selected_columns`
"""
return self.element.selected_columns
@property
def _from_objects(self):
return self.element._from_objects
class DeprecatedSelectBaseGenerations(object):
"""A collection of methods available on :class:`_sql.Select` and
:class:`_sql.CompoundSelect`, these are all **deprecated** methods as they
modify the object in-place.
"""
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.append_order_by` "
"method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative method "
":meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.order_by`.",
)
def append_order_by(self, *clauses):
"""Append the given ORDER BY criterion applied to this selectable.
The criterion will be appended to any pre-existing ORDER BY criterion.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.order_by` method is preferred,
as it
provides standard :term:`method chaining`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.order_by`
"""
self.order_by.non_generative(self, *clauses)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.append_group_by` "
"method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative method "
":meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.group_by`.",
)
def append_group_by(self, *clauses):
"""Append the given GROUP BY criterion applied to this selectable.
The criterion will be appended to any pre-existing GROUP BY criterion.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.GenerativeSelect.group_by` method is preferred,
as it
provides standard :term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.group_by.non_generative(self, *clauses)
class GenerativeSelect(DeprecatedSelectBaseGenerations, SelectBase):
"""Base class for SELECT statements where additional elements can be
added.
This serves as the base for :class:`_expression.Select` and
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`
where elements such as ORDER BY, GROUP BY can be added and column
rendering can be controlled. Compare to
:class:`_expression.TextualSelect`, which,
while it subclasses :class:`_expression.SelectBase`
and is also a SELECT construct,
represents a fixed textual string which cannot be altered at this level,
only wrapped as a subquery.
"""
_order_by_clauses = ()
_group_by_clauses = ()
_limit_clause = None
_offset_clause = None
_fetch_clause = None
_fetch_clause_options = None
_for_update_arg = None
@util.deprecated_params(
bind=(
"2.0",
"The :paramref:`_sql.select.bind` argument is deprecated and "
"will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0.",
),
)
def __init__(
self,
_label_style=LABEL_STYLE_DEFAULT,
use_labels=False,
limit=None,
offset=None,
order_by=None,
group_by=None,
bind=None,
):
if use_labels:
if util.SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20:
util.warn_deprecated_20(
"The use_labels=True keyword argument to GenerativeSelect "
"is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.0. Please "
"use "
"select.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL) "
"if you need to replicate this legacy behavior.",
stacklevel=4,
)
_label_style = LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL
self._label_style = _label_style
if limit is not None:
self.limit.non_generative(self, limit)
if offset is not None:
self.offset.non_generative(self, offset)
if order_by is not None:
self.order_by.non_generative(self, *util.to_list(order_by))
if group_by is not None:
self.group_by.non_generative(self, *util.to_list(group_by))
self._bind = bind
@_generative
def with_for_update(
self,
nowait=False,
read=False,
of=None,
skip_locked=False,
key_share=False,
):
"""Specify a ``FOR UPDATE`` clause for this
:class:`_expression.GenerativeSelect`.
E.g.::
stmt = select(table).with_for_update(nowait=True)
On a database like PostgreSQL or Oracle, the above would render a
statement like::
SELECT table.a, table.b FROM table FOR UPDATE NOWAIT
on other backends, the ``nowait`` option is ignored and instead
would produce::
SELECT table.a, table.b FROM table FOR UPDATE
When called with no arguments, the statement will render with
the suffix ``FOR UPDATE``. Additional arguments can then be
provided which allow for common database-specific
variants.
:param nowait: boolean; will render ``FOR UPDATE NOWAIT`` on Oracle
and PostgreSQL dialects.
:param read: boolean; will render ``LOCK IN SHARE MODE`` on MySQL,
``FOR SHARE`` on PostgreSQL. On PostgreSQL, when combined with
``nowait``, will render ``FOR SHARE NOWAIT``.
:param of: SQL expression or list of SQL expression elements
(typically :class:`_schema.Column`
objects or a compatible expression) which
will render into a ``FOR UPDATE OF`` clause; supported by PostgreSQL
and Oracle. May render as a table or as a column depending on
backend.
:param skip_locked: boolean, will render ``FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED``
on Oracle and PostgreSQL dialects or ``FOR SHARE SKIP LOCKED`` if
``read=True`` is also specified.
:param key_share: boolean, will render ``FOR NO KEY UPDATE``,
or if combined with ``read=True`` will render ``FOR KEY SHARE``,
on the PostgreSQL dialect.
"""
self._for_update_arg = ForUpdateArg(
nowait=nowait,
read=read,
of=of,
skip_locked=skip_locked,
key_share=key_share,
)
def get_label_style(self):
"""
Retrieve the current label style.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return self._label_style
def set_label_style(self, style):
"""Return a new selectable with the specified label style.
There are three "label styles" available,
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`,
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL`, and
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_NONE`. The default style is
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL`.
In modern SQLAlchemy, there is not generally a need to change the
labeling style, as per-expression labels are more effectively used by
making use of the :meth:`_sql.ColumnElement.label` method. In past
versions, :data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL` was used to
disambiguate same-named columns from different tables, aliases, or
subqueries; the newer :data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY` now
applies labels only to names that conflict with an existing name so
that the impact of this labeling is minimal.
The rationale for disambiguation is mostly so that all column
expressions are available from a given :attr:`_sql.FromClause.c`
collection when a subquery is created.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 - the
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.set_label_style` method replaces the
previous combination of ``.apply_labels()``, ``.with_labels()`` and
``use_labels=True`` methods and/or parameters.
.. seealso::
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL`
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_NONE`
:data:`_sql.LABEL_STYLE_DEFAULT`
"""
if self._label_style is not style:
self = self._generate()
self._label_style = style
return self
@util.deprecated_20(
":meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.apply_labels`",
alternative="Use set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL) "
"instead.",
)
def apply_labels(self):
return self.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL)
@property
def _group_by_clause(self):
"""ClauseList access to group_by_clauses for legacy dialects"""
return ClauseList._construct_raw(
operators.comma_op, self._group_by_clauses
)
@property
def _order_by_clause(self):
"""ClauseList access to order_by_clauses for legacy dialects"""
return ClauseList._construct_raw(
operators.comma_op, self._order_by_clauses
)
def _offset_or_limit_clause(self, element, name=None, type_=None):
"""Convert the given value to an "offset or limit" clause.
This handles incoming integers and converts to an expression; if
an expression is already given, it is passed through.
"""
return coercions.expect(
roles.LimitOffsetRole, element, name=name, type_=type_
)
def _offset_or_limit_clause_asint(self, clause, attrname):
"""Convert the "offset or limit" clause of a select construct to an
integer.
This is only possible if the value is stored as a simple bound
parameter. Otherwise, a compilation error is raised.
"""
if clause is None:
return None
try:
value = clause._limit_offset_value
except AttributeError as err:
util.raise_(
exc.CompileError(
"This SELECT structure does not use a simple "
"integer value for %s" % attrname
),
replace_context=err,
)
else:
return util.asint(value)
@property
def _limit(self):
"""Get an integer value for the limit. This should only be used
by code that cannot support a limit as a BindParameter or
other custom clause as it will throw an exception if the limit
isn't currently set to an integer.
"""
return self._offset_or_limit_clause_asint(self._limit_clause, "limit")
def _simple_int_clause(self, clause):
"""True if the clause is a simple integer, False
if it is not present or is a SQL expression.
"""
return isinstance(clause, _OffsetLimitParam)
@property
def _offset(self):
"""Get an integer value for the offset. This should only be used
by code that cannot support an offset as a BindParameter or
other custom clause as it will throw an exception if the
offset isn't currently set to an integer.
"""
return self._offset_or_limit_clause_asint(
self._offset_clause, "offset"
)
@property
def _has_row_limiting_clause(self):
return (
self._limit_clause is not None
or self._offset_clause is not None
or self._fetch_clause is not None
)
@_generative
def limit(self, limit):
"""Return a new selectable with the given LIMIT criterion
applied.
This is a numerical value which usually renders as a ``LIMIT``
expression in the resulting select. Backends that don't
support ``LIMIT`` will attempt to provide similar
functionality.
.. note::
The :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.limit` method will replace
any clause applied with :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch`.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0.0 - :meth:`_expression.Select.limit` can now
accept arbitrary SQL expressions as well as integer values.
:param limit: an integer LIMIT parameter, or a SQL expression
that provides an integer result. Pass ``None`` to reset it.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch`
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.offset`
"""
self._fetch_clause = self._fetch_clause_options = None
self._limit_clause = self._offset_or_limit_clause(limit)
@_generative
def fetch(self, count, with_ties=False, percent=False):
"""Return a new selectable with the given FETCH FIRST criterion
applied.
This is a numeric value which usually renders as
``FETCH {FIRST | NEXT} [ count ] {ROW | ROWS} {ONLY | WITH TIES}``
expression in the resulting select. This functionality is
is currently implemented for Oracle, PostgreSQL, MSSQL.
Use :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.offset` to specify the offset.
.. note::
The :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch` method will replace
any clause applied with :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.limit`.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
:param count: an integer COUNT parameter, or a SQL expression
that provides an integer result. When ``percent=True`` this will
represent the percentage of rows to return, not the absolute value.
Pass ``None`` to reset it.
:param with_ties: When ``True``, the WITH TIES option is used
to return any additional rows that tie for the last place in the
result set according to the ``ORDER BY`` clause. The
``ORDER BY`` may be mandatory in this case. Defaults to ``False``
:param percent: When ``True``, ``count`` represents the percentage
of the total number of selected rows to return. Defaults to ``False``
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.limit`
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.offset`
"""
self._limit_clause = None
if count is None:
self._fetch_clause = self._fetch_clause_options = None
else:
self._fetch_clause = self._offset_or_limit_clause(count)
self._fetch_clause_options = {
"with_ties": with_ties,
"percent": percent,
}
@_generative
def offset(self, offset):
"""Return a new selectable with the given OFFSET criterion
applied.
This is a numeric value which usually renders as an ``OFFSET``
expression in the resulting select. Backends that don't
support ``OFFSET`` will attempt to provide similar
functionality.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0.0 - :meth:`_expression.Select.offset` can now
accept arbitrary SQL expressions as well as integer values.
:param offset: an integer OFFSET parameter, or a SQL expression
that provides an integer result. Pass ``None`` to reset it.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.limit`
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch`
"""
self._offset_clause = self._offset_or_limit_clause(offset)
@_generative
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def slice(self, start, stop):
"""Apply LIMIT / OFFSET to this statement based on a slice.
The start and stop indices behave like the argument to Python's
built-in :func:`range` function. This method provides an
alternative to using ``LIMIT``/``OFFSET`` to get a slice of the
query.
For example, ::
stmt = select(User).order_by(User).id.slice(1, 3)
renders as
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT users.id AS users_id,
users.name AS users_name
FROM users ORDER BY users.id
LIMIT ? OFFSET ?
(2, 1)
.. note::
The :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.slice` method will replace
any clause applied with :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch`.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 Added the :meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.slice`
method generalized from the ORM.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.limit`
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.offset`
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.fetch`
"""
sql_util = util.preloaded.sql_util
self._fetch_clause = self._fetch_clause_options = None
self._limit_clause, self._offset_clause = sql_util._make_slice(
self._limit_clause, self._offset_clause, start, stop
)
@_generative
def order_by(self, *clauses):
r"""Return a new selectable with the given list of ORDER BY
criteria applied.
e.g.::
stmt = select(table).order_by(table.c.id, table.c.name)
All existing ORDER BY criteria may be cancelled by passing
``None`` by itself. New ORDER BY criteria may then be added by
invoking :meth:`_sql.Select.order_by` again, e.g.::
# will erase all ORDER BY and ORDER BY new_col alone
stmt = stmt.order_by(None).order_by(new_col)
:param \*clauses: a series of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
constructs
which will be used to generate an ORDER BY clause.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_order_by` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
:ref:`tutorial_order_by_label` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
"""
if len(clauses) == 1 and clauses[0] is None:
self._order_by_clauses = ()
else:
self._order_by_clauses += tuple(
coercions.expect(roles.OrderByRole, clause)
for clause in clauses
)
@_generative
def group_by(self, *clauses):
r"""Return a new selectable with the given list of GROUP BY
criterion applied.
All existing GROUP BY settings can be suppressed by passing ``None``.
e.g.::
stmt = select(table.c.name, func.max(table.c.stat)).\
group_by(table.c.name)
:param \*clauses: a series of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
constructs
which will be used to generate an GROUP BY clause.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_group_by_w_aggregates` - in the
:ref:`unified_tutorial`
:ref:`tutorial_order_by_label` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
"""
if len(clauses) == 1 and clauses[0] is None:
self._group_by_clauses = ()
else:
self._group_by_clauses += tuple(
coercions.expect(roles.GroupByRole, clause)
for clause in clauses
)
@CompileState.plugin_for("default", "compound_select")
class CompoundSelectState(CompileState):
@util.memoized_property
def _label_resolve_dict(self):
# TODO: this is hacky and slow
hacky_subquery = self.statement.subquery()
hacky_subquery.named_with_column = False
d = dict((c.key, c) for c in hacky_subquery.c)
return d, d, d
class CompoundSelect(HasCompileState, GenerativeSelect):
"""Forms the basis of ``UNION``, ``UNION ALL``, and other
SELECT-based set operations.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.union`
:func:`_expression.union_all`
:func:`_expression.intersect`
:func:`_expression.intersect_all`
:func:`_expression.except`
:func:`_expression.except_all`
"""
__visit_name__ = "compound_select"
_traverse_internals = [
("selects", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_limit_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_offset_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_fetch_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_fetch_clause_options", InternalTraversal.dp_plain_dict),
("_order_by_clauses", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_group_by_clauses", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_for_update_arg", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("keyword", InternalTraversal.dp_string),
] + SupportsCloneAnnotations._clone_annotations_traverse_internals
UNION = util.symbol("UNION")
UNION_ALL = util.symbol("UNION ALL")
EXCEPT = util.symbol("EXCEPT")
EXCEPT_ALL = util.symbol("EXCEPT ALL")
INTERSECT = util.symbol("INTERSECT")
INTERSECT_ALL = util.symbol("INTERSECT ALL")
_is_from_container = True
def __init__(self, keyword, *selects, **kwargs):
self._auto_correlate = kwargs.pop("correlate", False)
self.keyword = keyword
self.selects = [
coercions.expect(roles.CompoundElementRole, s).self_group(
against=self
)
for s in selects
]
if kwargs and util.SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20:
util.warn_deprecated_20(
"Set functions such as union(), union_all(), extract(), etc. "
"in SQLAlchemy 2.0 will accept a "
"series of SELECT statements only. "
"Please use generative methods such as order_by() for "
"additional modifications to this CompoundSelect.",
stacklevel=4,
)
GenerativeSelect.__init__(self, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_union(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return a ``UNION`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
A similar :func:`union()` method is available on all
:class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.UNION, *selects, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_union_all(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return a ``UNION ALL`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
A similar :func:`union_all()` method is available on all
:class:`_expression.FromClause` subclasses.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.UNION_ALL, *selects, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_except(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return an ``EXCEPT`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.EXCEPT, *selects, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_except_all(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return an ``EXCEPT ALL`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.EXCEPT_ALL, *selects, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_intersect(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return an ``INTERSECT`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.INTERSECT, *selects, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def _create_intersect_all(cls, *selects, **kwargs):
r"""Return an ``INTERSECT ALL`` of multiple selectables.
The returned object is an instance of
:class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`.
:param \*selects:
a list of :class:`_expression.Select` instances.
:param \**kwargs:
available keyword arguments are the same as those of
:func:`select`.
"""
return CompoundSelect(CompoundSelect.INTERSECT_ALL, *selects, **kwargs)
def _scalar_type(self):
return self.selects[0]._scalar_type()
def self_group(self, against=None):
return SelectStatementGrouping(self)
def is_derived_from(self, fromclause):
for s in self.selects:
if s.is_derived_from(fromclause):
return True
return False
def _set_label_style(self, style):
if self._label_style is not style:
self = self._generate()
select_0 = self.selects[0]._set_label_style(style)
self.selects = [select_0] + self.selects[1:]
return self
def _ensure_disambiguated_names(self):
new_select = self.selects[0]._ensure_disambiguated_names()
if new_select is not self.selects[0]:
self = self._generate()
self.selects = [new_select] + self.selects[1:]
return self
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, subquery):
# this is a slightly hacky thing - the union exports a
# column that resembles just that of the *first* selectable.
# to get at a "composite" column, particularly foreign keys,
# you have to dig through the proxies collection which we
# generate below. We may want to improve upon this, such as
# perhaps _make_proxy can accept a list of other columns
# that are "shared" - schema.column can then copy all the
# ForeignKeys in. this would allow the union() to have all
# those fks too.
select_0 = self.selects[0]
if self._label_style is not LABEL_STYLE_DEFAULT:
select_0 = select_0.set_label_style(self._label_style)
select_0._generate_fromclause_column_proxies(subquery)
# hand-construct the "_proxies" collection to include all
# derived columns place a 'weight' annotation corresponding
# to how low in the list of select()s the column occurs, so
# that the corresponding_column() operation can resolve
# conflicts
for subq_col, select_cols in zip(
subquery.c._all_columns,
zip(*[s.selected_columns for s in self.selects]),
):
subq_col._proxies = [
c._annotate({"weight": i + 1})
for (i, c) in enumerate(select_cols)
]
def _refresh_for_new_column(self, column):
super(CompoundSelect, self)._refresh_for_new_column(column)
for select in self.selects:
select._refresh_for_new_column(column)
@property
def _all_selected_columns(self):
return self.selects[0]._all_selected_columns
@property
def selected_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
representing the columns that
this SELECT statement or similar construct returns in its result set,
not including :class:`_sql.TextClause` constructs.
For a :class:`_expression.CompoundSelect`, the
:attr:`_expression.CompoundSelect.selected_columns`
attribute returns the selected
columns of the first SELECT statement contained within the series of
statements within the set operation.
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.Select.selected_columns`
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return self.selects[0].selected_columns
@property
@util.deprecated_20(
":attr:`.Executable.bind`",
alternative="Bound metadata is being removed as of SQLAlchemy 2.0.",
enable_warnings=False,
)
def bind(self):
"""Returns the :class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection`
to which this :class:`.Executable` is bound, or None if none found.
"""
if self._bind:
return self._bind
for s in self.selects:
e = s.bind
if e:
return e
else:
return None
@bind.setter
def bind(self, bind):
self._bind = bind
class DeprecatedSelectGenerations(object):
"""A collection of methods available on :class:`_sql.Select`, these
are all **deprecated** methods as they modify the :class:`_sql.Select`
object in -place.
"""
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_correlation` "
"method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`.",
)
def append_correlation(self, fromclause):
"""Append the given correlation expression to this select()
construct.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate` method is preferred,
as it provides
standard :term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.correlate.non_generative(self, fromclause)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_column` method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.add_columns`.",
)
def append_column(self, column):
"""Append the given column expression to the columns clause of this
select() construct.
E.g.::
my_select.append_column(some_table.c.new_column)
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.add_columns` method is preferred,
as it provides standard
:term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.add_columns.non_generative(self, column)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_prefix` method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.prefix_with`.",
)
def append_prefix(self, clause):
"""Append the given columns clause prefix expression to this select()
construct.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.prefix_with` method is preferred,
as it provides
standard :term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.prefix_with.non_generative(self, clause)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_whereclause` "
"method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.where`.",
)
def append_whereclause(self, whereclause):
"""Append the given expression to this select() construct's WHERE
criterion.
The expression will be joined to existing WHERE criterion via AND.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.where` method is preferred,
as it provides standard
:term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.where.non_generative(self, whereclause)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_having` method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.having`.",
)
def append_having(self, having):
"""Append the given expression to this select() construct's HAVING
criterion.
The expression will be joined to existing HAVING criterion via AND.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.having` method is preferred,
as it provides standard
:term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.having.non_generative(self, having)
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.append_from` method is deprecated "
"and will be removed in a future release. Use the generative "
"method :meth:`_expression.Select.select_from`.",
)
def append_from(self, fromclause):
"""Append the given :class:`_expression.FromClause` expression
to this select() construct's FROM clause.
This is an **in-place** mutation method; the
:meth:`_expression.Select.select_from` method is preferred,
as it provides
standard :term:`method chaining`.
"""
self.select_from.non_generative(self, fromclause)
@CompileState.plugin_for("default", "select")
class SelectState(util.MemoizedSlots, CompileState):
__slots__ = (
"from_clauses",
"froms",
"columns_plus_names",
"_label_resolve_dict",
)
class default_select_compile_options(CacheableOptions):
_cache_key_traversal = []
def __init__(self, statement, compiler, **kw):
self.statement = statement
self.from_clauses = statement._from_obj
for memoized_entities in statement._memoized_select_entities:
self._setup_joins(
memoized_entities._setup_joins, memoized_entities._raw_columns
)
if statement._setup_joins:
self._setup_joins(statement._setup_joins, statement._raw_columns)
self.froms = self._get_froms(statement)
self.columns_plus_names = statement._generate_columns_plus_names(True)
@classmethod
def _plugin_not_implemented(cls):
raise NotImplementedError(
"The default SELECT construct without plugins does not "
"implement this method."
)
@classmethod
def get_column_descriptions(cls, statement):
return [
{
"name": name,
"type": element.type,
"expr": element,
}
for _, name, _, element, _ in (
statement._generate_columns_plus_names(False)
)
]
@classmethod
def from_statement(cls, statement, from_statement):
cls._plugin_not_implemented()
@classmethod
def get_columns_clause_froms(cls, statement):
return cls._normalize_froms(
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
element._from_objects for element in statement._raw_columns
)
)
@classmethod
def _column_naming_convention(cls, label_style):
table_qualified = label_style is LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL
dedupe = label_style is not LABEL_STYLE_NONE
pa = prefix_anon_map()
names = set()
def go(c, col_name=None):
if c._is_text_clause:
return None
elif not dedupe:
name = c._proxy_key
if name is None:
name = "_no_label"
return name
name = c._tq_key_label if table_qualified else c._proxy_key
if name is None:
name = "_no_label"
if name in names:
return c._anon_label(name) % pa
else:
names.add(name)
return name
elif name in names:
return (
c._anon_tq_key_label % pa
if table_qualified
else c._anon_key_label % pa
)
else:
names.add(name)
return name
return go
def _get_froms(self, statement):
return self._normalize_froms(
itertools.chain(
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
[
element._from_objects
for element in statement._raw_columns
]
),
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
[
element._from_objects
for element in statement._where_criteria
]
),
self.from_clauses,
),
check_statement=statement,
)
@classmethod
def _normalize_froms(cls, iterable_of_froms, check_statement=None):
"""given an iterable of things to select FROM, reduce them to what
would actually render in the FROM clause of a SELECT.
This does the job of checking for JOINs, tables, etc. that are in fact
overlapping due to cloning, adaption, present in overlapping joins,
etc.
"""
seen = set()
froms = []
for item in iterable_of_froms:
if item._is_subquery and item.element is check_statement:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"select() construct refers to itself as a FROM"
)
if not seen.intersection(item._cloned_set):
froms.append(item)
seen.update(item._cloned_set)
if froms:
toremove = set(
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
[_expand_cloned(f._hide_froms) for f in froms]
)
)
if toremove:
# filter out to FROM clauses not in the list,
# using a list to maintain ordering
froms = [f for f in froms if f not in toremove]
return froms
def _get_display_froms(
self, explicit_correlate_froms=None, implicit_correlate_froms=None
):
"""Return the full list of 'from' clauses to be displayed.
Takes into account a set of existing froms which may be
rendered in the FROM clause of enclosing selects; this Select
may want to leave those absent if it is automatically
correlating.
"""
froms = self.froms
if self.statement._correlate:
to_correlate = self.statement._correlate
if to_correlate:
froms = [
f
for f in froms
if f
not in _cloned_intersection(
_cloned_intersection(
froms, explicit_correlate_froms or ()
),
to_correlate,
)
]
if self.statement._correlate_except is not None:
froms = [
f
for f in froms
if f
not in _cloned_difference(
_cloned_intersection(
froms, explicit_correlate_froms or ()
),
self.statement._correlate_except,
)
]
if (
self.statement._auto_correlate
and implicit_correlate_froms
and len(froms) > 1
):
froms = [
f
for f in froms
if f
not in _cloned_intersection(froms, implicit_correlate_froms)
]
if not len(froms):
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Select statement '%r"
"' returned no FROM clauses "
"due to auto-correlation; "
"specify correlate(<tables>) "
"to control correlation "
"manually." % self.statement
)
return froms
def _memoized_attr__label_resolve_dict(self):
with_cols = dict(
(c._tq_label or c.key, c)
for c in self.statement._all_selected_columns
if c._allow_label_resolve
)
only_froms = dict(
(c.key, c)
for c in _select_iterables(self.froms)
if c._allow_label_resolve
)
only_cols = with_cols.copy()
for key, value in only_froms.items():
with_cols.setdefault(key, value)
return with_cols, only_froms, only_cols
@classmethod
def determine_last_joined_entity(cls, stmt):
if stmt._setup_joins:
return stmt._setup_joins[-1][0]
else:
return None
@classmethod
def all_selected_columns(cls, statement):
return [c for c in _select_iterables(statement._raw_columns)]
def _setup_joins(self, args, raw_columns):
for (right, onclause, left, flags) in args:
isouter = flags["isouter"]
full = flags["full"]
if left is None:
(
left,
replace_from_obj_index,
) = self._join_determine_implicit_left_side(
raw_columns, left, right, onclause
)
else:
(replace_from_obj_index) = self._join_place_explicit_left_side(
left
)
if replace_from_obj_index is not None:
# splice into an existing element in the
# self._from_obj list
left_clause = self.from_clauses[replace_from_obj_index]
self.from_clauses = (
self.from_clauses[:replace_from_obj_index]
+ (
Join(
left_clause,
right,
onclause,
isouter=isouter,
full=full,
),
)
+ self.from_clauses[replace_from_obj_index + 1 :]
)
else:
self.from_clauses = self.from_clauses + (
Join(left, right, onclause, isouter=isouter, full=full),
)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def _join_determine_implicit_left_side(
self, raw_columns, left, right, onclause
):
"""When join conditions don't express the left side explicitly,
determine if an existing FROM or entity in this query
can serve as the left hand side.
"""
sql_util = util.preloaded.sql_util
replace_from_obj_index = None
from_clauses = self.from_clauses
if from_clauses:
indexes = sql_util.find_left_clause_to_join_from(
from_clauses, right, onclause
)
if len(indexes) == 1:
replace_from_obj_index = indexes[0]
left = from_clauses[replace_from_obj_index]
else:
potential = {}
statement = self.statement
for from_clause in itertools.chain(
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
[element._from_objects for element in raw_columns]
),
itertools.chain.from_iterable(
[
element._from_objects
for element in statement._where_criteria
]
),
):
potential[from_clause] = ()
all_clauses = list(potential.keys())
indexes = sql_util.find_left_clause_to_join_from(
all_clauses, right, onclause
)
if len(indexes) == 1:
left = all_clauses[indexes[0]]
if len(indexes) > 1:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Can't determine which FROM clause to join "
"from, there are multiple FROMS which can "
"join to this entity. Please use the .select_from() "
"method to establish an explicit left side, as well as "
"providing an explicit ON clause if not present already to "
"help resolve the ambiguity."
)
elif not indexes:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Don't know how to join to %r. "
"Please use the .select_from() "
"method to establish an explicit left side, as well as "
"providing an explicit ON clause if not present already to "
"help resolve the ambiguity." % (right,)
)
return left, replace_from_obj_index
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def _join_place_explicit_left_side(self, left):
replace_from_obj_index = None
sql_util = util.preloaded.sql_util
from_clauses = list(self.statement._iterate_from_elements())
if from_clauses:
indexes = sql_util.find_left_clause_that_matches_given(
self.from_clauses, left
)
else:
indexes = []
if len(indexes) > 1:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Can't identify which entity in which to assign the "
"left side of this join. Please use a more specific "
"ON clause."
)
# have an index, means the left side is already present in
# an existing FROM in the self._from_obj tuple
if indexes:
replace_from_obj_index = indexes[0]
# no index, means we need to add a new element to the
# self._from_obj tuple
return replace_from_obj_index
class _SelectFromElements(object):
def _iterate_from_elements(self):
# note this does not include elements
# in _setup_joins or _legacy_setup_joins
seen = set()
for element in self._raw_columns:
for fr in element._from_objects:
if fr in seen:
continue
seen.add(fr)
yield fr
for element in self._where_criteria:
for fr in element._from_objects:
if fr in seen:
continue
seen.add(fr)
yield fr
for element in self._from_obj:
if element in seen:
continue
seen.add(element)
yield element
class _MemoizedSelectEntities(
traversals.HasCacheKey, traversals.HasCopyInternals, visitors.Traversible
):
__visit_name__ = "memoized_select_entities"
_traverse_internals = [
("_raw_columns", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_setup_joins", InternalTraversal.dp_setup_join_tuple),
("_legacy_setup_joins", InternalTraversal.dp_setup_join_tuple),
("_with_options", InternalTraversal.dp_executable_options),
]
_annotations = util.EMPTY_DICT
def _clone(self, **kw):
c = self.__class__.__new__(self.__class__)
c.__dict__ = {k: v for k, v in self.__dict__.items()}
c._is_clone_of = self.__dict__.get("_is_clone_of", self)
return c
@classmethod
def _generate_for_statement(cls, select_stmt):
if (
select_stmt._setup_joins
or select_stmt._legacy_setup_joins
or select_stmt._with_options
):
self = _MemoizedSelectEntities()
self._raw_columns = select_stmt._raw_columns
self._setup_joins = select_stmt._setup_joins
self._legacy_setup_joins = select_stmt._legacy_setup_joins
self._with_options = select_stmt._with_options
select_stmt._memoized_select_entities += (self,)
select_stmt._raw_columns = (
select_stmt._setup_joins
) = (
select_stmt._legacy_setup_joins
) = select_stmt._with_options = ()
class Select(
HasPrefixes,
HasSuffixes,
HasHints,
HasCompileState,
DeprecatedSelectGenerations,
_SelectFromElements,
GenerativeSelect,
):
"""Represents a ``SELECT`` statement.
The :class:`_sql.Select` object is normally constructed using the
:func:`_sql.select` function. See that function for details.
.. seealso::
:func:`_sql.select`
:ref:`tutorial_selecting_data` - in the 2.0 tutorial
"""
__visit_name__ = "select"
_setup_joins = ()
_legacy_setup_joins = ()
_memoized_select_entities = ()
_distinct = False
_distinct_on = ()
_correlate = ()
_correlate_except = None
_where_criteria = ()
_having_criteria = ()
_from_obj = ()
_auto_correlate = True
_compile_options = SelectState.default_select_compile_options
_traverse_internals = (
[
("_raw_columns", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
(
"_memoized_select_entities",
InternalTraversal.dp_memoized_select_entities,
),
("_from_obj", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
("_where_criteria", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_having_criteria", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_order_by_clauses", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_group_by_clauses", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_setup_joins", InternalTraversal.dp_setup_join_tuple),
("_legacy_setup_joins", InternalTraversal.dp_setup_join_tuple),
("_correlate", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_correlate_except", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_limit_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_offset_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_fetch_clause", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_fetch_clause_options", InternalTraversal.dp_plain_dict),
("_for_update_arg", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("_distinct", InternalTraversal.dp_boolean),
("_distinct_on", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuple),
("_label_style", InternalTraversal.dp_plain_obj),
]
+ HasCTE._has_ctes_traverse_internals
+ HasPrefixes._has_prefixes_traverse_internals
+ HasSuffixes._has_suffixes_traverse_internals
+ HasHints._has_hints_traverse_internals
+ SupportsCloneAnnotations._clone_annotations_traverse_internals
+ Executable._executable_traverse_internals
)
_cache_key_traversal = _traverse_internals + [
("_compile_options", InternalTraversal.dp_has_cache_key)
]
@classmethod
def _create_select_from_fromclause(cls, target, entities, *arg, **kw):
if arg or kw:
return Select.create_legacy_select(entities, *arg, **kw)
else:
return Select._create_select(*entities)
@classmethod
@util.deprecated(
"2.0",
"The legacy calling style of :func:`_sql.select` is deprecated and "
"will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0. Please use the new calling "
"style described at :func:`_sql.select`.",
)
def create_legacy_select(
cls,
columns=None,
whereclause=None,
from_obj=None,
distinct=False,
having=None,
correlate=True,
prefixes=None,
suffixes=None,
**kwargs
):
"""Construct a new :class:`_expression.Select` using the 1.x style API.
This method is called implicitly when the :func:`_expression.select`
construct is used and the first argument is a Python list or other
plain sequence object, which is taken to refer to the columns
collection.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 Added the :meth:`.Select.create_legacy_select`
constructor which documents the calling style in use when the
:func:`.select` construct is invoked using 1.x-style arguments.
Similar functionality is also available via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.select` method on any
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
All arguments which accept :class:`_expression.ClauseElement` arguments
also accept string arguments, which will be converted as appropriate
into either :func:`_expression.text()` or
:func:`_expression.literal_column()` constructs.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_selecting_data` - in the :ref:`unified_tutorial`
:param columns:
A list of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` or
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
objects which will form the columns clause of the resulting
statement. For those objects that are instances of
:class:`_expression.FromClause` (typically :class:`_schema.Table`
or :class:`_expression.Alias`
objects), the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.c`
collection is extracted
to form a collection of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects.
This parameter will also accept :class:`_expression.TextClause`
constructs as
given, as well as ORM-mapped classes.
.. note::
The :paramref:`_expression.select.columns`
parameter is not available
in the method form of :func:`_expression.select`, e.g.
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.column`
:meth:`_expression.Select.with_only_columns`
:param whereclause:
A :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
expression which will be used to form the
``WHERE`` clause. It is typically preferable to add WHERE
criterion to an existing :class:`_expression.Select`
using method chaining
with :meth:`_expression.Select.where`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.where`
:param from_obj:
A list of :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
objects which will be added to the
``FROM`` clause of the resulting statement. This is equivalent
to calling :meth:`_expression.Select.select_from`
using method chaining on
an existing :class:`_expression.Select` object.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.select_from`
- full description of explicit
FROM clause specification.
:param bind=None:
an :class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection` instance
to which the
resulting :class:`_expression.Select` object will be bound. The
:class:`_expression.Select`
object will otherwise automatically bind to
whatever :class:`~.base.Connectable` instances can be located within
its contained :class:`_expression.ClauseElement` members.
:param correlate=True:
indicates that this :class:`_expression.Select`
object should have its
contained :class:`_expression.FromClause`
elements "correlated" to an enclosing
:class:`_expression.Select` object.
It is typically preferable to specify
correlations on an existing :class:`_expression.Select`
construct using
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`
- full description of correlation.
:param distinct=False:
when ``True``, applies a ``DISTINCT`` qualifier to the columns
clause of the resulting statement.
The boolean argument may also be a column expression or list
of column expressions - this is a special calling form which
is understood by the PostgreSQL dialect to render the
``DISTINCT ON (<columns>)`` syntax.
``distinct`` is also available on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`
object via the :meth:`_expression.Select.distinct` method.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.distinct`
:param group_by:
a list of :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
objects which will comprise the
``GROUP BY`` clause of the resulting select. This parameter
is typically specified more naturally using the
:meth:`_expression.Select.group_by` method on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.group_by`
:param having:
a :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
that will comprise the ``HAVING`` clause
of the resulting select when ``GROUP BY`` is used. This parameter
is typically specified more naturally using the
:meth:`_expression.Select.having` method on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.having`
:param limit=None:
a numerical value which usually renders as a ``LIMIT``
expression in the resulting select. Backends that don't
support ``LIMIT`` will attempt to provide similar
functionality. This parameter is typically specified more
naturally using the :meth:`_expression.Select.limit`
method on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.limit`
:param offset=None:
a numeric value which usually renders as an ``OFFSET``
expression in the resulting select. Backends that don't
support ``OFFSET`` will attempt to provide similar
functionality. This parameter is typically specified more naturally
using the :meth:`_expression.Select.offset` method on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.offset`
:param order_by:
a scalar or list of :class:`_expression.ClauseElement`
objects which will
comprise the ``ORDER BY`` clause of the resulting select.
This parameter is typically specified more naturally using the
:meth:`_expression.Select.order_by` method on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.order_by`
:param use_labels=False:
when ``True``, the statement will be generated using labels
for each column in the columns clause, which qualify each
column with its parent table's (or aliases) name so that name
conflicts between columns in different tables don't occur.
The format of the label is ``<tablename>_<column>``. The "c"
collection of a :class:`_expression.Subquery` created
against this :class:`_expression.Select`
object, as well as the :attr:`_expression.Select.selected_columns`
collection of the :class:`_expression.Select` itself, will use these
names for targeting column members.
This parameter can also be specified on an existing
:class:`_expression.Select` object using the
:meth:`_expression.Select.set_label_style`
method.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.set_label_style`
"""
self = cls.__new__(cls)
self._auto_correlate = correlate
if distinct is not False:
if distinct is True:
self.distinct.non_generative(self)
else:
self.distinct.non_generative(self, *util.to_list(distinct))
if from_obj is not None:
self.select_from.non_generative(self, *util.to_list(from_obj))
try:
cols_present = bool(columns)
except TypeError as err:
util.raise_(
exc.ArgumentError(
"select() construct created in legacy mode, i.e. with "
"keyword arguments, must provide the columns argument as "
"a Python list or other iterable.",
code="c9ae",
),
from_=err,
)
if cols_present:
self._raw_columns = [
coercions.expect(
roles.ColumnsClauseRole, c, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
for c in columns
]
else:
self._raw_columns = []
if whereclause is not None:
self.where.non_generative(self, whereclause)
if having is not None:
self.having.non_generative(self, having)
if prefixes:
self._setup_prefixes(prefixes)
if suffixes:
self._setup_suffixes(suffixes)
GenerativeSelect.__init__(self, **kwargs)
return self
@classmethod
def _create_future_select(cls, *entities):
r"""Construct a new :class:`_expression.Select` using the 2.
x style API.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 - The :func:`_sql.select` function now accepts
column arguments positionally. The top-level :func:`_sql.select`
function will automatically use the 1.x or 2.x style API based on
the incoming arguments; using :func:`_future.select` from the
``sqlalchemy.future`` module will enforce that only the 2.x style
constructor is used.
Similar functionality is also available via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.select` method on any
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`coretutorial_selecting` - Core Tutorial description of
:func:`_expression.select`.
:param \*entities:
Entities to SELECT from. For Core usage, this is typically a series
of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` and / or
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
objects which will form the columns clause of the resulting
statement. For those objects that are instances of
:class:`_expression.FromClause` (typically :class:`_schema.Table`
or :class:`_expression.Alias`
objects), the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.c`
collection is extracted
to form a collection of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects.
This parameter will also accept :class:`_expression.TextClause`
constructs as
given, as well as ORM-mapped classes.
"""
self = cls.__new__(cls)
self._raw_columns = [
coercions.expect(
roles.ColumnsClauseRole, ent, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
for ent in entities
]
GenerativeSelect.__init__(self)
return self
_create_select = _create_future_select
@classmethod
def _create_raw_select(cls, **kw):
"""Create a :class:`.Select` using raw ``__new__`` with no coercions.
Used internally to build up :class:`.Select` constructs with
pre-established state.
"""
stmt = Select.__new__(Select)
stmt.__dict__.update(kw)
return stmt
@classmethod
def _create(cls, *args, **kw):
r"""Create a :class:`.Select` using either the 1.x or 2.0 constructor
style.
For the legacy calling style, see :meth:`.Select.create_legacy_select`.
If the first argument passed is a Python sequence or if keyword
arguments are present, this style is used.
.. versionadded:: 2.0 - the :func:`_future.select` construct is
the same construct as the one returned by
:func:`_expression.select`, except that the function only
accepts the "columns clause" entities up front; the rest of the
state of the SELECT should be built up using generative methods.
Similar functionality is also available via the
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.select` method on any
:class:`_expression.FromClause`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`coretutorial_selecting` - Core Tutorial description of
:func:`_expression.select`.
:param \*entities:
Entities to SELECT from. For Core usage, this is typically a series
of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` and / or
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
objects which will form the columns clause of the resulting
statement. For those objects that are instances of
:class:`_expression.FromClause` (typically :class:`_schema.Table`
or :class:`_expression.Alias`
objects), the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.c`
collection is extracted
to form a collection of :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects.
This parameter will also accept :class:`_expression.TextClause`
constructs as given, as well as ORM-mapped classes.
"""
if (
args
and (
isinstance(args[0], list)
or (
hasattr(args[0], "__iter__")
and not isinstance(
args[0], util.string_types + (ClauseElement,)
)
and inspect(args[0], raiseerr=False) is None
and not hasattr(args[0], "__clause_element__")
)
)
) or kw:
return cls.create_legacy_select(*args, **kw)
else:
return cls._create_future_select(*args)
def __init__(self):
raise NotImplementedError()
def _scalar_type(self):
elem = self._raw_columns[0]
cols = list(elem._select_iterable)
return cols[0].type
def filter(self, *criteria):
"""A synonym for the :meth:`_future.Select.where` method."""
return self.where(*criteria)
def _filter_by_zero(self):
if self._setup_joins:
meth = SelectState.get_plugin_class(
self
).determine_last_joined_entity
_last_joined_entity = meth(self)
if _last_joined_entity is not None:
return _last_joined_entity
if self._from_obj:
return self._from_obj[0]
return self._raw_columns[0]
def filter_by(self, **kwargs):
r"""apply the given filtering criterion as a WHERE clause
to this select.
"""
from_entity = self._filter_by_zero()
clauses = [
_entity_namespace_key(from_entity, key) == value
for key, value in kwargs.items()
]
return self.filter(*clauses)
@property
def column_descriptions(self):
"""Return a :term:`plugin-enabled` 'column descriptions' structure
referring to the columns which are SELECTed by this statement.
This attribute is generally useful when using the ORM, as an
extended structure which includes information about mapped
entities is returned. The section :ref:`queryguide_inspection`
contains more background.
For a Core-only statement, the structure returned by this accessor
is derived from the same objects that are returned by the
:attr:`.Select.selected_columns` accessor, formatted as a list of
dictionaries which contain the keys ``name``, ``type`` and ``expr``,
which indicate the column expressions to be selected::
>>> stmt = select(user_table)
>>> stmt.column_descriptions
[
{
'name': 'id',
'type': Integer(),
'expr': Column('id', Integer(), ...)},
{
'name': 'name',
'type': String(length=30),
'expr': Column('name', String(length=30), ...)}
]
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.33 The :attr:`.Select.column_descriptions`
attribute returns a structure for a Core-only set of entities,
not just ORM-only entities.
.. seealso::
:attr:`.UpdateBase.entity_description` - entity information for
an :func:`.insert`, :func:`.update`, or :func:`.delete`
:ref:`queryguide_inspection` - ORM background
"""
meth = SelectState.get_plugin_class(self).get_column_descriptions
return meth(self)
def from_statement(self, statement):
"""Apply the columns which this :class:`.Select` would select
onto another statement.
This operation is :term:`plugin-specific` and will raise a not
supported exception if this :class:`_sql.Select` does not select from
plugin-enabled entities.
The statement is typically either a :func:`_expression.text` or
:func:`_expression.select` construct, and should return the set of
columns appropriate to the entities represented by this
:class:`.Select`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`orm_queryguide_selecting_text` - usage examples in the
ORM Querying Guide
"""
meth = SelectState.get_plugin_class(self).from_statement
return meth(self, statement)
@_generative
def join(self, target, onclause=None, isouter=False, full=False):
r"""Create a SQL JOIN against this :class:`_expression.Select`
object's criterion
and apply generatively, returning the newly resulting
:class:`_expression.Select`.
E.g.::
stmt = select(user_table).join(address_table, user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id)
The above statement generates SQL similar to::
SELECT user.id, user.name FROM user JOIN address ON user.id = address.user_id
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 :meth:`_expression.Select.join` now creates
a :class:`_sql.Join` object between a :class:`_sql.FromClause`
source that is within the FROM clause of the existing SELECT,
and a given target :class:`_sql.FromClause`, and then adds
this :class:`_sql.Join` to the FROM clause of the newly generated
SELECT statement. This is completely reworked from the behavior
in 1.3, which would instead create a subquery of the entire
:class:`_expression.Select` and then join that subquery to the
target.
This is a **backwards incompatible change** as the previous behavior
was mostly useless, producing an unnamed subquery rejected by
most databases in any case. The new behavior is modeled after
that of the very successful :meth:`_orm.Query.join` method in the
ORM, in order to support the functionality of :class:`_orm.Query`
being available by using a :class:`_sql.Select` object with an
:class:`_orm.Session`.
See the notes for this change at :ref:`change_select_join`.
:param target: target table to join towards
:param onclause: ON clause of the join. If omitted, an ON clause
is generated automatically based on the :class:`_schema.ForeignKey`
linkages between the two tables, if one can be unambiguously
determined, otherwise an error is raised.
:param isouter: if True, generate LEFT OUTER join. Same as
:meth:`_expression.Select.outerjoin`.
:param full: if True, generate FULL OUTER join.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_select_join` - in the :doc:`/tutorial/index`
:ref:`orm_queryguide_joins` - in the :ref:`queryguide_toplevel`
:meth:`_expression.Select.join_from`
:meth:`_expression.Select.outerjoin`
""" # noqa: E501
target = coercions.expect(
roles.JoinTargetRole, target, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
if onclause is not None:
onclause = coercions.expect(roles.OnClauseRole, onclause)
self._setup_joins += (
(target, onclause, None, {"isouter": isouter, "full": full}),
)
def outerjoin_from(self, from_, target, onclause=None, full=False):
r"""Create a SQL LEFT OUTER JOIN against this
:class:`_expression.Select` object's criterion and apply generatively,
returning the newly resulting :class:`_expression.Select`.
Usage is the same as that of :meth:`_selectable.Select.join_from`.
"""
return self.join_from(
from_, target, onclause=onclause, isouter=True, full=full
)
@_generative
def join_from(
self, from_, target, onclause=None, isouter=False, full=False
):
r"""Create a SQL JOIN against this :class:`_expression.Select`
object's criterion
and apply generatively, returning the newly resulting
:class:`_expression.Select`.
E.g.::
stmt = select(user_table, address_table).join_from(
user_table, address_table, user_table.c.id == address_table.c.user_id
)
The above statement generates SQL similar to::
SELECT user.id, user.name, address.id, address.email, address.user_id
FROM user JOIN address ON user.id = address.user_id
.. versionadded:: 1.4
:param from\_: the left side of the join, will be rendered in the
FROM clause and is roughly equivalent to using the
:meth:`.Select.select_from` method.
:param target: target table to join towards
:param onclause: ON clause of the join.
:param isouter: if True, generate LEFT OUTER join. Same as
:meth:`_expression.Select.outerjoin`.
:param full: if True, generate FULL OUTER join.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_select_join` - in the :doc:`/tutorial/index`
:ref:`orm_queryguide_joins` - in the :ref:`queryguide_toplevel`
:meth:`_expression.Select.join`
""" # noqa: E501
# note the order of parsing from vs. target is important here, as we
# are also deriving the source of the plugin (i.e. the subject mapper
# in an ORM query) which should favor the "from_" over the "target"
from_ = coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, from_, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
target = coercions.expect(
roles.JoinTargetRole, target, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
if onclause is not None:
onclause = coercions.expect(roles.OnClauseRole, onclause)
self._setup_joins += (
(target, onclause, from_, {"isouter": isouter, "full": full}),
)
def outerjoin(self, target, onclause=None, full=False):
"""Create a left outer join.
Parameters are the same as that of :meth:`_expression.Select.join`.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 :meth:`_expression.Select.outerjoin` now
creates a :class:`_sql.Join` object between a
:class:`_sql.FromClause` source that is within the FROM clause of
the existing SELECT, and a given target :class:`_sql.FromClause`,
and then adds this :class:`_sql.Join` to the FROM clause of the
newly generated SELECT statement. This is completely reworked
from the behavior in 1.3, which would instead create a subquery of
the entire
:class:`_expression.Select` and then join that subquery to the
target.
This is a **backwards incompatible change** as the previous behavior
was mostly useless, producing an unnamed subquery rejected by
most databases in any case. The new behavior is modeled after
that of the very successful :meth:`_orm.Query.join` method in the
ORM, in order to support the functionality of :class:`_orm.Query`
being available by using a :class:`_sql.Select` object with an
:class:`_orm.Session`.
See the notes for this change at :ref:`change_select_join`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_select_join` - in the :doc:`/tutorial/index`
:ref:`orm_queryguide_joins` - in the :ref:`queryguide_toplevel`
:meth:`_expression.Select.join`
"""
return self.join(target, onclause=onclause, isouter=True, full=full)
def get_final_froms(self):
"""Compute the final displayed list of :class:`_expression.FromClause`
elements.
This method will run through the full computation required to
determine what FROM elements will be displayed in the resulting
SELECT statement, including shadowing individual tables with
JOIN objects, as well as full computation for ORM use cases including
eager loading clauses.
For ORM use, this accessor returns the **post compilation**
list of FROM objects; this collection will include elements such as
eagerly loaded tables and joins. The objects will **not** be
ORM enabled and not work as a replacement for the
:meth:`_sql.Select.select_froms` collection; additionally, the
method is not well performing for an ORM enabled statement as it
will incur the full ORM construction process.
To retrieve the FROM list that's implied by the "columns" collection
passed to the :class:`_sql.Select` originally, use the
:attr:`_sql.Select.columns_clause_froms` accessor.
To select from an alternative set of columns while maintaining the
FROM list, use the :meth:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns` method and
pass the
:paramref:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns.maintain_column_froms`
parameter.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.23 - the :meth:`_sql.Select.get_final_froms`
method replaces the previous :attr:`_sql.Select.froms` accessor,
which is deprecated.
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.Select.columns_clause_froms`
"""
return self._compile_state_factory(self, None)._get_display_froms()
@property
@util.deprecated(
"1.4.23",
"The :attr:`_expression.Select.froms` attribute is moved to "
"the :meth:`_expression.Select.get_final_froms` method.",
)
def froms(self):
"""Return the displayed list of :class:`_expression.FromClause`
elements.
"""
return self.get_final_froms()
@property
def columns_clause_froms(self):
"""Return the set of :class:`_expression.FromClause` objects implied
by the columns clause of this SELECT statement.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.23
.. seealso::
:attr:`_sql.Select.froms` - "final" FROM list taking the full
statement into account
:meth:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns` - makes use of this
collection to set up a new FROM list
"""
return SelectState.get_plugin_class(self).get_columns_clause_froms(
self
)
@property
def inner_columns(self):
"""An iterator of all :class:`_expression.ColumnElement`
expressions which would
be rendered into the columns clause of the resulting SELECT statement.
This method is legacy as of 1.4 and is superseded by the
:attr:`_expression.Select.exported_columns` collection.
"""
return iter(self._all_selected_columns)
def is_derived_from(self, fromclause):
if self in fromclause._cloned_set:
return True
for f in self._iterate_from_elements():
if f.is_derived_from(fromclause):
return True
return False
def _copy_internals(self, clone=_clone, **kw):
# Select() object has been cloned and probably adapted by the
# given clone function. Apply the cloning function to internal
# objects
# 1. keep a dictionary of the froms we've cloned, and what
# they've become. This allows us to ensure the same cloned from
# is used when other items such as columns are "cloned"
all_the_froms = set(
itertools.chain(
_from_objects(*self._raw_columns),
_from_objects(*self._where_criteria),
_from_objects(*[elem[0] for elem in self._setup_joins]),
)
)
# do a clone for the froms we've gathered. what is important here
# is if any of the things we are selecting from, like tables,
# were converted into Join objects. if so, these need to be
# added to _from_obj explicitly, because otherwise they won't be
# part of the new state, as they don't associate themselves with
# their columns.
new_froms = {f: clone(f, **kw) for f in all_the_froms}
# 2. copy FROM collections, adding in joins that we've created.
existing_from_obj = [clone(f, **kw) for f in self._from_obj]
add_froms = (
set(f for f in new_froms.values() if isinstance(f, Join))
.difference(all_the_froms)
.difference(existing_from_obj)
)
self._from_obj = tuple(existing_from_obj) + tuple(add_froms)
# 3. clone everything else, making sure we use columns
# corresponding to the froms we just made.
def replace(obj, **kw):
if isinstance(obj, ColumnClause) and obj.table in new_froms:
newelem = new_froms[obj.table].corresponding_column(obj)
return newelem
kw["replace"] = replace
# copy everything else. for table-ish things like correlate,
# correlate_except, setup_joins, these clone normally. For
# column-expression oriented things like raw_columns, where_criteria,
# order by, we get this from the new froms.
super(Select, self)._copy_internals(
clone=clone, omit_attrs=("_from_obj",), **kw
)
self._reset_memoizations()
def get_children(self, **kwargs):
return itertools.chain(
super(Select, self).get_children(
omit_attrs=["_from_obj", "_correlate", "_correlate_except"]
),
self._iterate_from_elements(),
)
@_generative
def add_columns(self, *columns):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with
the given column expressions added to its columns clause.
E.g.::
my_select = my_select.add_columns(table.c.new_column)
See the documentation for
:meth:`_expression.Select.with_only_columns`
for guidelines on adding /replacing the columns of a
:class:`_expression.Select` object.
"""
self._reset_memoizations()
self._raw_columns = self._raw_columns + [
coercions.expect(
roles.ColumnsClauseRole, column, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
for column in columns
]
def _set_entities(self, entities):
self._raw_columns = [
coercions.expect(
roles.ColumnsClauseRole, ent, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
for ent in util.to_list(entities)
]
@util.deprecated(
"1.4",
"The :meth:`_expression.Select.column` method is deprecated and will "
"be removed in a future release. Please use "
":meth:`_expression.Select.add_columns`",
)
def column(self, column):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with
the given column expression added to its columns clause.
E.g.::
my_select = my_select.column(table.c.new_column)
See the documentation for
:meth:`_expression.Select.with_only_columns`
for guidelines on adding /replacing the columns of a
:class:`_expression.Select` object.
"""
return self.add_columns(column)
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.sql.util")
def reduce_columns(self, only_synonyms=True):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with redundantly
named, equivalently-valued columns removed from the columns clause.
"Redundant" here means two columns where one refers to the
other either based on foreign key, or via a simple equality
comparison in the WHERE clause of the statement. The primary purpose
of this method is to automatically construct a select statement
with all uniquely-named columns, without the need to use
table-qualified labels as
:meth:`_expression.Select.set_label_style`
does.
When columns are omitted based on foreign key, the referred-to
column is the one that's kept. When columns are omitted based on
WHERE equivalence, the first column in the columns clause is the
one that's kept.
:param only_synonyms: when True, limit the removal of columns
to those which have the same name as the equivalent. Otherwise,
all columns that are equivalent to another are removed.
"""
return self.with_only_columns(
*util.preloaded.sql_util.reduce_columns(
self._all_selected_columns,
only_synonyms=only_synonyms,
*(self._where_criteria + self._from_obj)
)
)
@_generative
def with_only_columns(self, *columns, **kw):
r"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with its columns
clause replaced with the given columns.
By default, this method is exactly equivalent to as if the original
:func:`_expression.select` had been called with the given columns
clause. E.g. a statement::
s = select(table1.c.a, table1.c.b)
s = s.with_only_columns(table1.c.b)
should be exactly equivalent to::
s = select(table1.c.b)
In this mode of operation, :meth:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns`
will also dynamically alter the FROM clause of the
statement if it is not explicitly stated.
To maintain the existing set of FROMs including those implied by the
current columns clause, add the
:paramref:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns.maintain_column_froms`
parameter::
s = select(table1.c.a, table2.c.b)
s = s.with_only_columns(table1.c.a, maintain_column_froms=True)
The above parameter performs a transfer of the effective FROMs
in the columns collection to the :meth:`_sql.Select.select_from`
method, as though the following were invoked::
s = select(table1.c.a, table2.c.b)
s = s.select_from(table1, table2).with_only_columns(table1.c.a)
The :paramref:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns.maintain_column_froms`
parameter makes use of the :attr:`_sql.Select.columns_clause_froms`
collection and performs an operation equivalent to the following::
s = select(table1.c.a, table2.c.b)
s = s.select_from(*s.columns_clause_froms).with_only_columns(table1.c.a)
:param \*columns: column expressions to be used.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 the :meth:`_sql.Select.with_only_columns`
method accepts the list of column expressions positionally;
passing the expressions as a list is deprecated.
:param maintain_column_froms: boolean parameter that will ensure the
FROM list implied from the current columns clause will be transferred
to the :meth:`_sql.Select.select_from` method first.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.23
""" # noqa: E501
# memoizations should be cleared here as of
# I95c560ffcbfa30b26644999412fb6a385125f663 , asserting this
# is the case for now.
self._assert_no_memoizations()
maintain_column_froms = kw.pop("maintain_column_froms", False)
if kw:
raise TypeError("unknown parameters: %s" % (", ".join(kw),))
if maintain_column_froms:
self.select_from.non_generative(self, *self.columns_clause_froms)
# then memoize the FROMs etc.
_MemoizedSelectEntities._generate_for_statement(self)
self._raw_columns = [
coercions.expect(roles.ColumnsClauseRole, c)
for c in coercions._expression_collection_was_a_list(
"columns", "Select.with_only_columns", columns
)
]
@property
def whereclause(self):
"""Return the completed WHERE clause for this
:class:`_expression.Select` statement.
This assembles the current collection of WHERE criteria
into a single :class:`_expression.BooleanClauseList` construct.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return BooleanClauseList._construct_for_whereclause(
self._where_criteria
)
_whereclause = whereclause
@_generative
def where(self, *whereclause):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with
the given expression added to
its WHERE clause, joined to the existing clause via AND, if any.
"""
assert isinstance(self._where_criteria, tuple)
for criterion in whereclause:
where_criteria = coercions.expect(roles.WhereHavingRole, criterion)
self._where_criteria += (where_criteria,)
@_generative
def having(self, having):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with
the given expression added to
its HAVING clause, joined to the existing clause via AND, if any.
"""
self._having_criteria += (
coercions.expect(roles.WhereHavingRole, having),
)
@_generative
def distinct(self, *expr):
r"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct which
will apply DISTINCT to its columns clause.
:param \*expr: optional column expressions. When present,
the PostgreSQL dialect will render a ``DISTINCT ON (<expressions>>)``
construct.
.. deprecated:: 1.4 Using \*expr in other dialects is deprecated
and will raise :class:`_exc.CompileError` in a future version.
"""
if expr:
self._distinct = True
self._distinct_on = self._distinct_on + tuple(
coercions.expect(roles.ByOfRole, e) for e in expr
)
else:
self._distinct = True
@_generative
def select_from(self, *froms):
r"""Return a new :func:`_expression.select` construct with the
given FROM expression(s)
merged into its list of FROM objects.
E.g.::
table1 = table('t1', column('a'))
table2 = table('t2', column('b'))
s = select(table1.c.a).\
select_from(
table1.join(table2, table1.c.a==table2.c.b)
)
The "from" list is a unique set on the identity of each element,
so adding an already present :class:`_schema.Table`
or other selectable
will have no effect. Passing a :class:`_expression.Join` that refers
to an already present :class:`_schema.Table`
or other selectable will have
the effect of concealing the presence of that selectable as
an individual element in the rendered FROM list, instead
rendering it into a JOIN clause.
While the typical purpose of :meth:`_expression.Select.select_from`
is to
replace the default, derived FROM clause with a join, it can
also be called with individual table elements, multiple times
if desired, in the case that the FROM clause cannot be fully
derived from the columns clause::
select(func.count('*')).select_from(table1)
"""
self._from_obj += tuple(
coercions.expect(
roles.FromClauseRole, fromclause, apply_propagate_attrs=self
)
for fromclause in froms
)
@_generative
def correlate(self, *fromclauses):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Select`
which will correlate the given FROM
clauses to that of an enclosing :class:`_expression.Select`.
Calling this method turns off the :class:`_expression.Select` object's
default behavior of "auto-correlation". Normally, FROM elements
which appear in a :class:`_expression.Select`
that encloses this one via
its :term:`WHERE clause`, ORDER BY, HAVING or
:term:`columns clause` will be omitted from this
:class:`_expression.Select`
object's :term:`FROM clause`.
Setting an explicit correlation collection using the
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`
method provides a fixed list of FROM objects
that can potentially take place in this process.
When :meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`
is used to apply specific FROM clauses
for correlation, the FROM elements become candidates for
correlation regardless of how deeply nested this
:class:`_expression.Select`
object is, relative to an enclosing :class:`_expression.Select`
which refers to
the same FROM object. This is in contrast to the behavior of
"auto-correlation" which only correlates to an immediate enclosing
:class:`_expression.Select`.
Multi-level correlation ensures that the link
between enclosed and enclosing :class:`_expression.Select`
is always via
at least one WHERE/ORDER BY/HAVING/columns clause in order for
correlation to take place.
If ``None`` is passed, the :class:`_expression.Select`
object will correlate
none of its FROM entries, and all will render unconditionally
in the local FROM clause.
:param \*fromclauses: a list of one or more
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
constructs, or other compatible constructs (i.e. ORM-mapped
classes) to become part of the correlate collection.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate_except`
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery`
"""
self._auto_correlate = False
if fromclauses and fromclauses[0] in {None, False}:
self._correlate = ()
else:
self._correlate = self._correlate + tuple(
coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, f) for f in fromclauses
)
@_generative
def correlate_except(self, *fromclauses):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Select`
which will omit the given FROM
clauses from the auto-correlation process.
Calling :meth:`_expression.Select.correlate_except` turns off the
:class:`_expression.Select` object's default behavior of
"auto-correlation" for the given FROM elements. An element
specified here will unconditionally appear in the FROM list, while
all other FROM elements remain subject to normal auto-correlation
behaviors.
If ``None`` is passed, the :class:`_expression.Select`
object will correlate
all of its FROM entries.
:param \*fromclauses: a list of one or more
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
constructs, or other compatible constructs (i.e. ORM-mapped
classes) to become part of the correlate-exception collection.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.Select.correlate`
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery`
"""
self._auto_correlate = False
if fromclauses and fromclauses[0] in {None, False}:
self._correlate_except = ()
else:
self._correlate_except = (self._correlate_except or ()) + tuple(
coercions.expect(roles.FromClauseRole, f) for f in fromclauses
)
@HasMemoized.memoized_attribute
def selected_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
representing the columns that
this SELECT statement or similar construct returns in its result set,
not including :class:`_sql.TextClause` constructs.
This collection differs from the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.columns`
collection of a :class:`_expression.FromClause` in that the columns
within this collection cannot be directly nested inside another SELECT
statement; a subquery must be applied first which provides for the
necessary parenthesization required by SQL.
For a :func:`_expression.select` construct, the collection here is
exactly what would be rendered inside the "SELECT" statement, and the
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects are directly present as they
were given, e.g.::
col1 = column('q', Integer)
col2 = column('p', Integer)
stmt = select(col1, col2)
Above, ``stmt.selected_columns`` would be a collection that contains
the ``col1`` and ``col2`` objects directly. For a statement that is
against a :class:`_schema.Table` or other
:class:`_expression.FromClause`, the collection will use the
:class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects that are in the
:attr:`_expression.FromClause.c` collection of the from element.
.. note::
The :attr:`_sql.Select.selected_columns` collection does not
include expressions established in the columns clause using the
:func:`_sql.text` construct; these are silently omitted from the
collection. To use plain textual column expressions inside of a
:class:`_sql.Select` construct, use the :func:`_sql.literal_column`
construct.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
# compare to SelectState._generate_columns_plus_names, which
# generates the actual names used in the SELECT string. that
# method is more complex because it also renders columns that are
# fully ambiguous, e.g. same column more than once.
conv = SelectState._column_naming_convention(self._label_style)
return ColumnCollection(
[
(conv(c), c)
for c in self._all_selected_columns
if not c._is_text_clause
]
).as_immutable()
@HasMemoized.memoized_attribute
def _all_selected_columns(self):
meth = SelectState.get_plugin_class(self).all_selected_columns
return list(meth(self))
def _ensure_disambiguated_names(self):
if self._label_style is LABEL_STYLE_NONE:
self = self.set_label_style(LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY)
return self
def _generate_columns_plus_names(self, anon_for_dupe_key):
"""Generate column names as rendered in a SELECT statement by
the compiler.
This is distinct from the _column_naming_convention generator that's
intended for population of .c collections and similar, which has
different rules. the collection returned here calls upon the
_column_naming_convention as well.
"""
cols = self._all_selected_columns
key_naming_convention = SelectState._column_naming_convention(
self._label_style
)
names = {}
result = []
result_append = result.append
table_qualified = self._label_style is LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL
label_style_none = self._label_style is LABEL_STYLE_NONE
# a counter used for "dedupe" labels, which have double underscores
# in them and are never referred by name; they only act
# as positional placeholders. they need only be unique within
# the single columns clause they're rendered within (required by
# some dbs such as mysql). So their anon identity is tracked against
# a fixed counter rather than hash() identity.
dedupe_hash = 1
for c in cols:
repeated = False
if not c._render_label_in_columns_clause:
effective_name = (
required_label_name
) = fallback_label_name = None
elif label_style_none:
effective_name = required_label_name = None
fallback_label_name = c._non_anon_label or c._anon_name_label
else:
if table_qualified:
required_label_name = (
effective_name
) = fallback_label_name = c._tq_label
else:
effective_name = fallback_label_name = c._non_anon_label
required_label_name = None
if effective_name is None:
# it seems like this could be _proxy_key and we would
# not need _expression_label but it isn't
# giving us a clue when to use anon_label instead
expr_label = c._expression_label
if expr_label is None:
repeated = c._anon_name_label in names
names[c._anon_name_label] = c
effective_name = required_label_name = None
if repeated:
# here, "required_label_name" is sent as
# "None" and "fallback_label_name" is sent.
if table_qualified:
fallback_label_name = (
c._dedupe_anon_tq_label_idx(dedupe_hash)
)
dedupe_hash += 1
else:
fallback_label_name = c._dedupe_anon_label_idx(
dedupe_hash
)
dedupe_hash += 1
else:
fallback_label_name = c._anon_name_label
else:
required_label_name = (
effective_name
) = fallback_label_name = expr_label
if effective_name is not None:
if effective_name in names:
# when looking to see if names[name] is the same column as
# c, use hash(), so that an annotated version of the column
# is seen as the same as the non-annotated
if hash(names[effective_name]) != hash(c):
# different column under the same name. apply
# disambiguating label
if table_qualified:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._anon_tq_label
else:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._anon_name_label
if anon_for_dupe_key and required_label_name in names:
# here, c._anon_tq_label is definitely unique to
# that column identity (or annotated version), so
# this should always be true.
# this is also an infrequent codepath because
# you need two levels of duplication to be here
assert hash(names[required_label_name]) == hash(c)
# the column under the disambiguating label is
# already present. apply the "dedupe" label to
# subsequent occurrences of the column so that the
# original stays non-ambiguous
if table_qualified:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._dedupe_anon_tq_label_idx(dedupe_hash)
dedupe_hash += 1
else:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._dedupe_anon_label_idx(dedupe_hash)
dedupe_hash += 1
repeated = True
else:
names[required_label_name] = c
elif anon_for_dupe_key:
# same column under the same name. apply the "dedupe"
# label so that the original stays non-ambiguous
if table_qualified:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._dedupe_anon_tq_label_idx(dedupe_hash)
dedupe_hash += 1
else:
required_label_name = (
fallback_label_name
) = c._dedupe_anon_label_idx(dedupe_hash)
dedupe_hash += 1
repeated = True
else:
names[effective_name] = c
result_append(
(
# string label name, if non-None, must be rendered as a
# label, i.e. "AS <name>"
required_label_name,
# proxy_key that is to be part of the result map for this
# col. this is also the key in a fromclause.c or
# select.selected_columns collection
key_naming_convention(c),
# name that can be used to render an "AS <name>" when
# we have to render a label even though
# required_label_name was not given
fallback_label_name,
# the ColumnElement itself
c,
# True if this is a duplicate of a previous column
# in the list of columns
repeated,
)
)
return result
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, subquery):
"""Generate column proxies to place in the exported ``.c``
collection of a subquery."""
prox = [
c._make_proxy(
subquery,
key=proxy_key,
name=required_label_name,
name_is_truncatable=True,
)
for (
required_label_name,
proxy_key,
fallback_label_name,
c,
repeated,
) in (self._generate_columns_plus_names(False))
if not c._is_text_clause
]
subquery._columns._populate_separate_keys(prox)
def _needs_parens_for_grouping(self):
return self._has_row_limiting_clause or bool(
self._order_by_clause.clauses
)
def self_group(self, against=None):
"""Return a 'grouping' construct as per the
:class:`_expression.ClauseElement` specification.
This produces an element that can be embedded in an expression. Note
that this method is called automatically as needed when constructing
expressions and should not require explicit use.
"""
if (
isinstance(against, CompoundSelect)
and not self._needs_parens_for_grouping()
):
return self
else:
return SelectStatementGrouping(self)
def union(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``UNION`` of this select() construct against
the given selectables provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_union(self, *other, **kwargs)
def union_all(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``UNION ALL`` of this select() construct against
the given selectables provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_union_all(self, *other, **kwargs)
def except_(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``EXCEPT`` of this select() construct against
the given selectable provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_except(self, *other, **kwargs)
def except_all(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``EXCEPT ALL`` of this select() construct against
the given selectables provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_except_all(self, *other, **kwargs)
def intersect(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``INTERSECT`` of this select() construct against
the given selectables provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_intersect(self, *other, **kwargs)
def intersect_all(self, *other, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SQL ``INTERSECT ALL`` of this select() construct
against the given selectables provided as positional arguments.
:param \*other: one or more elements with which to create a
UNION.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4.28
multiple elements are now accepted.
:param \**kwargs: keyword arguments are forwarded to the constructor
for the newly created :class:`_sql.CompoundSelect` object.
"""
return CompoundSelect._create_intersect_all(self, *other, **kwargs)
@property
@util.deprecated_20(
":attr:`.Executable.bind`",
alternative="Bound metadata is being removed as of SQLAlchemy 2.0.",
enable_warnings=False,
)
def bind(self):
"""Returns the :class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection`
to which this :class:`.Executable` is bound, or None if none found.
"""
if self._bind:
return self._bind
for item in self._iterate_from_elements():
if item._is_subquery and item.element is self:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"select() construct refers to itself as a FROM"
)
e = item.bind
if e:
self._bind = e
return e
else:
break
for c in self._raw_columns:
e = c.bind
if e:
self._bind = e
return e
@bind.setter
def bind(self, bind):
self._bind = bind
class ScalarSelect(roles.InElementRole, Generative, Grouping):
"""Represent a scalar subquery.
A :class:`_sql.ScalarSelect` is created by invoking the
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.scalar_subquery` method. The object
then participates in other SQL expressions as a SQL column expression
within the :class:`_sql.ColumnElement` hierarchy.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.scalar_subquery`
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery` - in the 2.0 tutorial
"""
_from_objects = []
_is_from_container = True
_is_implicitly_boolean = False
inherit_cache = True
def __init__(self, element):
self.element = element
self.type = element._scalar_type()
@property
def columns(self):
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Scalar Select expression has no "
"columns; use this object directly "
"within a column-level expression."
)
c = columns
@_generative
def where(self, crit):
"""Apply a WHERE clause to the SELECT statement referred to
by this :class:`_expression.ScalarSelect`.
"""
self.element = self.element.where(crit)
def self_group(self, **kwargs):
return self
@_generative
def correlate(self, *fromclauses):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.ScalarSelect`
which will correlate the given FROM
clauses to that of an enclosing :class:`_expression.Select`.
This method is mirrored from the :meth:`_sql.Select.correlate` method
of the underlying :class:`_sql.Select`. The method applies the
:meth:_sql.Select.correlate` method, then returns a new
:class:`_sql.ScalarSelect` against that statement.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 Previously, the
:meth:`_sql.ScalarSelect.correlate`
method was only available from :class:`_sql.Select`.
:param \*fromclauses: a list of one or more
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
constructs, or other compatible constructs (i.e. ORM-mapped
classes) to become part of the correlate collection.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.ScalarSelect.correlate_except`
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery` - in the 2.0 tutorial
"""
self.element = self.element.correlate(*fromclauses)
@_generative
def correlate_except(self, *fromclauses):
r"""Return a new :class:`_expression.ScalarSelect`
which will omit the given FROM
clauses from the auto-correlation process.
This method is mirrored from the
:meth:`_sql.Select.correlate_except` method of the underlying
:class:`_sql.Select`. The method applies the
:meth:_sql.Select.correlate_except` method, then returns a new
:class:`_sql.ScalarSelect` against that statement.
.. versionadded:: 1.4 Previously, the
:meth:`_sql.ScalarSelect.correlate_except`
method was only available from :class:`_sql.Select`.
:param \*fromclauses: a list of one or more
:class:`_expression.FromClause`
constructs, or other compatible constructs (i.e. ORM-mapped
classes) to become part of the correlate-exception collection.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_expression.ScalarSelect.correlate`
:ref:`tutorial_scalar_subquery` - in the 2.0 tutorial
"""
self.element = self.element.correlate_except(*fromclauses)
class Exists(UnaryExpression):
"""Represent an ``EXISTS`` clause.
See :func:`_sql.exists` for a description of usage.
An ``EXISTS`` clause can also be constructed from a :func:`_sql.select`
instance by calling :meth:`_sql.SelectBase.exists`.
"""
_from_objects = []
inherit_cache = True
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Construct a new :class:`_expression.Exists` construct.
The :func:`_sql.exists` can be invoked by itself to produce an
:class:`_sql.Exists` construct, which will accept simple WHERE
criteria::
exists_criteria = exists().where(table1.c.col1 == table2.c.col2)
However, for greater flexibility in constructing the SELECT, an
existing :class:`_sql.Select` construct may be converted to an
:class:`_sql.Exists`, most conveniently by making use of the
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.exists` method::
exists_criteria = (
select(table2.c.col2).
where(table1.c.col1 == table2.c.col2).
exists()
)
The EXISTS criteria is then used inside of an enclosing SELECT::
stmt = select(table1.c.col1).where(exists_criteria)
The above statement will then be of the form::
SELECT col1 FROM table1 WHERE EXISTS
(SELECT table2.col2 FROM table2 WHERE table2.col2 = table1.col1)
.. seealso::
:ref:`tutorial_exists` - in the :term:`2.0 style` tutorial.
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.exists` - method to transform a ``SELECT`` to an
``EXISTS`` clause.
""" # noqa: E501
if args and isinstance(args[0], (SelectBase, ScalarSelect)):
s = args[0]
else:
if not args:
args = (literal_column("*"),)
s = Select._create(*args, **kwargs).scalar_subquery()
UnaryExpression.__init__(
self,
s,
operator=operators.exists,
type_=type_api.BOOLEANTYPE,
wraps_column_expression=True,
)
def _regroup(self, fn):
element = self.element._ungroup()
element = fn(element)
return element.self_group(against=operators.exists)
@util.deprecated_params(
whereclause=(
"2.0",
"The :paramref:`_sql.Exists.select().whereclause` parameter "
"is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.0. "
"Please make use "
"of the :meth:`.Select.where` "
"method to add WHERE criteria to the SELECT statement.",
),
kwargs=(
"2.0",
"The :meth:`_sql.Exists.select` method will no longer accept "
"keyword arguments in version 2.0. "
"Please use generative methods from the "
":class:`_sql.Select` construct in order to apply additional "
"modifications.",
),
)
def select(self, whereclause=None, **kwargs):
r"""Return a SELECT of this :class:`_expression.Exists`.
e.g.::
stmt = exists(some_table.c.id).where(some_table.c.id == 5).select()
This will produce a statement resembling::
SELECT EXISTS (SELECT id FROM some_table WHERE some_table = :param) AS anon_1
:param whereclause: a WHERE clause, equivalent to calling the
:meth:`_sql.Select.where` method.
:param **kwargs: additional keyword arguments are passed to the
legacy constructor for :class:`_sql.Select` described at
:meth:`_sql.Select.create_legacy_select`.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.select` - general purpose
method which allows for arbitrary column lists.
""" # noqa
if whereclause is not None:
kwargs["whereclause"] = whereclause
return Select._create_select_from_fromclause(self, [self], **kwargs)
def correlate(self, *fromclause):
"""Apply correlation to the subquery noted by this
:class:`_sql.Exists`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.ScalarSelect.correlate`
"""
e = self._clone()
e.element = self._regroup(
lambda element: element.correlate(*fromclause)
)
return e
def correlate_except(self, *fromclause):
"""Apply correlation to the subquery noted by this
:class:`_sql.Exists`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`_sql.ScalarSelect.correlate_except`
"""
e = self._clone()
e.element = self._regroup(
lambda element: element.correlate_except(*fromclause)
)
return e
def select_from(self, *froms):
"""Return a new :class:`_expression.Exists` construct,
applying the given
expression to the :meth:`_expression.Select.select_from`
method of the select
statement contained.
.. note:: it is typically preferable to build a :class:`_sql.Select`
statement first, including the desired WHERE clause, then use the
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.exists` method to produce an
:class:`_sql.Exists` object at once.
"""
e = self._clone()
e.element = self._regroup(lambda element: element.select_from(*froms))
return e
def where(self, *clause):
"""Return a new :func:`_expression.exists` construct with the
given expression added to
its WHERE clause, joined to the existing clause via AND, if any.
.. note:: it is typically preferable to build a :class:`_sql.Select`
statement first, including the desired WHERE clause, then use the
:meth:`_sql.SelectBase.exists` method to produce an
:class:`_sql.Exists` object at once.
"""
e = self._clone()
e.element = self._regroup(lambda element: element.where(*clause))
return e
class TextualSelect(SelectBase):
"""Wrap a :class:`_expression.TextClause` construct within a
:class:`_expression.SelectBase`
interface.
This allows the :class:`_expression.TextClause` object to gain a
``.c`` collection
and other FROM-like capabilities such as
:meth:`_expression.FromClause.alias`,
:meth:`_expression.SelectBase.cte`, etc.
The :class:`_expression.TextualSelect` construct is produced via the
:meth:`_expression.TextClause.columns`
method - see that method for details.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 the :class:`_expression.TextualSelect`
class was renamed
from ``TextAsFrom``, to more correctly suit its role as a
SELECT-oriented object and not a FROM clause.
.. seealso::
:func:`_expression.text`
:meth:`_expression.TextClause.columns` - primary creation interface.
"""
__visit_name__ = "textual_select"
_label_style = LABEL_STYLE_NONE
_traverse_internals = [
("element", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
("column_args", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_list),
] + SupportsCloneAnnotations._clone_annotations_traverse_internals
_is_textual = True
is_text = True
is_select = True
def __init__(self, text, columns, positional=False):
self.element = text
# convert for ORM attributes->columns, etc
self.column_args = [
coercions.expect(roles.ColumnsClauseRole, c) for c in columns
]
self.positional = positional
@HasMemoized.memoized_attribute
def selected_columns(self):
"""A :class:`_expression.ColumnCollection`
representing the columns that
this SELECT statement or similar construct returns in its result set,
not including :class:`_sql.TextClause` constructs.
This collection differs from the :attr:`_expression.FromClause.columns`
collection of a :class:`_expression.FromClause` in that the columns
within this collection cannot be directly nested inside another SELECT
statement; a subquery must be applied first which provides for the
necessary parenthesization required by SQL.
For a :class:`_expression.TextualSelect` construct, the collection
contains the :class:`_expression.ColumnElement` objects that were
passed to the constructor, typically via the
:meth:`_expression.TextClause.columns` method.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
return ColumnCollection(
(c.key, c) for c in self.column_args
).as_immutable()
@property
def _all_selected_columns(self):
return self.column_args
def _set_label_style(self, style):
return self
def _ensure_disambiguated_names(self):
return self
@property
def _bind(self):
return self.element._bind
@_generative
def bindparams(self, *binds, **bind_as_values):
self.element = self.element.bindparams(*binds, **bind_as_values)
def _generate_fromclause_column_proxies(self, fromclause):
fromclause._columns._populate_separate_keys(
c._make_proxy(fromclause) for c in self.column_args
)
def _scalar_type(self):
return self.column_args[0].type
TextAsFrom = TextualSelect
"""Backwards compatibility with the previous name"""
class AnnotatedFromClause(Annotated):
def __init__(self, element, values):
# force FromClause to generate their internal
# collections into __dict__
element.c
Annotated.__init__(self, element, values)