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|
:orphan:
.. _glossary:
========
Glossary
========
.. glossary::
:sorted:
annotations
Annotations are a concept used internally by SQLAlchemy in order to store
additional information along with :class:`.ClauseElement` objects. A Python
dictionary is associated with a copy of the object, which contains key/value
pairs significant to various internal systems, mostly within the ORM::
some_column = Column('some_column', Integer)
some_column_annotated = some_column._annotate({"entity": User})
The annotation system differs from the public dictionary :attr:`.Column.info`
in that the above annotation operation creates a *copy* of the new :class:`.Column`,
rather than considering all annotation values to be part of a single
unit. The ORM creates copies of expression objects in order to
apply annotations that are specific to their context, such as to differentiate
columns that should render themselves as relative to a joined-inheritance
entity versus those which should render relative to their immediate parent
table alone, as well as to differentiate columns within the "join condition"
of a relationship where the column in some cases needs to be expressed
in terms of one particular table alias or another, based on its position
within the join expression.
crud
An acronym meaning "Create, Update, Delete". The term in SQL refers to the
set of operations that create, modify and delete data from the database,
also known as :term:`DML`, and typically refers to the ``INSERT``,
``UPDATE``, and ``DELETE`` statements.
descriptor
descriptors
In Python, a descriptor is an object attribute with “binding behavior”, one whose attribute access has been overridden by methods in the `descriptor protocol <http://docs.python.org/howto/descriptor.html>`_.
Those methods are __get__(), __set__(), and __delete__(). If any of those methods are defined
for an object, it is said to be a descriptor.
In SQLAlchemy, descriptors are used heavily in order to provide attribute behavior
on mapped classes. When a class is mapped as such::
class MyClass(Base):
__tablename__ = 'foo'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
data = Column(String)
The ``MyClass`` class will be :term:`mapped` when its definition
is complete, at which point the ``id`` and ``data`` attributes,
starting out as :class:`.Column` objects, will be replaced
by the :term:`instrumentation` system with instances
of :class:`.InstrumentedAttribute`, which are descriptors that
provide the above mentioned ``__get__()``, ``__set__()`` and
``__delete__()`` methods. The :class:`.InstrumentedAttribute`
will generate a SQL expression when used at the class level::
>>> print(MyClass.data == 5)
data = :data_1
and at the instance level, keeps track of changes to values,
and also :term:`lazy loads` unloaded attributes
from the database::
>>> m1 = MyClass()
>>> m1.id = 5
>>> m1.data = "some data"
>>> from sqlalchemy import inspect
>>> inspect(m1).attrs.data.history.added
"some data"
DDL
An acronym for *Data Definition Language*. DDL is the subset
of SQL that relational databases use to configure tables, constraints,
and other permanent objects within a database schema. SQLAlchemy
provides a rich API for constructing and emitting DDL expressions.
.. seealso::
:ref:`metadata_toplevel`
`DDL (via Wikipedia) <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_definition_language>`_
discriminator
A result-set column which is used during :term:`polymorphic` loading
to determine what kind of mapped class should be applied to a particular
incoming result row. In SQLAlchemy, the classes are always part
of a hierarchy mapping using inheritance mapping.
.. seealso::
:ref:`inheritance_toplevel`
instrumentation
instrumented
instrumenting
Instrumentation refers to the process of augmenting the functionality
and attribute set of a particular class. Ideally, the
behavior of the class should remain close to a regular
class, except that additional behaviors and features are
made available. The SQLAlchemy :term:`mapping` process,
among other things, adds database-enabled :term:`descriptors`
to a mapped
class which each represent a particular database column
or relationship to a related class.
identity map
A mapping between Python objects and their database identities.
The identity map is a collection that's associated with an
ORM :term:`session` object, and maintains a single instance
of every database object keyed to its identity. The advantage
to this pattern is that all operations which occur for a particular
database identity are transparently coordinated onto a single
object instance. When using an identity map in conjunction with
an :term:`isolated` transaction, having a reference
to an object that's known to have a particular primary key can
be considered from a practical standpoint to be a
proxy to the actual database row.
.. seealso::
Martin Fowler - Identity Map - http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/identityMap.html
lazy load
lazy loads
lazy loaded
lazy loading
In object relational mapping, a "lazy load" refers to an
attribute that does not contain its database-side value
for some period of time, typically when the object is
first loaded. Instead, the attribute receives a
*memoization* that causes it to go out to the database
and load its data when it's first used. Using this pattern,
the complexity and time spent within object fetches can
sometimes be reduced, in that
attributes for related tables don't need to be addressed
immediately.
.. seealso::
`Lazy Load (on Martin Fowler) <http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/lazyLoad.html>`_
:term:`N plus one problem`
:doc:`orm/loading_relationships`
mapping
mapped
We say a class is "mapped" when it has been passed through the
:func:`.orm.mapper` function. This process associates the
class with a database table or other :term:`selectable`
construct, so that instances of it can be persisted
using a :class:`.Session` as well as loaded using a
:class:`.Query`.
N plus one problem
The N plus one problem is a common side effect of the
:term:`lazy load` pattern, whereby an application wishes
to iterate through a related attribute or collection on
each member of a result set of objects, where that
attribute or collection is set to be loaded via the lazy
load pattern. The net result is that a SELECT statement
is emitted to load the initial result set of parent objects;
then, as the application iterates through each member,
an additional SELECT statement is emitted for each member
in order to load the related attribute or collection for
that member. The end result is that for a result set of
N parent objects, there will be N + 1 SELECT statements emitted.
The N plus one problem is alleviated using :term:`eager loading`.
.. seealso::
:doc:`orm/loading_relationships`
polymorphic
polymorphically
Refers to a function that handles several types at once. In SQLAlchemy,
the term is usually applied to the concept of an ORM mapped class
whereby a query operation will return different subclasses
based on information in the result set, typically by checking the
value of a particular column in the result known as the :term:`discriminator`.
Polymorphic loading in SQLAlchemy implies that a one or a
combination of three different schemes are used to map a hierarchy
of classes; "joined", "single", and "concrete". The section
:ref:`inheritance_toplevel` describes inheritance mapping fully.
generative
A term that SQLAlchemy uses to refer what's normally known
as :term:`method chaining`; see that term for details.
method chaining
An object-oriented technique whereby the state of an object
is constructed by calling methods on the object. The
object features any number of methods, each of which return
a new object (or in some cases the same object) with
additional state added to the object.
The two SQLAlchemy objects that make the most use of
method chaining are the :class:`~.expression.Select`
object and the :class:`~.orm.query.Query` object.
For example, a :class:`~.expression.Select` object can
be assigned two expressions to its WHERE clause as well
as an ORDER BY clause by calling upon the :meth:`~.Select.where`
and :meth:`~.Select.order_by` methods::
stmt = select([user.c.name]).\
where(user.c.id > 5).\
where(user.c.name.like('e%').\
order_by(user.c.name)
Each method call above returns a copy of the original
:class:`~.expression.Select` object with additional qualifiers
added.
.. seealso::
:term:`generative`
release
releases
released
In the context of SQLAlchemy, the term "released"
refers to the process of ending the usage of a particular
database connection. SQLAlchemy features the usage
of connection pools, which allows configurability as to
the lifespan of database connections. When using a pooled
connection, the process of "closing" it, i.e. invoking
a statement like ``connection.close()``, may have the effect
of the connection being returned to an existing pool,
or it may have the effect of actually shutting down the
underlying TCP/IP connection referred to by that connection -
which one takes place depends on configuration as well
as the current state of the pool. So we used the term
*released* instead, to mean "do whatever it is you do
with connections when we're done using them".
The term will sometimes be used in the phrase, "release
transactional resources", to indicate more explicitly that
what we are actually "releasing" is any transactional
state which as accumulated upon the connection. In most
situations, the process of selecting from tables, emitting
updates, etc. acquires :term:`isolated` state upon
that connection as well as potential row or table locks.
This state is all local to a particular transaction
on the connection, and is released when we emit a rollback.
An important feature of the connection pool is that when
we return a connection to the pool, the ``connection.rollback()``
method of the DBAPI is called as well, so that as the
connection is set up to be used again, it's in a "clean"
state with no references held to the previous series
of operations.
.. seealso::
:ref:`pooling_toplevel`
DBAPI
DBAPI is shorthand for the phrase "Python Database API
Specification". This is a widely used specification
within Python to define common usage patterns for all
database connection packages. The DBAPI is a "low level"
API which is typically the lowest level system used
in a Python application to talk to a database. SQLAlchemy's
:term:`dialect` system is constructed around the
operation of the DBAPI, providing individual dialect
classes which service a specific DBAPI on top of a
specific database engine; for example, the :func:`.create_engine`
URL ``postgresql+psycopg2://@localhost/test``
refers to the :mod:`psycopg2 <.postgresql.psycopg2>`
DBAPI/dialect combination, whereas the URL ``mysql+mysqldb://@localhost/test``
refers to the :mod:`MySQL for Python <.mysql.mysqldb>`
DBAPI DBAPI/dialect combination.
.. seealso::
`PEP 249 - Python Database API Specification v2.0 <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0249/>`_
domain model
A domain model in problem solving and software engineering is a conceptual model of all the topics related to a specific problem. It describes the various entities, their attributes, roles, and relationships, plus the constraints that govern the problem domain.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
`Domain Model (wikipedia) <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_model>`_
unit of work
This pattern is where the system transparently keeps
track of changes to objects and periodically flushes all those
pending changes out to the database. SQLAlchemy's Session
implements this pattern fully in a manner similar to that of
Hibernate.
.. seealso::
`Unit of Work by Martin Fowler <http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/unitOfWork.html>`_
:doc:`orm/session`
expire
expires
expiring
In the SQLAlchemy ORM, refers to when the data in a :term:`persistent`
or sometimes :term:`detached` object is erased, such that when
the object's attributes are next accessed, a :term:`lazy load` SQL
query will be emitted in order to refresh the data for this object
as stored in the current ongoing transaction.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_expire`
Session
The container or scope for ORM database operations. Sessions
load instances from the database, track changes to mapped
instances and persist changes in a single unit of work when
flushed.
.. seealso::
:doc:`orm/session`
columns clause
The portion of the ``SELECT`` statement which enumerates the
SQL expressions to be returned in the result set. The expressions
follow the ``SELECT`` keyword directly and are a comma-separated
list of individual expressions.
E.g.:
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user_account.name, user_account.email
FROM user_account WHERE user_account.name = 'fred'
Above, the list of columns ``user_acount.name``,
``user_account.email`` is the columns clause of the ``SELECT``.
WHERE clause
The portion of the ``SELECT`` statement which indicates criteria
by which rows should be filtered. It is a single SQL expression
which follows the keyword ``WHERE``.
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user_account.name, user_account.email
FROM user_account
WHERE user_account.name = 'fred' AND user_account.status = 'E'
Above, the phrase ``WHERE user_account.name = 'fred' AND user_account.status = 'E'``
comprises the WHERE clause of the ``SELECT``.
FROM clause
The portion of the ``SELECT`` statement which indicates the initial
source of rows.
A simple ``SELECT`` will feature one or more table names in its
FROM clause. Multiple sources are separated by a comma:
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user.name, address.email_address
FROM user, address
WHERE user.id=address.user_id
The FROM clause is also where explicit joins are specified. We can
rewrite the above ``SELECT`` using a single ``FROM`` element which consists
of a ``JOIN`` of the two tables:
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user.name, address.email_address
FROM user JOIN address ON user.id=address.user_id
subquery
Refers to a ``SELECT`` statement that is embedded within an enclosing
``SELECT``.
A subquery comes in two general flavors, one known as a "scalar select"
which specifically must return exactly one row and one column, and the
other form which acts as a "derived table" and serves as a source of
rows for the FROM clause of another select. A scalar select is eligible
to be placed in the :term:`WHERE clause`, :term:`columns clause`,
ORDER BY clause or HAVING clause of the enclosing select, whereas the
derived table form is eligible to be placed in the FROM clause of the
enclosing ``SELECT``.
Examples:
1. a scalar subquery placed in the :term:`columns clause` of an enclosing
``SELECT``. The subquery in this example is a :term:`correlated subquery` because part
of the rows which it selects from are given via the enclosing statement.
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT id, (SELECT name FROM address WHERE address.user_id=user.id)
FROM user
2. a scalar subquery placed in the :term:`WHERE clause` of an enclosing
``SELECT``. This subquery in this example is not correlated as it selects a fixed result.
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT id, name FROM user
WHERE status=(SELECT status_id FROM status_code WHERE code='C')
3. a derived table subquery placed in the :term:`FROM clause` of an enclosing
``SELECT``. Such a subquery is almost always given an alias name.
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user.id, user.name, ad_subq.email_address
FROM
user JOIN
(select user_id, email_address FROM address WHERE address_type='Q') AS ad_subq
ON user.id = ad_subq.user_id
correlates
correlated subquery
correlated subqueries
A :term:`subquery` is correlated if it depends on data in the
enclosing ``SELECT``.
Below, a subquery selects the aggregate value ``MIN(a.id)``
from the ``email_address`` table, such that
it will be invoked for each value of ``user_account.id``, correlating
the value of this column against the ``email_address.user_account_id``
column:
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT user_account.name, email_address.email
FROM user_account
JOIN email_address ON user_account.id=email_address.user_account_id
WHERE email_address.id = (
SELECT MIN(a.id) FROM email_address AS a
WHERE a.user_account_id=user_account.id
)
The above subquery refers to the ``user_account`` table, which is not itself
in the ``FROM`` clause of this nested query. Instead, the ``user_account``
table is received from the enclosing query, where each row selected from
``user_account`` results in a distinct execution of the subquery.
A correlated subquery is in most cases present in the :term:`WHERE clause`
or :term:`columns clause` of the immediately enclosing ``SELECT``
statement, as well as in the ORDER BY or HAVING clause.
In less common cases, a correlated subquery may be present in the
:term:`FROM clause` of an enclosing ``SELECT``; in these cases the
correlation is typically due to the enclosing ``SELECT`` itself being
enclosed in the WHERE,
ORDER BY, columns or HAVING clause of another ``SELECT``, such as:
.. sourcecode:: sql
SELECT parent.id FROM parent
WHERE EXISTS (
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT child.id AS id, child.parent_id AS parent_id, child.pos AS pos
FROM child
WHERE child.parent_id = parent.id ORDER BY child.pos
LIMIT 3)
WHERE id = 7)
Correlation from one ``SELECT`` directly to one which encloses the correlated
query via its ``FROM``
clause is not possible, because the correlation can only proceed once the
original source rows from the enclosing statement's FROM clause are available.
ACID
ACID model
An acronym for "Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation,
Durability"; a set of properties that guarantee that
database transactions are processed reliably.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
:term:`atomicity`
:term:`consistency`
:term:`isolation`
:term:`durability`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACID_Model
atomicity
Atomicity is one of the components of the :term:`ACID` model,
and requires that each transaction is "all or nothing":
if one part of the transaction fails, the entire transaction
fails, and the database state is left unchanged. An atomic
system must guarantee atomicity in each and every situation,
including power failures, errors, and crashes.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
:term:`ACID`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomicity_(database_systems)
consistency
Consistency is one of the compoments of the :term:`ACID` model,
and ensures that any transaction will
bring the database from one valid state to another. Any data
written to the database must be valid according to all defined
rules, including but not limited to :term:`constraints`, cascades,
triggers, and any combination thereof.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
:term:`ACID`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consistency_(database_systems)
isolation
isolated
The isolation property of the :term:`ACID` model
ensures that the concurrent execution
of transactions results in a system state that would be
obtained if transactions were executed serially, i.e. one
after the other. Each transaction must execute in total
isolation i.e. if T1 and T2 execute concurrently then each
should remain independent of the other.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
:term:`ACID`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isolation_(database_systems)
durability
Durability is a property of the :term:`ACID` model
which means that once a transaction has been committed,
it will remain so, even in the event of power loss, crashes,
or errors. In a relational database, for instance, once a
group of SQL statements execute, the results need to be stored
permanently (even if the database crashes immediately
thereafter).
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
:term:`ACID`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durability_(database_systems)
RETURNING
This is a non-SQL standard clause provided in various forms by
certain backends, which provides the service of returning a result
set upon execution of an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statement. Any set
of columns from the matched rows can be returned, as though they were
produced from a SELECT statement.
The RETURNING clause provides both a dramatic performance boost to
common update/select scenarios, including retrieval of inline- or
default- generated primary key values and defaults at the moment they
were created, as well as a way to get at server-generated
default values in an atomic way.
An example of RETURNING, idiomatic to Postgresql, looks like::
INSERT INTO user_account (name) VALUES ('new name') RETURNING id, timestamp
Above, the INSERT statement will provide upon execution a result set
which includes the values of the columns ``user_account.id`` and
``user_account.timestamp``, which above should have been generated as default
values as they are not included otherwise (but note any series of columns
or SQL expressions can be placed into RETURNING, not just default-value columns).
The backends that currently support
RETURNING or a similar construct are Postgresql, SQL Server, Oracle,
and Firebird. The Postgresql and Firebird implementations are generally
full featured, whereas the implementations of SQL Server and Oracle
have caveats. On SQL Server, the clause is known as "OUTPUT INSERTED"
for INSERT and UPDATE statements and "OUTPUT DELETED" for DELETE statements;
the key caveat is that triggers are not supported in conjunction with this
keyword. On Oracle, it is known as "RETURNING...INTO", and requires that the
value be placed into an OUT paramter, meaning not only is the syntax awkward,
but it can also only be used for one row at a time.
SQLAlchemy's :meth:`.UpdateBase.returning` system provides a layer of abstraction
on top of the RETURNING systems of these backends to provide a consistent
interface for returning columns. The ORM also includes many optimizations
that make use of RETURNING when available.
one to many
A style of :func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` which links
the primary key of the parent mapper's table to the foreign
key of a related table. Each unique parent object can
then refer to zero or more unique related objects.
The related objects in turn will have an implicit or
explicit :term:`many to one` relationship to their parent
object.
An example one to many schema (which, note, is identical
to the :term:`many to one` schema):
.. sourcecode:: sql
CREATE TABLE department (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE employee (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30),
dep_id INTEGER REFERENCES department(id)
)
The relationship from ``department`` to ``employee`` is
one to many, since many employee records can be associated with a
single department. A SQLAlchemy mapping might look like::
class Department(Base):
__tablename__ = 'department'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
employees = relationship("Employee")
class Employee(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
dep_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('department.id'))
.. seealso::
:term:`relationship`
:term:`many to one`
:term:`backref`
many to one
A style of :func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` which links
a foreign key in the parent mapper's table to the primary
key of a related table. Each parent object can
then refer to exactly zero or one related object.
The related objects in turn will have an implicit or
explicit :term:`one to many` relationship to any number
of parent objects that refer to them.
An example many to one schema (which, note, is identical
to the :term:`one to many` schema):
.. sourcecode:: sql
CREATE TABLE department (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE employee (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30),
dep_id INTEGER REFERENCES department(id)
)
The relationship from ``employee`` to ``department`` is
many to one, since many employee records can be associated with a
single department. A SQLAlchemy mapping might look like::
class Department(Base):
__tablename__ = 'department'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
class Employee(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
dep_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('department.id'))
department = relationship("Department")
.. seealso::
:term:`relationship`
:term:`one to many`
:term:`backref`
backref
bidirectional relationship
An extension to the :term:`relationship` system whereby two
distinct :func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` objects can be
mutually associated with each other, such that they coordinate
in memory as changes occur to either side. The most common
way these two relationships are constructed is by using
the :func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` function explicitly
for one side and specifying the ``backref`` keyword to it so that
the other :func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` is created
automatically. We can illustrate this against the example we've
used in :term:`one to many` as follows::
class Department(Base):
__tablename__ = 'department'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
employees = relationship("Employee", backref="department")
class Employee(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String(30))
dep_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('department.id'))
A backref can be applied to any relationship, including one to many,
many to one, and :term:`many to many`.
.. seealso::
:term:`relationship`
:term:`one to many`
:term:`many to one`
:term:`many to many`
many to many
A style of :func:`sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` which links two tables together
via an intermediary table in the middle. Using this configuration,
any number of rows on the left side may refer to any number of
rows on the right, and vice versa.
A schema where employees can be associated with projects:
.. sourcecode:: sql
CREATE TABLE employee (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE project (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE employee_project (
employee_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
project_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
FOREIGN KEY employee_id REFERENCES employee(id),
FOREIGN KEY project_id REFERENCES project(id)
)
Above, the ``employee_project`` table is the many-to-many table,
which naturally forms a composite primary key consisting
of the primary key from each related table.
In SQLAlchemy, the :func:`sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` function
can represent this style of relationship in a mostly
transparent fashion, where the many-to-many table is
specified using plain table metadata::
class Employee(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key)
name = Column(String(30))
projects = relationship(
"Project",
secondary=Table('employee_project', Base.metadata,
Column("employee_id", Integer, ForeignKey('employee.id'),
primary_key=True),
Column("project_id", Integer, ForeignKey('project.id'),
primary_key=True)
),
backref="employees"
)
class Project(Base):
__tablename__ = 'project'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key)
name = Column(String(30))
Above, the ``Employee.projects`` and back-referencing ``Project.employees``
collections are defined::
proj = Project(name="Client A")
emp1 = Employee(name="emp1")
emp2 = Employee(name="emp2")
proj.employees.extend([emp1, emp2])
.. seealso::
:term:`association relationship`
:term:`relationship`
:term:`one to many`
:term:`many to one`
relationship
relationships
A connecting unit between two mapped classes, corresponding
to some relationship between the two tables in the database.
The relationship is defined using the SQLAlchemy function
:func:`~sqlalchemy.orm.relationship`. Once created, SQLAlchemy
inspects the arguments and underlying mappings involved
in order to classify the relationship as one of three types:
:term:`one to many`, :term:`many to one`, or :term:`many to many`.
With this classification, the relationship construct
handles the task of persisting the appropriate linkages
in the database in response to in-memory object associations,
as well as the job of loading object references and collections
into memory based on the current linkages in the
database.
.. seealso::
:ref:`relationship_config_toplevel`
association relationship
A two-tiered :term:`relationship` which links two tables
together using an association table in the middle. The
association relationship differs from a :term:`many to many`
relationship in that the many-to-many table is mapped
by a full class, rather than invisibly handled by the
:func:`sqlalchemy.orm.relationship` construct as in the case
with many-to-many, so that additional attributes are
explicitly available.
For example, if we wanted to associate employees with
projects, also storing the specific role for that employee
with the project, the relational schema might look like:
.. sourcecode:: sql
CREATE TABLE employee (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE project (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
CREATE TABLE employee_project (
employee_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
project_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
role_name VARCHAR(30),
FOREIGN KEY employee_id REFERENCES employee(id),
FOREIGN KEY project_id REFERENCES project(id)
)
A SQLAlchemy declarative mapping for the above might look like::
class Employee(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key)
name = Column(String(30))
class Project(Base):
__tablename__ = 'project'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key)
name = Column(String(30))
class EmployeeProject(Base):
__tablename__ = 'employee_project'
employee_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('employee.id'), primary_key=True)
project_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('project.id'), primary_key=True)
role_name = Column(String(30))
project = relationship("Project", backref="project_employees")
employee = relationship("Employee", backref="employee_projects")
Employees can be added to a project given a role name::
proj = Project(name="Client A")
emp1 = Employee(name="emp1")
emp2 = Employee(name="emp2")
proj.project_employees.extend([
EmployeeProject(employee=emp1, role="tech lead"),
EmployeeProject(employee=emp2, role="account executive")
])
.. seealso::
:term:`many to many`
constraint
constraints
constrained
Rules established within a relational database that ensure
the validity and consistency of data. Common forms
of constraint include :term:`primary key constraint`,
:term:`foreign key constraint`, and :term:`check constraint`.
candidate key
A :term:`relational algebra` term referring to an attribute or set
of attributes that form a uniquely identifying key for a
row. A row may have more than one candidate key, each of which
is suitable for use as the primary key of that row.
The primary key of a table is always a candidate key.
.. seealso::
:term:`primary key`
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candidate_key
primary key
primary key constraint
A :term:`constraint` that uniquely defines the characteristics
of each :term:`row`. The primary key has to consist of
characteristics that cannot be duplicated by any other row.
The primary key may consist of a single attribute or
multiple attributes in combination.
(via Wikipedia)
The primary key of a table is typically, though not always,
defined within the ``CREATE TABLE`` :term:`DDL`:
.. sourcecode:: sql
CREATE TABLE employee (
emp_id INTEGER,
emp_name VARCHAR(30),
dep_id INTEGER,
PRIMARY KEY (emp_id)
)
.. seealso::
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_Key
foreign key constraint
A referential constraint between two tables. A foreign key is a field or set of fields in a
relational table that matches a :term:`candidate key` of another table.
The foreign key can be used to cross-reference tables.
(via Wikipedia)
A foreign key constraint can be added to a table in standard
SQL using :term:`DDL` like the following:
.. sourcecode:: sql
ALTER TABLE employee ADD CONSTRAINT dep_id_fk
FOREIGN KEY (employee) REFERENCES department (dep_id)
.. seealso::
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_key_constraint
check constraint
A check constraint is a
condition that defines valid data when adding or updating an
entry in a table of a relational database. A check constraint
is applied to each row in the table.
(via Wikipedia)
A check constraint can be added to a table in standard
SQL using :term:`DDL` like the following:
.. sourcecode:: sql
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5);
.. seealso::
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Check_constraint
unique constraint
unique key index
A unique key index can uniquely identify each row of data
values in a database table. A unique key index comprises a
single column or a set of columns in a single database table.
No two distinct rows or data records in a database table can
have the same data value (or combination of data values) in
those unique key index columns if NULL values are not used.
Depending on its design, a database table may have many unique
key indexes but at most one primary key index.
(via Wikipedia)
.. seealso::
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unique_key#Defining_unique_keys
transient
This describes one of the four major object states which
an object can have within a :term:`session`; a transient object
is a new object that doesn't have any database identity
and has not been associated with a session yet. When the
object is added to the session, it moves to the
:term:`pending` state.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_object_states`
pending
This describes one of the four major object states which
an object can have within a :term:`session`; a pending object
is a new object that doesn't have any database identity,
but has been recently associated with a session. When
the session emits a flush and the row is inserted, the
object moves to the :term:`persistent` state.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_object_states`
persistent
This describes one of the four major object states which
an object can have within a :term:`session`; a persistent object
is an object that has a database identity (i.e. a primary key)
and is currently associated with a session. Any object
that was previously :term:`pending` and has now been inserted
is in the persistent state, as is any object that's
been loaded by the session from the database. When a
persistent object is removed from a session, it is known
as :term:`detached`.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_object_states`
detached
This describes one of the four major object states which
an object can have within a :term:`session`; a detached object
is an object that has a database identity (i.e. a primary key)
but is not associated with any session. An object that
was previously :term:`persistent` and was removed from its
session either because it was expunged, or the owning
session was closed, moves into the detached state.
The detached state is generally used when objects are being
moved between sessions or when being moved to/from an external
object cache.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_object_states`
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