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Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +00001:mod:`sqlite3` --- DB-API 2.0 interface for SQLite databases
2============================================================
3
4.. module:: sqlite3
5 :synopsis: A DB-API 2.0 implementation using SQLite 3.x.
6.. sectionauthor:: Gerhard Häring <gh@ghaering.de>
7
8
9.. versionadded:: 2.5
10
11SQLite is a C library that provides a lightweight disk-based database that
12doesn't require a separate server process and allows accessing the database
13using a nonstandard variant of the SQL query language. Some applications can use
14SQLite for internal data storage. It's also possible to prototype an
15application using SQLite and then port the code to a larger database such as
16PostgreSQL or Oracle.
17
18pysqlite was written by Gerhard Häring and provides a SQL interface compliant
19with the DB-API 2.0 specification described by :pep:`249`.
20
21To use the module, you must first create a :class:`Connection` object that
22represents the database. Here the data will be stored in the
23:file:`/tmp/example` file::
24
25 conn = sqlite3.connect('/tmp/example')
26
27You can also supply the special name ``:memory:`` to create a database in RAM.
28
29Once you have a :class:`Connection`, you can create a :class:`Cursor` object
30and call its :meth:`execute` method to perform SQL commands::
31
32 c = conn.cursor()
33
34 # Create table
35 c.execute('''create table stocks
36 (date text, trans text, symbol text,
37 qty real, price real)''')
38
39 # Insert a row of data
40 c.execute("""insert into stocks
41 values ('2006-01-05','BUY','RHAT',100,35.14)""")
42
43 # Save (commit) the changes
44 conn.commit()
45
46 # We can also close the cursor if we are done with it
47 c.close()
48
49Usually your SQL operations will need to use values from Python variables. You
50shouldn't assemble your query using Python's string operations because doing so
51is insecure; it makes your program vulnerable to an SQL injection attack.
52
53Instead, use the DB-API's parameter substitution. Put ``?`` as a placeholder
54wherever you want to use a value, and then provide a tuple of values as the
55second argument to the cursor's :meth:`execute` method. (Other database modules
56may use a different placeholder, such as ``%s`` or ``:1``.) For example::
57
58 # Never do this -- insecure!
59 symbol = 'IBM'
60 c.execute("... where symbol = '%s'" % symbol)
61
62 # Do this instead
63 t = (symbol,)
64 c.execute('select * from stocks where symbol=?', t)
65
66 # Larger example
67 for t in (('2006-03-28', 'BUY', 'IBM', 1000, 45.00),
68 ('2006-04-05', 'BUY', 'MSOFT', 1000, 72.00),
69 ('2006-04-06', 'SELL', 'IBM', 500, 53.00),
70 ):
71 c.execute('insert into stocks values (?,?,?,?,?)', t)
72
Georg Brandle7a09902007-10-21 12:10:28 +000073To retrieve data after executing a SELECT statement, you can either treat the
74cursor as an :term:`iterator`, call the cursor's :meth:`fetchone` method to
75retrieve a single matching row, or call :meth:`fetchall` to get a list of the
76matching rows.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000077
78This example uses the iterator form::
79
80 >>> c = conn.cursor()
81 >>> c.execute('select * from stocks order by price')
82 >>> for row in c:
83 ... print row
84 ...
85 (u'2006-01-05', u'BUY', u'RHAT', 100, 35.140000000000001)
86 (u'2006-03-28', u'BUY', u'IBM', 1000, 45.0)
87 (u'2006-04-06', u'SELL', u'IBM', 500, 53.0)
88 (u'2006-04-05', u'BUY', u'MSOFT', 1000, 72.0)
89 >>>
90
91
92.. seealso::
93
94 http://www.pysqlite.org
95 The pysqlite web page.
96
97 http://www.sqlite.org
98 The SQLite web page; the documentation describes the syntax and the available
99 data types for the supported SQL dialect.
100
101 :pep:`249` - Database API Specification 2.0
102 PEP written by Marc-André Lemburg.
103
104
105.. _sqlite3-module-contents:
106
107Module functions and constants
108------------------------------
109
110
111.. data:: PARSE_DECLTYPES
112
113 This constant is meant to be used with the *detect_types* parameter of the
114 :func:`connect` function.
115
116 Setting it makes the :mod:`sqlite3` module parse the declared type for each
117 column it returns. It will parse out the first word of the declared type, i. e.
118 for "integer primary key", it will parse out "integer". Then for that column, it
119 will look into the converters dictionary and use the converter function
120 registered for that type there. Converter names are case-sensitive!
121
122
123.. data:: PARSE_COLNAMES
124
125 This constant is meant to be used with the *detect_types* parameter of the
126 :func:`connect` function.
127
128 Setting this makes the SQLite interface parse the column name for each column it
129 returns. It will look for a string formed [mytype] in there, and then decide
130 that 'mytype' is the type of the column. It will try to find an entry of
131 'mytype' in the converters dictionary and then use the converter function found
132 there to return the value. The column name found in :attr:`cursor.description`
133 is only the first word of the column name, i. e. if you use something like
134 ``'as "x [datetime]"'`` in your SQL, then we will parse out everything until the
135 first blank for the column name: the column name would simply be "x".
136
137
138.. function:: connect(database[, timeout, isolation_level, detect_types, factory])
139
140 Opens a connection to the SQLite database file *database*. You can use
141 ``":memory:"`` to open a database connection to a database that resides in RAM
142 instead of on disk.
143
144 When a database is accessed by multiple connections, and one of the processes
145 modifies the database, the SQLite database is locked until that transaction is
146 committed. The *timeout* parameter specifies how long the connection should wait
147 for the lock to go away until raising an exception. The default for the timeout
148 parameter is 5.0 (five seconds).
149
150 For the *isolation_level* parameter, please see the
151 :attr:`Connection.isolation_level` property of :class:`Connection` objects.
152
153 SQLite natively supports only the types TEXT, INTEGER, FLOAT, BLOB and NULL. If
154 you want to use other types you must add support for them yourself. The
155 *detect_types* parameter and the using custom **converters** registered with the
156 module-level :func:`register_converter` function allow you to easily do that.
157
158 *detect_types* defaults to 0 (i. e. off, no type detection), you can set it to
159 any combination of :const:`PARSE_DECLTYPES` and :const:`PARSE_COLNAMES` to turn
160 type detection on.
161
162 By default, the :mod:`sqlite3` module uses its :class:`Connection` class for the
163 connect call. You can, however, subclass the :class:`Connection` class and make
164 :func:`connect` use your class instead by providing your class for the *factory*
165 parameter.
166
167 Consult the section :ref:`sqlite3-types` of this manual for details.
168
169 The :mod:`sqlite3` module internally uses a statement cache to avoid SQL parsing
170 overhead. If you want to explicitly set the number of statements that are cached
171 for the connection, you can set the *cached_statements* parameter. The currently
172 implemented default is to cache 100 statements.
173
174
175.. function:: register_converter(typename, callable)
176
177 Registers a callable to convert a bytestring from the database into a custom
178 Python type. The callable will be invoked for all database values that are of
179 the type *typename*. Confer the parameter *detect_types* of the :func:`connect`
180 function for how the type detection works. Note that the case of *typename* and
181 the name of the type in your query must match!
182
183
184.. function:: register_adapter(type, callable)
185
186 Registers a callable to convert the custom Python type *type* into one of
187 SQLite's supported types. The callable *callable* accepts as single parameter
188 the Python value, and must return a value of the following types: int, long,
189 float, str (UTF-8 encoded), unicode or buffer.
190
191
192.. function:: complete_statement(sql)
193
194 Returns :const:`True` if the string *sql* contains one or more complete SQL
195 statements terminated by semicolons. It does not verify that the SQL is
196 syntactically correct, only that there are no unclosed string literals and the
197 statement is terminated by a semicolon.
198
199 This can be used to build a shell for SQLite, as in the following example:
200
201
202 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/complete_statement.py
203
204
205.. function:: enable_callback_tracebacks(flag)
206
207 By default you will not get any tracebacks in user-defined functions,
208 aggregates, converters, authorizer callbacks etc. If you want to debug them, you
209 can call this function with *flag* as True. Afterwards, you will get tracebacks
210 from callbacks on ``sys.stderr``. Use :const:`False` to disable the feature
211 again.
212
213
214.. _sqlite3-connection-objects:
215
216Connection Objects
217------------------
218
219A :class:`Connection` instance has the following attributes and methods:
220
221.. attribute:: Connection.isolation_level
222
223 Get or set the current isolation level. None for autocommit mode or one of
224 "DEFERRED", "IMMEDIATE" or "EXLUSIVE". See section
225 :ref:`sqlite3-controlling-transactions` for a more detailed explanation.
226
227
228.. method:: Connection.cursor([cursorClass])
229
230 The cursor method accepts a single optional parameter *cursorClass*. If
231 supplied, this must be a custom cursor class that extends
232 :class:`sqlite3.Cursor`.
233
234
235.. method:: Connection.execute(sql, [parameters])
236
237 This is a nonstandard shortcut that creates an intermediate cursor object by
238 calling the cursor method, then calls the cursor's :meth:`execute` method with
239 the parameters given.
240
241
242.. method:: Connection.executemany(sql, [parameters])
243
244 This is a nonstandard shortcut that creates an intermediate cursor object by
245 calling the cursor method, then calls the cursor's :meth:`executemany` method
246 with the parameters given.
247
248
249.. method:: Connection.executescript(sql_script)
250
251 This is a nonstandard shortcut that creates an intermediate cursor object by
252 calling the cursor method, then calls the cursor's :meth:`executescript` method
253 with the parameters given.
254
255
256.. method:: Connection.create_function(name, num_params, func)
257
258 Creates a user-defined function that you can later use from within SQL
259 statements under the function name *name*. *num_params* is the number of
260 parameters the function accepts, and *func* is a Python callable that is called
261 as the SQL function.
262
263 The function can return any of the types supported by SQLite: unicode, str, int,
264 long, float, buffer and None.
265
266 Example:
267
268 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/md5func.py
269
270
271.. method:: Connection.create_aggregate(name, num_params, aggregate_class)
272
273 Creates a user-defined aggregate function.
274
275 The aggregate class must implement a ``step`` method, which accepts the number
276 of parameters *num_params*, and a ``finalize`` method which will return the
277 final result of the aggregate.
278
279 The ``finalize`` method can return any of the types supported by SQLite:
280 unicode, str, int, long, float, buffer and None.
281
282 Example:
283
284 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/mysumaggr.py
285
286
287.. method:: Connection.create_collation(name, callable)
288
289 Creates a collation with the specified *name* and *callable*. The callable will
290 be passed two string arguments. It should return -1 if the first is ordered
291 lower than the second, 0 if they are ordered equal and 1 if the first is ordered
292 higher than the second. Note that this controls sorting (ORDER BY in SQL) so
293 your comparisons don't affect other SQL operations.
294
295 Note that the callable will get its parameters as Python bytestrings, which will
296 normally be encoded in UTF-8.
297
298 The following example shows a custom collation that sorts "the wrong way":
299
300 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/collation_reverse.py
301
302 To remove a collation, call ``create_collation`` with None as callable::
303
304 con.create_collation("reverse", None)
305
306
307.. method:: Connection.interrupt()
308
309 You can call this method from a different thread to abort any queries that might
310 be executing on the connection. The query will then abort and the caller will
311 get an exception.
312
313
314.. method:: Connection.set_authorizer(authorizer_callback)
315
316 This routine registers a callback. The callback is invoked for each attempt to
317 access a column of a table in the database. The callback should return
318 :const:`SQLITE_OK` if access is allowed, :const:`SQLITE_DENY` if the entire SQL
319 statement should be aborted with an error and :const:`SQLITE_IGNORE` if the
320 column should be treated as a NULL value. These constants are available in the
321 :mod:`sqlite3` module.
322
323 The first argument to the callback signifies what kind of operation is to be
324 authorized. The second and third argument will be arguments or :const:`None`
325 depending on the first argument. The 4th argument is the name of the database
326 ("main", "temp", etc.) if applicable. The 5th argument is the name of the
327 inner-most trigger or view that is responsible for the access attempt or
328 :const:`None` if this access attempt is directly from input SQL code.
329
330 Please consult the SQLite documentation about the possible values for the first
331 argument and the meaning of the second and third argument depending on the first
332 one. All necessary constants are available in the :mod:`sqlite3` module.
333
334
335.. attribute:: Connection.row_factory
336
337 You can change this attribute to a callable that accepts the cursor and the
338 original row as a tuple and will return the real result row. This way, you can
339 implement more advanced ways of returning results, such as returning an object
340 that can also access columns by name.
341
342 Example:
343
344 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/row_factory.py
345
346 If returning a tuple doesn't suffice and you want name-based access to
347 columns, you should consider setting :attr:`row_factory` to the
348 highly-optimized :class:`sqlite3.Row` type. :class:`Row` provides both
349 index-based and case-insensitive name-based access to columns with almost no
350 memory overhead. It will probably be better than your own custom
351 dictionary-based approach or even a db_row based solution.
352
Georg Brandlb19be572007-12-29 10:57:00 +0000353 .. XXX what's a db_row-based solution?
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000354
355
356.. attribute:: Connection.text_factory
357
358 Using this attribute you can control what objects are returned for the TEXT data
359 type. By default, this attribute is set to :class:`unicode` and the
360 :mod:`sqlite3` module will return Unicode objects for TEXT. If you want to
361 return bytestrings instead, you can set it to :class:`str`.
362
363 For efficiency reasons, there's also a way to return Unicode objects only for
364 non-ASCII data, and bytestrings otherwise. To activate it, set this attribute to
365 :const:`sqlite3.OptimizedUnicode`.
366
367 You can also set it to any other callable that accepts a single bytestring
368 parameter and returns the resulting object.
369
370 See the following example code for illustration:
371
372 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/text_factory.py
373
374
375.. attribute:: Connection.total_changes
376
377 Returns the total number of database rows that have been modified, inserted, or
378 deleted since the database connection was opened.
379
380
381.. _sqlite3-cursor-objects:
382
383Cursor Objects
384--------------
385
386A :class:`Cursor` instance has the following attributes and methods:
387
388
389.. method:: Cursor.execute(sql, [parameters])
390
Georg Brandlf558d2e2008-01-19 20:53:07 +0000391 Executes an SQL statement. The SQL statement may be parametrized (i. e.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000392 placeholders instead of SQL literals). The :mod:`sqlite3` module supports two
393 kinds of placeholders: question marks (qmark style) and named placeholders
394 (named style).
395
396 This example shows how to use parameters with qmark style:
397
398 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/execute_1.py
399
400 This example shows how to use the named style:
401
402 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/execute_2.py
403
404 :meth:`execute` will only execute a single SQL statement. If you try to execute
405 more than one statement with it, it will raise a Warning. Use
406 :meth:`executescript` if you want to execute multiple SQL statements with one
407 call.
408
409
410.. method:: Cursor.executemany(sql, seq_of_parameters)
411
Georg Brandlf558d2e2008-01-19 20:53:07 +0000412 Executes an SQL command against all parameter sequences or mappings found in
Georg Brandle7a09902007-10-21 12:10:28 +0000413 the sequence *sql*. The :mod:`sqlite3` module also allows using an
414 :term:`iterator` yielding parameters instead of a sequence.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000415
416 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/executemany_1.py
417
Georg Brandlcf3fb252007-10-21 10:52:38 +0000418 Here's a shorter example using a :term:`generator`:
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000419
420 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/executemany_2.py
421
422
423.. method:: Cursor.executescript(sql_script)
424
425 This is a nonstandard convenience method for executing multiple SQL statements
426 at once. It issues a COMMIT statement first, then executes the SQL script it
427 gets as a parameter.
428
429 *sql_script* can be a bytestring or a Unicode string.
430
431 Example:
432
433 .. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/executescript.py
434
435
Georg Brandlf558d2e2008-01-19 20:53:07 +0000436.. method:: Cursor.fetchone()
437
438 Fetches the next row of a query result set, returning a single sequence,
439 or ``None`` when no more data is available.
440
441
442.. method:: Cursor.fetchmany([size=cursor.arraysize])
443
444 Fetches the next set of rows of a query result, returning a list. An empty
445 list is returned when no more rows are available.
446
447 The number of rows to fetch per call is specified by the *size* parameter.
448 If it is not given, the cursor's arraysize determines the number of rows
449 to be fetched. The method should try to fetch as many rows as indicated by
450 the size parameter. If this is not possible due to the specified number of
451 rows not being available, fewer rows may be returned.
452
453 Note there are performance considerations involved with the *size* parameter.
454 For optimal performance, it is usually best to use the arraysize attribute.
455 If the *size* parameter is used, then it is best for it to retain the same
456 value from one :meth:`fetchmany` call to the next.
457
458.. method:: Cursor.fetchall()
459
460 Fetches all (remaining) rows of a query result, returning a list. Note that
461 the cursor's arraysize attribute can affect the performance of this operation.
462 An empty list is returned when no rows are available.
463
464
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000465.. attribute:: Cursor.rowcount
466
467 Although the :class:`Cursor` class of the :mod:`sqlite3` module implements this
468 attribute, the database engine's own support for the determination of "rows
469 affected"/"rows selected" is quirky.
470
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000471 For ``DELETE`` statements, SQLite reports :attr:`rowcount` as 0 if you make a
472 ``DELETE FROM table`` without any condition.
473
474 For :meth:`executemany` statements, the number of modifications are summed up
475 into :attr:`rowcount`.
476
477 As required by the Python DB API Spec, the :attr:`rowcount` attribute "is -1 in
478 case no executeXX() has been performed on the cursor or the rowcount of the last
479 operation is not determinable by the interface".
480
Georg Brandl891f1d32007-08-23 20:40:01 +0000481 This includes ``SELECT`` statements because we cannot determine the number of
482 rows a query produced until all rows were fetched.
483
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000484
485.. _sqlite3-types:
486
487SQLite and Python types
488-----------------------
489
490
491Introduction
492^^^^^^^^^^^^
493
494SQLite natively supports the following types: NULL, INTEGER, REAL, TEXT, BLOB.
495
496The following Python types can thus be sent to SQLite without any problem:
497
498+------------------------+-------------+
499| Python type | SQLite type |
500+========================+=============+
501| ``None`` | NULL |
502+------------------------+-------------+
503| ``int`` | INTEGER |
504+------------------------+-------------+
505| ``long`` | INTEGER |
506+------------------------+-------------+
507| ``float`` | REAL |
508+------------------------+-------------+
509| ``str (UTF8-encoded)`` | TEXT |
510+------------------------+-------------+
511| ``unicode`` | TEXT |
512+------------------------+-------------+
513| ``buffer`` | BLOB |
514+------------------------+-------------+
515
516This is how SQLite types are converted to Python types by default:
517
518+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
519| SQLite type | Python type |
520+=============+=============================================+
521| ``NULL`` | None |
522+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
523| ``INTEGER`` | int or long, depending on size |
524+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
525| ``REAL`` | float |
526+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
527| ``TEXT`` | depends on text_factory, unicode by default |
528+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
529| ``BLOB`` | buffer |
530+-------------+---------------------------------------------+
531
532The type system of the :mod:`sqlite3` module is extensible in two ways: you can
533store additional Python types in a SQLite database via object adaptation, and
534you can let the :mod:`sqlite3` module convert SQLite types to different Python
535types via converters.
536
537
538Using adapters to store additional Python types in SQLite databases
539^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
540
541As described before, SQLite supports only a limited set of types natively. To
542use other Python types with SQLite, you must **adapt** them to one of the
543sqlite3 module's supported types for SQLite: one of NoneType, int, long, float,
544str, unicode, buffer.
545
546The :mod:`sqlite3` module uses Python object adaptation, as described in
547:pep:`246` for this. The protocol to use is :class:`PrepareProtocol`.
548
549There are two ways to enable the :mod:`sqlite3` module to adapt a custom Python
550type to one of the supported ones.
551
552
553Letting your object adapt itself
554""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
555
556This is a good approach if you write the class yourself. Let's suppose you have
557a class like this::
558
559 class Point(object):
560 def __init__(self, x, y):
561 self.x, self.y = x, y
562
563Now you want to store the point in a single SQLite column. First you'll have to
564choose one of the supported types first to be used for representing the point.
565Let's just use str and separate the coordinates using a semicolon. Then you need
566to give your class a method ``__conform__(self, protocol)`` which must return
567the converted value. The parameter *protocol* will be :class:`PrepareProtocol`.
568
569.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/adapter_point_1.py
570
571
572Registering an adapter callable
573"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
574
575The other possibility is to create a function that converts the type to the
576string representation and register the function with :meth:`register_adapter`.
577
578.. note::
579
Georg Brandla7395032007-10-21 12:15:05 +0000580 The type/class to adapt must be a :term:`new-style class`, i. e. it must have
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000581 :class:`object` as one of its bases.
582
583.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/adapter_point_2.py
584
585The :mod:`sqlite3` module has two default adapters for Python's built-in
586:class:`datetime.date` and :class:`datetime.datetime` types. Now let's suppose
587we want to store :class:`datetime.datetime` objects not in ISO representation,
588but as a Unix timestamp.
589
590.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/adapter_datetime.py
591
592
593Converting SQLite values to custom Python types
594^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
595
596Writing an adapter lets you send custom Python types to SQLite. But to make it
597really useful we need to make the Python to SQLite to Python roundtrip work.
598
599Enter converters.
600
601Let's go back to the :class:`Point` class. We stored the x and y coordinates
602separated via semicolons as strings in SQLite.
603
604First, we'll define a converter function that accepts the string as a parameter
605and constructs a :class:`Point` object from it.
606
607.. note::
608
609 Converter functions **always** get called with a string, no matter under which
610 data type you sent the value to SQLite.
611
612.. note::
613
614 Converter names are looked up in a case-sensitive manner.
615
616::
617
618 def convert_point(s):
619 x, y = map(float, s.split(";"))
620 return Point(x, y)
621
622Now you need to make the :mod:`sqlite3` module know that what you select from
623the database is actually a point. There are two ways of doing this:
624
625* Implicitly via the declared type
626
627* Explicitly via the column name
628
629Both ways are described in section :ref:`sqlite3-module-contents`, in the entries
630for the constants :const:`PARSE_DECLTYPES` and :const:`PARSE_COLNAMES`.
631
632The following example illustrates both approaches.
633
634.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/converter_point.py
635
636
637Default adapters and converters
638^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
639
640There are default adapters for the date and datetime types in the datetime
641module. They will be sent as ISO dates/ISO timestamps to SQLite.
642
643The default converters are registered under the name "date" for
644:class:`datetime.date` and under the name "timestamp" for
645:class:`datetime.datetime`.
646
647This way, you can use date/timestamps from Python without any additional
648fiddling in most cases. The format of the adapters is also compatible with the
649experimental SQLite date/time functions.
650
651The following example demonstrates this.
652
653.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/pysqlite_datetime.py
654
655
656.. _sqlite3-controlling-transactions:
657
658Controlling Transactions
659------------------------
660
661By default, the :mod:`sqlite3` module opens transactions implicitly before a
662Data Modification Language (DML) statement (i.e. INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE/REPLACE),
663and commits transactions implicitly before a non-DML, non-query statement (i. e.
664anything other than SELECT/INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE/REPLACE).
665
666So if you are within a transaction and issue a command like ``CREATE TABLE
667...``, ``VACUUM``, ``PRAGMA``, the :mod:`sqlite3` module will commit implicitly
668before executing that command. There are two reasons for doing that. The first
669is that some of these commands don't work within transactions. The other reason
670is that pysqlite needs to keep track of the transaction state (if a transaction
671is active or not).
672
673You can control which kind of "BEGIN" statements pysqlite implicitly executes
674(or none at all) via the *isolation_level* parameter to the :func:`connect`
675call, or via the :attr:`isolation_level` property of connections.
676
677If you want **autocommit mode**, then set :attr:`isolation_level` to None.
678
679Otherwise leave it at its default, which will result in a plain "BEGIN"
680statement, or set it to one of SQLite's supported isolation levels: DEFERRED,
681IMMEDIATE or EXCLUSIVE.
682
683As the :mod:`sqlite3` module needs to keep track of the transaction state, you
684should not use ``OR ROLLBACK`` or ``ON CONFLICT ROLLBACK`` in your SQL. Instead,
685catch the :exc:`IntegrityError` and call the :meth:`rollback` method of the
686connection yourself.
687
688
689Using pysqlite efficiently
690--------------------------
691
692
693Using shortcut methods
694^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
695
696Using the nonstandard :meth:`execute`, :meth:`executemany` and
697:meth:`executescript` methods of the :class:`Connection` object, your code can
698be written more concisely because you don't have to create the (often
699superfluous) :class:`Cursor` objects explicitly. Instead, the :class:`Cursor`
700objects are created implicitly and these shortcut methods return the cursor
701objects. This way, you can execute a SELECT statement and iterate over it
702directly using only a single call on the :class:`Connection` object.
703
704.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/shortcut_methods.py
705
706
707Accessing columns by name instead of by index
708^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
709
710One useful feature of the :mod:`sqlite3` module is the builtin
711:class:`sqlite3.Row` class designed to be used as a row factory.
712
713Rows wrapped with this class can be accessed both by index (like tuples) and
714case-insensitively by name:
715
716.. literalinclude:: ../includes/sqlite3/rowclass.py
717