I'm using sqlalchemy as my orm, and use declarative
as Base.
Base = declarative_base()
class User(Base):
__tablename__ = 'users'
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
name = Column(String)
My question is, how do I know a user has been modified, and how to get the original values without query database again?
user = Session.query(User).filter_by(id=user_id).first()
# some operations on user
....
# how do I know if the user.name has been changed or not?
...
# How do get the original name?
Thanks in advance!
UPDATE
I found a method get_history
can get the history value of a field, but I'm not sure if it is the correct method for my purpose.
from sqlalchemy.orm.attributes import get_history
user = Session.query(User).first()
print user.name # 'Jack'
print get_history(user, 'name') # ((),['Jack'],())
user.name = 'Mike'
print get_history(user, 'name') # (['Mike'], (),['Jack'])
So, we can check the value of get_history
, but is it the best method?
\To see if user
has been modified you can check if user in session.dirty
. If it is and you want to undo it, you can execute
session.rollback()
but be advised that this will rollback everything for the session to the last session.commit()
.
If you want to get the original values and memory serves me correctly, it's the second element of the tuple returned by the sqlalchemy.orm.attributes.get_history
utility function. You would have to do
old_value = sqlalchemy.orm.attributes.get_history(user, 'attribute')[2]
for each attribute that you want.
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