I was trying to use executemany to insert values into a database, but it just won't work for me. Here is a sample:
clist = []
clist.append("abc")
clist.append("def")
clist.append("ghi")
cursor.executemany("INSERT INTO myTable(data) values (?) ", clist)
This gives me the following error:
sqlite3.ProgrammingError: Incorrect number of bindings supplied. The current statement uses 1, and there are 3 supplied.
However, when I change the list, it works fine:
clist = ["a", "b"]
cursor.executemany("INSERT INTO myTable(data) values (?) ", clist)
It works as expected! I can see the data in the database. Why does the first list not work and second one does ?
(PS: This is just a sample and not the actual code. I made a small test case for simplicity).
You don't need to install sqlite3 module. It is included in the standard library (since Python 2.5).
Connect To Database#!/usr/bin/python import sqlite3 conn = sqlite3. connect('test. db') print "Opened database successfully"; Here, you can also supply database name as the special name :memory: to create a database in RAM.
First, establish a connection to the SQLite database by creating a Connection object. Next, create a Cursor object using the cursor method of the Connection object. Then, execute a SELECT statement. After that, call the fetchall() method of the cursor object to fetch the data.
From what I know of executemany, you meant,
clist = [("abc", ), ("def", ), ("ghi", )]
cursor.executemany("INSERT INTO myTable(data) values(?)", clist)
Or something similar. Don't quote me on the syntax for sqlite, I haven't used it in an app in a while, but you need an iterable of tuples (more generally iterables).
It looks like the error you're getting is that it's trying to iterate through each string you're providing, so your statement works like:
clist = [('a', 'b', 'c'), ('d', 'e', 'f'), ('g', 'h', 'i')]
I don't know what your second query is trying to accomplish, but it appears to address a different table, so I'm guessing off of no schema info, but if you change the single character strings to multicharacter strings, it will fail too.
Just to complement the context: In a closely related situation I meant to insert a list of poly-tuples into a table using executemany
as such:
res = [("John", "2j4o1h2n"), ("Paula", "lsohvoeemsy"), ("Ben", "l8ers")]
cur.executemany("INSERT INTO users (user, password) VALUES (?)", res)
Expecting SQLite to to take one tuple at a time (hence the single ?
parameter-substitution in the VALUES field) and splitting it up into its encapsulated attributes (<username>, <password>
in this case), it failed with a sqlite3.ProgrammingError
exception The current statement uses 1, and there are 2 supplied.
as well, as SQLite expects separately substituted attributes in the VALUES (...)
field. So this fixes it:
cur.executemany("INSERT INTO users (user, password) VALUES (?, ?)", res)
This is a trivial case but might confuse a little, I hope it might help whoever's stuck.
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