I'm trying to find a way to cause SQLAlchemy to generate a query of the following form:
select * from t where (a,b) in ((a1,b1),(a2,b2));
Is this possible?
If not, any suggestions on a way to emulate it?
Use tuple_
:
keys = [(a1, b1), (a2, b2)]
session.query(T).filter(tuple_(T.a, T.b).in_(keys)).all()
http://docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/core/sqlelement.html#sqlalchemy.sql.expression.tuple_
Well, thanks to Hao Lian above, I came up with a functional if painful solution.
Assume that we have a declarative-style mapped class, Clazz
, and a list
of tuples of compound primary key values, values
(Edited to use a better (IMO) sql generation style):
from sqlalchemy.sql.expression import text,bindparam ... def __gParams(self, f, vs, ts, bs): for j,v in enumerate(vs): key = f % (j+97) bs.append(bindparam(key, value=v, type_=ts[j])) yield ':%s' % key def __gRows(self, ts, values, bs): for i,vs in enumerate(values): f = '%%c%d' % i yield '(%s)' % ', '.join(self.__gParams(f, vs, ts, bs)) def __gKeys(self, k, ts): for c in k: ts.append(c.type) yield str(c) def __makeSql(self,Clazz, values): t = [] b = [] return text( '(%s) in (%s)' % ( ', '.join(self.__gKeys(Clazz.__table__.primary_key,t)), ', '.join(self.__gRows(t,values,b))), bindparams=b)
This solution works for compound or simple primary keys. It's probably marginally slower than the col.in_(keys)
for simple primary keys though.
I'm still interested in suggestions of better ways to do this, but this way is working for now and performs noticeably better than the or_(and_(conditions))
way, or the for key in keys: do_stuff(q.get(key))
way.
see the tuple_ construct in SQLAlchemy 0.6
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