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sqlite3.OperationalError: no such column:

Tags:

python

sqlite

This is a very basic question and I know there are security issues with this code and it should be using parameterized entries among other issues - it is a work in progress. I am attempting to set build a user registration module for a project. I have set up a table with with the first column serving as an ID with a primary key constraint but when I run the code, I get the following error and am not sure why - (if it relates to the p_ID column):

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "user.py", line 72, in <module>
    userSignUp()
  File "user.py", line 68, in userSignUp
    c.execute("INSERT INTO People VALUES(userName, password, confirmPassword,   firstName,lastName, companyName, email, phoneNumber,addressLine1, addressLine2, addressLine3, zipCode, province, country, regDate)")
sqlite3.OperationalError: no such column: userName

The code is:

import sqlite3
import datetime


path = "/Users/workhorse/thinkful/"
db = "apartment.db"

def checkAndCreateDB():
    #not checking for some reason
    #fullPath = os.path.join(path, db)
    #if os.path.exists(fullPath):
    #   print "Database Exists"
    #else:
    connection = sqlite3.connect(db)
    print "Creating database"
    createUserRegTable()

def createUserRegTable():
    with sqlite3.connect(db) as connection:
        c = connection.cursor()
        c.execute("""CREATE TABLE People
        (p_ID INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
        userName TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
        password TEXT NOT NULL,
        confirmPassword TEXT NOT NULL,
        firstName TEXT NOT NULL,
        lastName TEXT NOT NULL,
        companyName TEXT NOT NULL,
        email TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
        phoneNumber TEXT NOT NULL,
        addressLine1 TEXT NOT NULL,
        addressLine2 TEXT,
        addressLine3 TEXT,
        zipCode TEXT NOT NULL,
        province TEXT NOT NULL,
        country TEXT NOT NULL,
        regDate DATE NOT NULL)
        """)
        print "table made"


def userSignIn():
    pass

def userSignUp():
    userName = raw_input("Enter a user name: ")
    password = raw_input("Enter a password: ")
    confirmPassword = raw_input("Confirm Your Password: ")
    firstName = raw_input("Enter your first name: ")
    lastName = raw_input("Enter your last name: ")
    companyName = raw_input("Enter your company name: ")
    email = raw_input("Enter your email: ")
    phoneNumber = raw_input("Enter your phone number: ")
    addressLine1 = raw_input("Enter your address: ")
    addressLine2 = raw_input("Enter second line of your address (Not Required): ")
    addressLine3 = raw_input("Enter third line of your address (Not Required): ")
    zipCode = raw_input("Enter your zip code: ")
    province = raw_input("Enter your state or province: ")
    country = raw_input("Enter your country: ")
    regDate = datetime.date.today()
    print regDate

    #userInfo = (userName, password, confirmPassword, firstName,lastName, companyName, email, phoneNumber,addressLine1,
    #addressLine2, addressLine3, zipCode, province, country, regDate)

    with sqlite3.connect(db) as connection:
        c = connection.cursor()
        c.execute("INSERT INTO People VALUES(userName, password, confirmPassword, firstName,lastName, companyName, email, phoneNumber,addressLine1, addressLine2, addressLine3, zipCode, province, country, regDate)")

checkAndCreateDB()

userSignUp()

Much thanks

like image 664
Geri Atric Avatar asked Jan 15 '14 16:01

Geri Atric


3 Answers

If you want to insert Python values into a SQL database, just naming the Python variables in the SQL statement is not enough. The SQL database instead thinks you wanted to insert values taken from the table or another query instead.

Use SQL parameters instead, and pass in the actual values:

params = (userName, password, confirmPassword, firstName, lastName,
          companyName, email, phoneNumber, addressLine1, addressLine2, 
          addressLine3, zipCode, province, country, regDate)

c.execute("INSERT INTO People VALUES (NULL, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?)", params)

The NULL value is for the p_ID primary key column; the alternative is to name all the columns you want to insert values for, or pass in None as the value for an additional parameter.

like image 93
Martijn Pieters Avatar answered Oct 13 '22 20:10

Martijn Pieters


Martijn's answer is great but works if you know a certain value is going to be NULL. But if any variable could be NULL, I used a slightly different implementation.

Set any variable to None. If you browse your db the value will be null, and it will display as None in your python console as they are equivalent.

See section 11.13.5.1 in the documentation (https://docs.python.org/2/library/sqlite3.html):

Python type None = SQLite type NULL

like image 37
J.Boss Avatar answered Oct 13 '22 19:10

J.Boss


Actually it's a small mistake, you have to edit it like this:

c.execute("INSERT INTO People VALUES('userName', 'password', 'confirmPassword', 'firstName','lastName', 'companyName', 'email', phoneNumber,'addressLine1', 'addressLine2', 'addressLine3', zipCode, 'province', 'country', 'regDate')")

I hope you understood

like image 4
Yashwanth Sai Avatar answered Oct 13 '22 21:10

Yashwanth Sai