.. _quickstart: Quickstart ========== .. currentmodule:: flask.ext.sqlalchemy Flask-SQLAlchemy is fun to use, incredibly easy for basic applications, and readily extends for larger applications. For the complete guide, checkout out the API documentation on the :class:`SQLAlchemy` class. A Minimal Application --------------------- For the common case of having one Flask application all you have to do is to create your Flask application, load the configuration of choice and then create the :class:`SQLAlchemy` object by passing it the application. Once created, that object then contains all the functions and helpers from both :mod:`sqlalchemy` and :mod:`sqlalchemy.orm`. Furthermore it provides a class called `Model` that is a declarative base which can be used to declare models:: from flask import Flask from flask.ext.sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy app = Flask(__name__) app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = 'sqlite:////tmp/test.db' db = SQLAlchemy(app) class User(db.Model): id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True) username = db.Column(db.String(80), unique=True) email = db.Column(db.String(120), unique=True) def __init__(self, username, email): self.username = username self.email = email def __repr__(self): return '<User %r>' % self.username To create the initial database, just import the `db` object from a interactive Python shell and run the :meth:`SQLAlchemy.create_all` method to create the tables and database: >>> from yourapplication import db >>> db.create_all() Boom, and there is your database. Now to create some users: >>> from yourapplication import User >>> admin = User('admin', 'admin@example.com') >>> guest = User('guest', 'guest@example.com') But they are not yet in the database, so let's make sure they are: >>> db.session.add(admin) >>> db.session.add(guest) >>> db.session.commit() Accessing the data in database is easy as a pie: >>> users = User.query.all() [<User u'admin'>, <User u'guest'>] >>> admin = User.query.filter_by(username='admin').first() <User u'admin'> Simple Relationships -------------------- SQLAlchemy connects to relational databases and what relational databases are really good at are relations. As such, we shall have an example of an application that uses two tables that have a relationship to each other:: from datetime import datetime class Post(db.Model): id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True) title = db.Column(db.String(80)) body = db.Column(db.Text) pub_date = db.Column(db.DateTime) category_id = db.Column(db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('category.id')) category = db.relationship('Category', backref=db.backref('posts', lazy='dynamic')) def __init__(self, title, body, category, pub_date=None): self.title = title self.body = body if pub_date is None: pub_date = datetime.utcnow() self.pub_date = pub_date self.category = category def __repr__(self): return '<Post %r>' % self.title class Category(db.Model): id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True) name = db.Column(db.String(50)) def __init__(self, name): self.name = name def __repr__(self): return '<Category %r>' % self.name First let's create some objects: >>> py = Category('Python') >>> p = Post('Hello Python!', 'Python is pretty cool', py) >>> db.session.add(py) >>> db.session.add(p) Now because we declared `posts` as dynamic relationship in the backref it shows up as query: >>> py.posts <sqlalchemy.orm.dynamic.AppenderBaseQuery object at 0x1027d37d0> It behaves like a regular query object so we can ask it for all posts that are associated with our test âPythonâ category: >>> py.posts.all() [<Post 'Hello Python!'>] Road to Enlightenment --------------------- The only things you need to know compared to plain SQLAlchemy are: 1. :class:`SQLAlchemy` gives you access to the following things: - all the functions and classes from :mod:`sqlalchemy` and :mod:`sqlalchemy.orm` - a preconfigured scoped session called `session` - the :attr:`~SQLAlchemy.metadata` - the :attr:`~SQLAlchemy.engine` - a :meth:`SQLAlchemy.create_all` and :meth:`SQLAlchemy.drop_all` methods to create and drop tables according to the models. - a :class:`Model` baseclass that is a configured declarative base. 2. The :class:`Model` declarative base class behaves like a regular Python class but has a `query` attribute attached that can be used to query the model. (:class:`Model` and :class:`BaseQuery`) 3. You have to commit the session, but you don't have to remove it at the end of the request, Flask-SQLAlchemy does that for you.