Unit 2.4a Using Programs with Data, SQLAlchemy
Using Programs with Data is focused on SQL and database actions. Part A focuses on SQLAlchemy and an OOP programming style,
Database and SQLAlchemy
In this blog we will explore using programs with data, focused on Databases. We will use SQLite Database to learn more about using Programs with Data. Use Debugging through these examples to examine Objects created in Code.
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Focus for the lesson will be objects, they have data and depth
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College Board talks about ideas like
- Program Usage. "iterative and interactive way when processing information"
- Managing Data. "classifying data are part of the process in using programs", "data files in a Table"
- Insight "insight and knowledge can be obtained from ... digitally represented information"
- Filter systems. 'tools for finding information and recognizing patterns"
- Application. "the preserve has two databases", "an employee wants to count the number of book"
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PBL, Databases, Iterative/OOP
- Iterative. Refers to a sequence of instructions or code being repeated until a specific end result is achieved
- OOP. A computer programming model that organizes software design around data, or objects, rather than functions and logic
- SQL. Structured Query Language, abbreviated as SQL, is a language used in programming, managing, and structuring data
Imports and Flask Objects
Defines and key object creations
- Comment on where you have observed these working? Provide a defintion of purpose.
- Flask app object:Flask is a template for a class. The app is an object in the class. 2. SQLAlchemy db object: SQLAlchemy uses the template from app to create a db.
"""
These imports define the key objects
"""
from flask import Flask
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
"""
These object and definitions are used throughout the Jupyter Notebook.
"""
# Setup of key Flask object (app)
app = Flask(__name__)
# Setup SQLAlchemy object and properties for the database (db)
database = 'sqlite:///sqlite.db' # path and filename of database
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_TRACK_MODIFICATIONS'] = False
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = database
app.config['SECRET_KEY'] = 'SECRET_KEY'
db = SQLAlchemy()
# Breakpoint means that we want to examine the things which have occurred before the breakpoint
# Flask helps to create the app object
# app.config adds to the app, since they are defined and assigned to it, can be called setters
# This belongs in place where it runs once per project
db.init_app(app)
Model Definition
Define columns, initialization, and CRUD methods for users table in sqlite.db
- Comment on these items in the class, purpose and defintion.
- class User:defining the template the class of Users, class definition template, helps us create objects which are of the type User - db.Model inheritance: inherit the ability of the class to be able to use database properties, attributes, and methods
- init method: can be called the constructor, used to instantiate an object from the User class
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@property
,@<column>.setter
- setters enable us to change the information of the object
- getters enable us to get the information of the object
- create, read, update, delete methods: methods which allow us to be able to alter the database, are executable elements whicha re defined by the class, classes can have attributes and methods
""" database dependencies to support sqlite examples """
import datetime
from datetime import datetime
import json
from sqlalchemy.exc import IntegrityError
from werkzeug.security import generate_password_hash, check_password_hash
''' Tutorial: https://www.sqlalchemy.org/library.html#tutorials, try to get into a Python shell and follow along '''
# Define the User class to manage actions in the 'users' table
# -- Object Relational Mapping (ORM) is the key concept of SQLAlchemy
# -- a.) db.Model is like an inner layer of the onion in ORM
# -- b.) User represents data we want to store, something that is built on db.Model
# -- c.) SQLAlchemy ORM is layer on top of SQLAlchemy Core, then SQLAlchemy engine, SQL
# defining the template the class of Users, class definition template, helps us create objects which are of the type User, template for future object
class User(db.Model):
__tablename__ = 'users' # table name is plural, class name is singular
# Define the User schema with "vars" from object
# db inheritance allows the class to be able to use database properties, attributes, and methods
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
_name = db.Column(db.String(255), unique=False, nullable=False)
_uid = db.Column(db.String(255), unique=True, nullable=False)
_password = db.Column(db.String(255), unique=False, nullable=False)
_dob = db.Column(db.Date)
# constructor of a User object, initializes the instance variables within object (self)
# can be called the constructor, used to instantiate an object from the User class
def __init__(self, name, uid, password="123qwerty", dob=datetime.today()):
self._name = name # variables with self prefix become part of the object,
self._uid = uid
self.set_password(password)
if isinstance(dob, str): # not a date type
dob = date=datetime.today()
self._dob = dob
# a name getter method, extracts name from object
@property
def name(self):
return self._name
# a setter function, allows name to be updated after initial object creation
@name.setter
def name(self, name):
self._name = name
# a getter method, extracts uid from object
@property
def uid(self):
return self._uid
# a setter function, allows uid to be updated after initial object creation
@uid.setter
def uid(self, uid):
self._uid = uid
# check if uid parameter matches user id in object, return boolean
def is_uid(self, uid):
return self._uid == uid
@property
def password(self):
return self._password[0:10] + "..." # because of security only show 1st characters
# update password, this is conventional method used for setter
def set_password(self, password):
"""Create a hashed password."""
self._password = generate_password_hash(password, method='sha256')
# check password parameter against stored/encrypted password
def is_password(self, password):
"""Check against hashed password."""
result = check_password_hash(self._password, password)
return result
# dob property is returned as string, a string represents date outside object
@property
def dob(self):
dob_string = self._dob.strftime('%m-%d-%Y')
return dob_string
# dob setter, verifies date type before it is set or default to today
@dob.setter
def dob(self, dob):
if isinstance(dob, str): # not a date type
dob = date=datetime.today()
self._dob = dob
# age is calculated field, age is returned according to date of birth
@property
def age(self):
today = datetime.today()
return today.year - self._dob.year - ((today.month, today.day) < (self._dob.month, self._dob.day))
# output content using str(object) is in human readable form
# output content using json dumps, this is ready for API response
def __str__(self):
return json.dumps(self.read())
# CRUD create/add a new record to the table
# returns self or None on error
def create(self):
try:
# creates a person object from User(db.Model) class, passes initializers
db.session.add(self) # add prepares to persist person object to Users table
db.session.commit() # SqlAlchemy "unit of work pattern" requires a manual commit
return self
except IntegrityError:
db.session.remove()
return None
# CRUD read converts self to dictionary
# returns dictionary
def read(self):
return {
"id": self.id,
"name": self.name,
"uid": self.uid,
"dob": self.dob,
"age": self.age,
}
# CRUD update: updates user name, password, phone
# returns self
def update(self, name="", uid="", password=""):
"""only updates values with length"""
if len(name) > 0:
self.name = name
if len(uid) > 0:
self.uid = uid
if len(password) > 0:
self.set_password(password)
db.session.add(self)
db.session.commit()
return self
# CRUD delete: remove self
# None
def delete(self):
db.session.delete(self)
db.session.commit()
return None
Initial Data
Uses SQLALchemy db.create_all() to initialize rows into sqlite.db
- Comment on how these work?
- Create All Tables from db Object:The Create All Tables from db Object creates the users from all of the defined variables in the users list. 2. User Object Constructors: The User Object Constructors create the rows in the database using the given information from the code.
- Try / Except: The try commands attempts to create a new addition to the database. The except command runs if there is an exception in the database.
"""Database Creation and Testing """
# Builds working data for testing
def initUsers():
with app.app_context():
"""Create database and tables"""
db.create_all()
"""Tester data for table"""
u1 = User(name='Thomas Edison', uid='toby', password='123toby', dob=datetime(1847, 2, 11))
u2 = User(name='Nikola Tesla', uid='niko', password='123niko')
u3 = User(name='Alexander Graham Bell', uid='lex', password='123lex')
u4 = User(name='Eli Whitney', uid='whit', password='123whit')
u5 = User(name='Indiana Jones', uid='indi', dob=datetime(1920, 10, 21))
u6 = User(name='Marion Ravenwood', uid='raven', dob=datetime(1921, 10, 21))
users = [u1, u2, u3, u4, u5, u6]
"""Builds sample user/note(s) data"""
for user in users:
try:
'''add user to table'''
object = user.create()
print(f"Created new uid {object.uid}")
except: # error raised if object nit created
'''fails with bad or duplicate data'''
print(f"Records exist uid {user.uid}, or error.")
initUsers()
Check for given Credentials in users table in sqlite.db
Use of ORM Query object and custom methods to identify user to credentials uid and password
- Comment on purpose of following
- User.query.filter_by:the User.query.filter_by searches for the specific user or users. In this case, using User.query.filter_by finds the first user and assigns it to a variable. 2. user.password: checks and references the password of the user.
def find_by_uid(uid):
with app.app_context():
# ORM allows us to do query methods on our data
# only returns the match to the first match to the database
user = User.query.filter_by(_uid=uid).first()
return user # returns user object
# Check credentials by finding user and verify password
def check_credentials(uid, password):
# query email and return user record
user = find_by_uid(uid)
# checks for the user
if user == None:
return False
# checks for the password for the selected user
if (user.is_password(password)):
return True
return False
check_credentials("indi", "123qwerty")
Create a new User in table in Sqlite.db
Uses SQLALchemy and custom user.create() method to add row.
- Comment on purpose of following
- user.find_by_uid() and try/except:user.find_by_uid() checks if they uid exists. Try will run if the uid is found and except will run if it is not found. 2. user = User(...): this defines the current parameters of User, so everything at the point is part of user.
- user.dob and try/except: user.dob is a function which converts the input from the consumer into a dob string which is valid for storage. If it meets the requirements for storage, try is run. Except is run if there is an error in the inputs.
- user.create() and try/except: user.create() runs the create() command to create a user. The try portion will output created if it is met. The except portion will output an error if it does not work.
def create():
# optimize user time to see if uid exists
uid = input("Enter your user id:")
user = find_by_uid(uid)
try:
print("Found\n", user.read())
return
except:
pass # keep going
# request value that ensure creating valid object
name = input("Enter your name:")
password = input("Enter your password")
# Initialize User object before date
user = User(name=name,
uid=uid,
password=password
)
# create user.dob, fail with today as dob
dob = input("Enter your date of birth 'YYYY-MM-DD'")
try:
user.dob = datetime.strptime(dob, '%Y-%m-%d').date()
except ValueError:
user.dob = datetime.today()
print(f"Invalid date {dob} require YYYY-mm-dd, date defaulted to {user.dob}")
# write object to database
with app.app_context():
try:
object = user.create()
print("Created\n", object.read())
except: # error raised if object not created
print("Unknown error uid {uid}")
create()
Reading users table in sqlite.db
Uses SQLALchemy query.all method to read data
- Comment on purpose of following
- User.query.all:user.query.all goes through the entire list of the users and makes sure that all rows of the SQLAlchemy database are selected. 2. json_ready assignment, google List Comprehension: the json_ready assignment reads all of the data in the SQLAlchemy table. List comprehension means reducing the running of a for loop to one line of code.
# SQLAlchemy extracts all users from database, turns each user into JSON
def read():
with app.app_context():
table = User.query.all()
json_ready = [user.read() for user in table] # "List Comprehensions", for each user add user.read() to list
return json_ready
read()
def deleteu():
# optimize user time to see if uid exists
uid = input("Enter your user id:")
user = find_by_uid(uid)
with app.app_context():
try:
user.delete()
print("Deleted", uid)
except: # error raised if object not created
print(f"Unknown error uid {uid}")
deleteu()
def updateu():
uid = input("Enter your user id:")
user = find_by_uid(uid)
with app.app_context():
try:
name = input("What would you like to change your name to?")
password = input("What would you like to change your password to?")
user.update(name=name, password=password)
print("Updated", uid)
except:
print(f"Error with {uid}")
updateu()