In SQLAlchemy, it is possible to do something like this:
mytable.query.filter(mytable.some_col < 5).all()
How can I implement something similar? I want developer users to be able to pass in logical operations to a function. Here's an example:
class row_obj:
def __init__(self, val1, val2, val3, val4):
self.val1 = val1
self.val2 = val2
self.val3 = val3
self.val4 = val4
def __repr__(self):
return str(self.val1)+","+str(self.val2)+","+str(self.val3)+","+str(self.val4)
class table_obj:
""" takes a list of row_objs """
def __init__(self, rows):
self.rows = rows #rows is a list of row_obj
def __repr__(self):
return "\n".join([str(row) for row in self.rows])
def filter(self, condition):
# I would like to return all rows which meet the condition here
return table_obj([row for row in self.rows if condition])
a = table_obj([ row_obj(1,2,3,4),
row_obj(5,6,7,8),
row_obj(2,4,6,8),
row_obj(5,2,7,4)])
print a.filter(row_obj.val3 == 7)
#should return
#5,6,7,8
#5,2,7,4
As you mentioned, SQLAlchemy allows expressions like:
mytable.query.filter(mytable.some_col < 5).all()
This is possible because mytable.some_col implements magic methods for each logical operator which returns some other object (in this case __lt__). So the operator is not really passed in. In my application, which defines a User object, this can be seen via:
>>> User.first_name == 'John'
<sqlalchemy.sql.elements.BinaryExpression object at 0x10f0991d0>
You could do the same to achieve the same effect.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With