"Resource Query Language for SQLAlchemy"


Keywords
sqlachemy, sql, rql, querying, httpapi
License
MIT
Install
pip install rqlalchemy==0.6.0

Documentation

RQLAlchemy

Build Status

Resource Query Language extension for SQLAlchemy

Overview

Resource Query Language (RQL) is a query language designed for use in URIs, with object-style data structures.

rqlalchemy is an RQL extension for SQLAlchemy, making it easy to expose SQLAlchemy tables or models as an HTTP API endpoint and perform complex queries using only query string parameters.

Installing

pip install rqlalchemy

Usage

Support RQL queries in your application by using the select() construct provided by RQLAlchemy. After creating the selectable, use the rql() method to apply the RQL query string, and then use the execute() method with the session to retrieve the results.

For example, in a Flask HTTP API with a users collection endpoint querying the User model:

from urllib.parse import unquote
from flask import request

from rqlalchemy import select

@app.route('/users')
def get_users_collection():
    qs = unquote(request.query_string.decode(request.charset))
    users = select(User).rql(qs).execute(session)

    return render_response(users)

The .execute() method handles the session and adjusts the results accordingly, returning scalars, lists of dicts, or a single scalar result when appropriate. There's no need to use session.execute() or session.scalars() directly unless you want to handle the results yourself.

Pagination

RQLAlchemy offers limit/offset pagination with the rql_paginate() method, returning the requested page, RQL expressions for previous and next pages if available, and the total number of items.

from urllib.parse import unquote
from flask import request

from rqlalchemy import select

@app.route('/users')
def get_users_collection():
    qs = unquote(request.query_string.decode(request.charset))
    res = select(User).rql(qs).rql_paginate(session)

    response = {
        "data": res.page,
        "total": res.total,
    }

    if res.previous_page:
        response["previous"] = '/users?' + res.previous_page

    if res.next_page:
        response["next"] = '/users?' + res.next_page

    return render_response(response)

Pagination requires a limit, as a RQLSelect._rql_default_limit value, a query string limit(x), or the limit parameter to the rql() method. Calling rql_paginate() without a limit will raise RQLQueryError.

Reference Table

RQL SQLAlchemy equivalent Observation
QUERYING
select(a,b,c,...) select(Model.a, Model.b, Model.c,...)
values(a) [o.a for o in query.from_self(a)]
limit(count,start?) .limit(count).offset(start)
sort(attr1) .order_by(attr)
sort(-attr1) .order_by(attr.desc())
distinct() .distinct()
first() .limit(1)
one() [query.one()]
FILTERING
eq(attr,value) .where(Model.attr == value)
ne(attr,value) .where(Model.attr != value)
lt(attr,value) .where(Model.attr < value)
le(attr,value) .where(Model.attr <= value)
gt(attr,value) .where(Model.attr > value)
ge(attr,value) .where(Model.attr >= value)
in(attr,value) .where(Model.attr.in_(value)
out(attr,value) .where(not_(Model.attr.in_(value)))
contains(attr,value) .where(Model.contains(value)) Produces a LIKE expression when querying against a string, or an IN expression when querying against an iterable relationship
excludes(attr,value) .where(not_(Model.contains(value))) See above.
and(expr1,expr2,...) .where(and_(expr1, expr2, ...))
or(expr1,expr2,...) .where(or_(expr1, expr2, ...))
AGGREGATING All aggregation functions return scalar results.
aggregate(a,b(c),...) select(Model.a, func.b(Model.c)).group_by(Model.a)
sum(attr) select(func.sum(Model.attr))
mean(attr) select(func.avg(Model.attr))
max(attr) select(func.max(Model.attr))
min(attr) select(func.min(Model.attr))
count() select(func.count())