Generally Flask-SQLAlchemy behaves like a properly configured declarative base from the declarative extension. As such we recommend reading the SQLAlchemy docs for a full reference. However the most common use cases are also documented here.
Things to keep in mind:
A very simple example:
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
Use Column to define a column. The name of the column is the name you assign it to. If you want to use a different name in the table you can provide an optional first argument which is a string with the desired column name. Primary keys are marked with primary_key=True. Multiple keys can be marked as primary keys in which case they become a compound primary key.
The types of the column are the first argument to Column. You can either provide them directly or call them to further specify them (like providing a length). The following types are the most common:
Integer | an integer |
String (size) | a string with a maximum length |
Text | some longer unicode text |
DateTime | date and time expressed as Python datetime object. |
Float | stores floating point values |
Boolean | stores a boolean value |
PickleType | stores a pickled Python object |
LargeBinary | stores large arbitrary binary data |
The most common relationships are one-to-many relationships. Because relationships are declared before they are established you can use strings to refer to classes that are not created yet (for instance if Person defines a relationship to Article which is declared later in the file).
Relationships are expressed with the relationship() function. However the foreign key has to be separately declared with the sqlalchemy.schema.ForeignKey class:
class Person(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
name = db.Column(db.String(50))
addresses = db.relationship('Address', backref='person',
lazy='dynamic')
class Address(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
email = db.Column(db.String(50))
person_id = db.Column(db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('person.id'))
What does db.relationship() do? That function returns a new property that can do multiple things. In this case we told it to point to the Address class and load multiple of those. How does it know that this will return more than one address? Because SQLAlchemy guesses a useful default from your declaration. If you would want to have a one-to-one relationship you can pass uselist=False to relationship().
So what do backref and lazy mean? backref is a simple way to also declare a new property on the Address class. You can then also use my_address.person to get to the person at that address. lazy defines when SQLAlchemy will load the data from the database:
How do you define the lazy status for backrefs? By using the backref() function:
class User(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
name = db.Column(db.String(50))
addresses = db.relationship('Address',
backref=db.backref('person', lazy='joined'), lazy='dynamic')
If you want to use many-to-many relationships you will need to define a helper table that is used for the relationship. For this helper table it is strongly recommended to not use a model but an actual table:
tags = db.Table('tags',
db.Column('tag_id', db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('tag.id')),
db.Column('page_id', db.Integer, db.ForeignKey('page.id'))
)
class Page(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
tags = db.relationship('Tag', secondary=tags,
backref=db.backref('pages', lazy='dynamic'))
class Tag(db.Model):
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True)
Here we configured Page.tags to be a list of tags once loaded because we don’t expect too many tags per page. The list of pages per tag (Tag.pages) however is a dynamic backref. As mentioned above this means that you will get a query object back you can use to fire a select yourself.