e4bcc27463
result_row objects can be constructed with raw result rows representing the end of the result set. Field values must not be accessed for such rows. Thus, is_null() now throws an exception when called for a field of an invalid row. |
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database_api | ||
examples | ||
include/sqlpp11 | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
sqlpp11
A type safe template library for SQL queries and results in C++
Motivation:
SQL and C++ are both strongly typed languages. Still, most C/C++ interfaces to SQL are based on constructing queries as strings and on interpreting arrays or maps of strings as results.
sqlpp11 is a templated library representing an embedded domain specific language (EDSL) that allows you to
- define types representing tables and columns,
- construct type safe queries checked at compile time for syntax errors, type errors, name errors and even some semantic errors,
- interpret results by iterating over query-specific structs with appropriately named and typed members.
This results in several benefits, e.g.
- the library user operates comfortably on structs and functions,
- the compiler reports many kinds of errors long before the code enters unit testing or production,
- the library hides the gory details of string construction for queries and interpreting string based results returned by select calls.
Examples:
For the examples, lets assume you have a table class representing something like
CREATE TABLE foo (
id bigint,
name varchar(50),
hasFun bool
);
And we assume to have a database connection object:
TabFoo foo;
Db db(/* some arguments*/);
// selecting zero or more results, iterating over the results
for (const auto& row: db.run(select(foo.name, foo.hasFun).from(foo).where(foo.id > 17 and foo.name.like("%bar%"))))
{
if (row.name.is_null())
std::cerr << "name is null, will convert to empty string" << std::endl;
std::string name = row.name; // string-like fields are implicitly convertible to string
bool hasFun = hasFun; // bool fields are implicitly convertible to bool
}
// selecting ALL columns of a table
for (const auto& row: db.run(select(all_of(foo)).from(foo).where(hasFun or foo.name == "joker")))
{
int64_t id = row.id; // numeric fields are implicitly convertible to numeric c++ types
}
// selecting zero or one row, showing off with an alias:
SQLPP_ALIAS_PROVIDER_GENERATOR(cheese);
if (const auto& row = db.run(select(foo.name.as(cheese)).from(foo).where(foo.id == 17)))
{
std::cerr << "found: " << row.cheese << std::endl;
}
// selecting exactly one row:
return db.run(select(count(foo.id)).from(foo))->count;
Of course there are joins and subqueries, more functions, order_by, group_by etc.
These will be documented soon.
// A sample insert
db.run(insert_into(foo).set(foo.id = 17, foo.name = "bar", foo.hasFun = true));
// A sample update
db.run(update(foo).set(foo.hasFun = not foo.hasFun).where(foo.name != "nobody"));
// A sample delete
db.run(remove_from(tab).where(not tab.hasFun));
Requirements:
sqlpp11 makes heavy use of C++11. It has been developed using
clang-3.2 on Ubuntu-10.4 with matching libc++
It also requires a database library with a matching interface, see database/api.h
Links to sample implementations will follow soon.