I got help with this code since I am learning how to use params and I want it to be downcase before it start searching. I have already taken care of the downcase on the address when the user submits it.
Where do I put the downcase in the params ?
#ads_item_plus_today = #ads_item_plus_today.where(category_id: params[:category_id]) if params[:category_id]
#ads_item_plus_today = #ads_item_plus_today.where("address LIKE ?", "%#{params[:address]}%") if params[:address] && params[:address] != ''
You can either downcase it in-place:
if params[:address].present?
params[:address].downcase!
#ads_item_plus_today = #ads_item_plus_today.where("address LIKE ?", "%#{params[:address]}%")
end
...which will modify the value in params[:address] or you can make a copy that's downcased:
if params[:address].present?
address = params[:address].downcase
#ads_item_plus_today = #ads_item_plus_today.where("address LIKE ?", "%#{address}%")
end
...which doesn't change params[:address].
However, you don't necessarily have to do this at all, depending on your database. In many configurations LIKE comparisons in MySQL are case-insensitive (you can check with SHOW COLLATION, or set it on a per-query basis with COLLATE ). In PostgreSQL you can use ILIKE instead of LIKE to make it case-insensitive.
Related
I have been trying to update some columns of a database table using cx_Oracle in Python. I created a list named check_to_process which is a result of another sql query. I am creating log_msg in the program based on success or failure and want to update same in the table only for records in check_to_process list. When I update the table without using bind variable <MESSAGE = %s>, it works fine. But when I try to use bind variable to update the columns it gives me error :
cursor.executemany("UPDATE apps.SLCAP_CITI_PAYMENT_BATCH SET MESSAGE = %s, "
TypeError: an integer is required (got type str)
Below is the code, I am using:
import cx_Oracle
connection = cx_Oracle.connect(user=os.environ['ORA_DB_USR'], password=os.environ['ORA_DB_PWD'], dsn=os.environ['ORA_DSN'])
cursor = connection.cursor()
check_to_process = ['ACHRMUS-20-OCT-2021 00:12:57', 'ACHRMUS-12-OCT-2021 16:12:01']
placeholders = ','.join(":x%d" % i for i,_ in enumerate(check_to_process))
log_msg = 'Success'
cursor.executemany("UPDATE apps.SLCAP_CITI_PAYMENT_BATCH SET MESSAGE = %s, "
"PAYMENT_FILE_CREATED_FLAG='N' "
"WHERE PAYMENT_BATCH_NAME = :1",
[(i,) for i in check_to_process], log_msg, arraydmlrowcounts=True)
Many thanks for suggestions and insights!
Your code has an odd mix of string substitution (the %s) and bind variable placeholders (the :1). And odd code that creates bind variable placeholders that aren't used. Passing log_msg the way you do isn't going to work, since executemany() syntax doesn't support string substitution.
You probably want to use some kind of IN list, as shown in the cx_Oracle documentation Binding Multiple Values to a SQL WHERE IN Clause. Various solutions are shown there, depending on the number of values and frequency that the statement will be re-executed.
Use only bind variables. You should be able to use execute() instead of executemany(). Effectively you would do:
cursor.execute("""UPDATE apps.SLCAP_CITI_PAYMENT_BATCH
SET MESSAGE = :1
WHERE PAYMENT_BATCH_NAME IN (something goes here - see the doc)""",
bind_values)
The bottom line is: read the documentation and review examples like batch_errors.py. If you still have problems, refine your question, correct it, and add more detail.
A possible solution for this question is here:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/6223961/12343395
It will probably work with a lot of work around.
But I have stored my table names in string format and want to call them as needed.
I am using Pandas read_sql_query. So as in params, I am passing, the table name and a few parameters in the WHERE section.
The WHERE section is fine, since the parameters are originally strings. But in the FROM section,
I really want the schema.table as a non-string.
Here is a snippet.
SELECT "rainfall(mm)","tmin(C)","tmax(C)","TimeStamp"
FROM crop_tables[choose_crop][0]
WHERE "District_Name" = %s AND "Season" = %s
ORDER BY "TimeStamp" ASC
where crop_tables[choose_crop][0] is 'sagita_historic.soyabean_daily_analyses' in this case.
But FROM will throw an error since it doesn't accept strings. So in essence, I wish to strip the 'sagita_historic.soyabean_daily_analyses' as a non-string.
Is it possible to do so?
Thank you.
Not sure I fully understand but maybe this will do?
SELECT "rainfall(mm)","tmin(C)","tmax(C)","TimeStamp"
FROM f"{crop_tables[choose_crop][0]}"
WHERE "District_Name" = %s AND "Season" = %s
ORDER BY "TimeStamp" ASC
I am stuck to find out better one between str() and format() in python
"SELECT schools.deis_income , schools.school_name,SUM(money.coin_in_amount) AS coinamount, SUM(money.note_in_amount) AS noteamount , SUM(money.coffee_coin_in_amount) AS coffeeamount , SUM(money.coin_out_amount) AS coinoutamount, SUM(money.note_out_amount) AS noteoutamount FROM money_transactions AS money JOIN school_admin_details AS sa on sa.id = money.school_admin_id JOIN schools ON schools.id=sa.school_id WHERE sa.school_id ={school_id} AND money.transaction_time BETWEEN '{start_date}' AND '{end_date}' GROUP BY schools.id".format(school_id=school_id,start_date=start_date,end_date=end_date)
I use format function here. can I use str() ?
please tell me which one give me quick result, str() or format() ???
If your question is which of this:
foo = "some text " + str(some_var) + " and some other text"
or this:
foo = "some text {} and some other text".format(var)
is "better", the general consensus is very clear: string formatting is much easier to read and maintain and the one pythonic way to go.
Now for your particular example, the answer is that both are totally wrong - unless you're ok to give full access to your database to even the most inept script kiddie. For SQL queries, the proper solution is to use prepared statements, where your db connector will take care of proper formatting and sanitizing of the values:
# assumes MySQL - for other vendors check your own
# db-api connector's doc for the correct placeholder
query = "SELECT somefield FROM mytable where somedate > %(somedate)s and something_else = %(someval)s"
cursor.execute(query, {"somedate": some_date, "someval": 42})
I have created a structure containing a few different fields. The fields contain data from a number of different subjects/participants.
At the beginning of the script I prompt the user to enter the "Subject number" like so:
prompt='Enter the subject number in the format SUB_n: ';
SUB=input(prompt,'s');
Example SUB_34 for the 34th subject.
I want to then name my structure such that it contains this string... i.e. I want the name of my structure to be SUB_34, e.g. SUB_34.field1. But I don't know how to do this.
I know that you can assign strings to a specific field name for example for structure S if I want field1 to be called z then
S=struct;
field1='z';
S.(field1);
works but it does not work for the structure name.
Can anyone help?
Thanks
Rather than creating structures named SUB_34 I would strongly recommend just using an array of structures instead and having the user simply input the subject number.
number = input('Subject Number')
S(number) = data_struct
Then you could simply find it again using:
subject = S(number);
If you really insist on it, you could use the method proposed in the comment by #Sembei using eval to get the struct. You really should not do this though
S = eval([SUB, ';']);
Or to set the structure
eval([SUB, ' = mydata;']);
One (of many) reasons not to do this is that I could enter the following at your prompt:
>> prompt = 'Enter the subject number in the format SUB_n: ';
>> SUB = input(prompt, 's');
>> eval([SUB, ' = mydata;']);
And I enter:
clear all; SUB_34
This would have the unforeseen consequence that it would remove all of your data since eval evaluates the input string as a command. Using eval on user input assumes that the user is never going to ever write something malformed or malicious, accidentally or otherwise.
I need to import certain information from an Excel file into an Access DB and in order to do this, I am using DAO.
The user gets the excel source file from a system, he does not need to directly interact with it. This source file has 10 columns and I would need to retrieve only certain records from it.
I am using this to retrieve all the records:
Set destinationFile = CurrentDb
Set dbtmp = OpenDatabase(sourceFile, False, True, "Excel 8.0;")
DoEvents
Set rs = dbtmp.OpenRecordset("SELECT * FROM [EEX_Avail_Cap_ALL_DEU_D1_S_Y1$A1:J65536]")
My problem comes when I want to retrieve only certain records using a WHERE clause. The name of the field where I want to apply the clause is 'Date (UCT)' (remember that the user gets this source file from another system) and I can not get the WHERE clause to work on it. If I apply the WHERE clause on another field, whose name does not have ( ) or spaces, then it works. Example:
Set rs = dbtmp.OpenRecordset("SELECT * FROM [EEX_Avail_Cap_ALL_DEU_D1_S_Y1$A1:J65536] WHERE Other = 12925")
The previous instruction will retrieve only the number of records where the field Other has the value 12925.
Could anyone please tell me how can I achieve the same result but with a field name that has spaces and parenthesis i.e. 'Date (UCT)' ?
Thank you very much.
Octavio
Try enclosing the field name in square brackets:
SELECT * FROM [EEX_Avail_Cap_ALL_DEU_D1_S_Y1$A1:J65536] WHERE [Date (UCT)] = 12925
or if it's a date we are looking for:
SELECT * FROM [EEX_Avail_Cap_ALL_DEU_D1_S_Y1$A1:J65536] WHERE [Date (UCT)] = #02/14/13#;
To use date literal you must enclose it in # characters and write the date in MM/DD/YY format regardless of any regional settings on your machine