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Declare variable in SQLite and use it

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-04-12 06:19 出处:网络
I want to declare a variable in SQLite and use it in insert operation. Like in MS SQL: declare @name as varchar(10)

I want to declare a variable in SQLite and use it in insert operation.

Like in MS SQL:

declare @name as varchar(10)
set name = 'name'
select * from table where name = @name

For example, I will need to get last_insert_row and use it in insert.

I hav开发者_如何学Goe found something about binding but I didn't really fully understood it.


SQLite doesn't support native variable syntax, but you can achieve virtually the same using an in-memory temp table.

I've used the below approach for large projects and works like a charm.

    /* Create in-memory temp table for variables */
    BEGIN;

    PRAGMA temp_store = 2; /* 2 means use in-memory */
    CREATE TEMP TABLE _Variables(Name TEXT PRIMARY KEY, RealValue REAL, IntegerValue INTEGER, BlobValue BLOB, TextValue TEXT);

    /* Declaring a variable */
    INSERT INTO _Variables (Name) VALUES ('VariableName');

    /* Assigning a variable (pick the right storage class) */
    UPDATE _Variables SET IntegerValue = ... WHERE Name = 'VariableName';

    /* Getting variable value (use within expression) */
    ... (SELECT coalesce(RealValue, IntegerValue, BlobValue, TextValue) FROM _Variables WHERE Name = 'VariableName' LIMIT 1) ...

    DROP TABLE _Variables;
    END;


For a read-only variable (that is, a constant value set once and used anywhere in the query), use a Common Table Expression (CTE).

WITH const AS (SELECT 'name' AS name, 10 AS more)
SELECT table.cost, (table.cost + const.more) AS newCost
FROM table, const 
WHERE table.name = const.name

SQLite WITH clause


Herman's solution works, but it can be simplified because Sqlite allows to store any value type on any field.

Here is a simpler version that uses one Value field declared as TEXT to store any value:

CREATE TEMP TABLE IF NOT EXISTS Variables (Name TEXT PRIMARY KEY, Value TEXT);

INSERT OR REPLACE INTO Variables VALUES ('VarStr', 'Val1');
INSERT OR REPLACE INTO Variables VALUES ('VarInt', 123);
INSERT OR REPLACE INTO Variables VALUES ('VarBlob', x'12345678');

SELECT Value
  FROM Variables
 WHERE Name = 'VarStr'
UNION ALL
SELECT Value
  FROM Variables
 WHERE Name = 'VarInt'
UNION ALL
SELECT Value
  FROM Variables
 WHERE Name = 'VarBlob';


Herman's solution worked for me, but the ... had me mixed up for a bit. I'm including the demo I worked up based on his answer. The additional features in my answer include foreign key support, auto incrementing keys, and use of the last_insert_rowid() function to get the last auto generated key in a transaction.

My need for this information came up when I hit a transaction that required three foreign keys but I could only get the last one with last_insert_rowid().

PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON;   -- sqlite foreign key support is off by default
PRAGMA temp_store = 2;      -- store temp table in memory, not on disk

CREATE TABLE Foo(
    Thing1 INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT NOT NULL
);

CREATE TABLE Bar(
    Thing2 INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT NOT NULL,
    FOREIGN KEY(Thing2) REFERENCES Foo(Thing1)
);

BEGIN TRANSACTION;

CREATE TEMP TABLE _Variables(Key TEXT, Value INTEGER);

INSERT INTO Foo(Thing1)
VALUES(2);

INSERT INTO _Variables(Key, Value)
VALUES('FooThing', last_insert_rowid());

INSERT INTO Bar(Thing2)
VALUES((SELECT Value FROM _Variables WHERE Key = 'FooThing'));

DROP TABLE _Variables;

END TRANSACTION;


To use the one from denverCR in your example:

WITH tblCTE AS (SELECT "Joe" AS namevar)
SELECT * FROM table, tblCTE
WHERE name = namevar

As a beginner I found other answers too difficult to understand, hope this works


Creating "VARIABLE" for use in SQLite SELECT (and some other) statements

CREATE TEMP TABLE IF NOT EXISTS variable AS SELECT '2002' AS _year; --creating the "variable" named "_year" with value "2002"
UPDATE variable SET _year = '2021'; --changing the variable named "_year" assigning "new" value "2021"
SELECT _year FROM variable; --viewing the variable
SELECT 'TEST', (SELECT _year FROM variable) AS _year; --using the variable
SELECT taxyr FROM owndat WHERE taxyr = (SELECT _year FROM variable); --another example of using the variable
SELECT DISTINCT taxyr FROM owndat WHERE taxyr IN ('2022',(SELECT _year FROM variable)); --another example of using the variable
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS variable; --releasing the "variable" if needed to be released


After reading all the answers I prefer something like this:

select *
from table, (select 'name' as name) const
where table.name = const.name


Try using Binding Values. You cannot use variables as you do in T-SQL but you can use "parameters". I hope the following link is usefull.Binding Values


I found one solution for assign variables to COLUMN or TABLE:

conn = sqlite3.connect('database.db')
cursor=conn.cursor()
z="Cash_payers"   # bring results from Table 1 , Column: Customers and COLUMN 
# which are pays cash
sorgu_y= Customers #Column name
query1="SELECT  * FROM  Table_1 WHERE " +sorgu_y+ " LIKE ? "
print (query1)
query=(query1)
cursor.execute(query,(z,))

Don't forget input one space between the WHERE and double quotes and between the double quotes and LIKE

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