views:

35

answers:

1

I'm using sqlalchemy as my orm, and use declarative as Base.

Base = declarative_base()
class User(Base):
    __tablename__ = 'users'

    id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    name = Column(String)

My question is, how do I know a user has been modified, and how to get the original values without query database again?

user = Session.query(User).filter_by(id=user_id).first()
# some operations on user
....
# how do I know if the user.name has been changed or not?
...
# How do get the original name?

Thanks in advance!


UPDATE

I found a method get_history can get the history value of a field, but I'm not sure if it is the correct method for my purpose.

from sqlalchemy.orm.attributes import get_history
user = Session.query(User).first()
print user.name  # 'Jack'
print get_history(user, 'name') # ((),['Jack'],())

user.name = 'Mike'
print get_history(user, 'name') # (['Mike'], (),['Jack'])

So, we can check the value of get_history, but is it the best method?

+1  A: 

\To see if user has been modified you can check if user in session.dirty. If it is and you want to undo it, you can execute

session.rollback()

but be advised that this will rollback everything for the session to the last session.commit().

If you want to get the original values and memory serves me correctly, it's the second element of the tuple returned by the sqlalchemy.orm.attributes.get_history utility function. You would have to do

old_value = sqlalchemy.orm.attributes.get_history(user, 'attribute')[2]

for each attribute that you want.

aaronasterling
Thank you, do you know how to get the original value?
Freewind
@Freewind. Sorry I missed that in the answer when that was the point. updated.
aaronasterling
@aaronasterling, thank you again :) I think I can use it now. And, as I tried, we should get the third element if the attribute had been modified. Please edit your answer if I'm right(just to let others see the correct answer)
Freewind