dlib/examples/sqlite_ex.cpp

138 lines
4.8 KiB
C++

// The contents of this file are in the public domain. See LICENSE_FOR_EXAMPLE_PROGRAMS.txt
/*
This example gives a quick overview of dlib's C++ API for the popular SQLite library.
*/
#include <iostream>
#include <dlib/sqlite.h>
#include <dlib/matrix.h>
using namespace dlib;
using namespace std;
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bool table_exists (
database& db,
const std::string& tablename
)
{
// Sometimes you want to just run a query that returns one thing. In this case, we
// want to see how many tables are in our database with the given tablename. The only
// possible outcomes are 1 or 0 and we can do this by looking in the special
// sqlite_master table that records such database metadata. For these kinds of "one
// result" queries we can use the query_int() method which executes a SQL statement
// against a database and returns the result as an int.
return query_int(db, "select count(*) from sqlite_master where name = '"+tablename+"'")==1;
}
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
int main() try
{
// Open the SQLite database in the stuff.db file (or create an empty database in
// stuff.db if it doesn't exist).
database db("stuff.db");
// Create a people table that records a person's name, age, and their "data".
if (!table_exists(db,"people"))
db.exec("create table people (name, age, data)");
// Now let's add some data to this table. We can do this by making a statement object
// as shown. Here we use the special ? character to indicate bindable arguments and
// below we will use st.bind() statements to populate those fields with values.
statement st(db, "insert into people VALUES(?,?,?)");
// The data for Davis
string name = "Davis";
int age = 32;
matrix<double> m = randm(3,3); // some random "data" for Davis
// You can bind any of the built in scalar types (e.g. int, float) or std::string and
// they will go into the table as the appropriate SQL types (e.g. INT, TEXT). If you
// try to bind any other object it will be saved as a binary blob if the type has an
// appropriate void serialize(const T&, std::ostream&) function defined for it. The
// matrix has such a serialize function (as do most dlib types) so the bind below saves
// the matrix as a binary blob.
st.bind(1, name);
st.bind(2, age);
st.bind(3, m);
st.exec(); // execute the SQL statement. This does the insert.
// We can reuse the statement to add more data to the database. In fact, if you have a
// bunch of statements to execute it is fastest if you reuse them in this manner.
name = "John";
age = 82;
m = randm(2,3);
st.bind(1, name);
st.bind(2, age);
st.bind(3, m);
st.exec();
// Now lets print out all the rows in the people table.
statement st2(db, "select * from people");
st2.exec();
// Loop over all the rows obtained by executing the statement with .exec().
while(st2.move_next())
{
string name;
int age;
matrix<double> m;
// Analogously to bind, we can grab the columns straight into C++ types. Here the
// matrix is automatically deserialized by calling its deserialize() routine.
st2.get_column(0, name);
st2.get_column(1, age);
st2.get_column(2, m);
cout << name << " " << age << "\n" << m << endl << endl;
}
// Finally, if you want to make a bunch of atomic changes to a database then you should
// do so inside a transaction. Here, either all the database modifications that occur
// between the creation of my_trans and the invocation of my_trans.commit() will appear
// in the database or none of them will. This way, if an exception or other error
// happens halfway though your transaction you won't be left with your database in an
// inconsistent state.
//
// Additionally, if you are going to do a large amount of inserts or updates then it is
// much faster to group them into a transaction.
transaction my_trans(db);
name = "Dude";
age = 49;
m = randm(4,2);
st.bind(1, name);
st.bind(2, age);
st.bind(3, m);
st.exec();
name = "Bob";
age = 29;
m = randm(2,2);
st.bind(1, name);
st.bind(2, age);
st.bind(3, m);
st.exec();
// If you comment out this line then you will see that these inserts do not take place.
// Specifically, what happens is that when my_trans is destructed it rolls back the
// entire transaction unless commit() has been called.
my_trans.commit();
}
catch (std::exception& e)
{
cout << e.what() << endl;
}
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------