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ORM

V has a powerful, concise ORM baked in! Create tables, insert records, manage relationships, all regardless of the DB driver you decide to use.

Nullable

For a nullable column, use an option field. If the field is non-option, the column will be defined with NOT NULL at table creation.

struct Foo {
    notnull  string
    nullable ?string
}

Attributes

Structs

  • [table: 'name'] explicitly sets the name of the table for the struct

Fields

  • [primary] sets the field as the primary key

  • [unique] gives the field a UNIQUE constraint

  • [unique: 'foo'] adds the field to a UNIQUE group

  • [skip] or [sql: '-'] field will be skipped

  • [sql: type] where type is a V type such as int or f64

  • [serial] or [sql: serial] lets the DB backend choose a column type for an auto-increment field

  • [sql: 'name'] sets a custom column name for the field

  • [sql_type: 'SQL TYPE'] explicitly sets the type in SQL

  • [default: 'raw_sql'] inserts raw_sql verbatim in a "DEFAULT" clause when creating a new table, allowing for SQL functions like CURRENT_TIME. For raw strings, surround raw_sql with backticks (`).

  • [fkey: 'parent_id'] sets foreign key for an field which holds an array

Usage

Note

For using the Function Call API for orm, please check Function Call API.

Here are a couple example structs showing most of the features outlined above.

import time

@[table: 'foos']
struct Foo {
    id          int         @[primary; sql: serial]
    name        string
    created_at  time.Time   @[default: 'CURRENT_TIME']
    updated_at  ?string     @[sql_type: 'TIMESTAMP']
    deleted_at  ?time.Time
    children    []Child     @[fkey: 'parent_id']
}

struct Child {
    id        int    @[primary; sql: serial]
    parent_id int
    name      string
}

To use the ORM, there is a special interface that lets you use the structs and V itself in queries. This interface takes the database instance as an argument.

import db.sqlite

db := sqlite.connect(':memory:')!

sql db {
    // query; see below
}!

When you need to reference the table, simply pass the struct itself.

import models.Foo

struct Bar {
    id int @[primary; sql: serial]
}

sql db {
    create table models.Foo
    create table Bar
}!

Create & Drop Tables

You can create and drop tables by passing the struct to create table and drop table.

import models.Foo

struct Bar {
    id int @[primary; sql: serial]
}

sql db {
    create table models.Foo
    drop table Bar
}!

Insert Records

To insert a record, create a struct and pass the variable to the query. Again, reference the struct as the table.

foo := Foo{
    name:       'abc'
    created_at: time.now()
    // updated_at defaults to none
    // deleted_at defaults to none
    children: [
        Child{
            name: 'abc'
        },
        Child{
            name: 'def'
        },
    ]
}

foo_id := sql db {
    insert foo into Foo
}!

If the id field is marked as sql: serial and primary, the insert expression returns the database ID of the newly added object. Getting an ID of a newly added DB row is often useful.

When inserting, [sql: serial] fields, and fields with a [default: 'raw_sql'] attribute, are not sent to the database when the value being sent is the default for the V struct field (e.g., 0 int, or an empty string). This allows the database to insert default values for auto-increment fields and where you have specified a default.

Select

You can select rows from the database by passing the struct as the table, and use V syntax and functions for expressions. Selecting returns an array of the results.

result := sql db {
    select from Foo where id == 1
}!

foo := result.first()
result := sql db {
    select from Foo where id > 1 && name != 'lasanha' limit 5
}!
result := sql db {
    select from Foo where id > 1 order by id
}!

Update

You can update fields in a row using V syntax and functions. Again, pass the struct as the table.

sql db {
    update Foo set updated_at = time.now() where name == 'abc' && updated_at is none
}!

Note that is none and !is none can be used to select for NULL fields.

Delete

You can delete rows using V syntax and functions. Again, pass the struct as the table.

sql db {
    delete from Foo where id > 10
}!

time.Time Fields

It's definitely useful to cast a field as time.Time so you can use V's built-in time functions; however, this is handled a bit differently than expected in the ORM. time.Time fields are created as integer columns in the database. Because of this, the usual time functions (current_timestamp, NOW(), etc) in SQL do not work as defaults.

Example

import db.pg

struct Member {
	id         string @[default: 'gen_random_uuid()'; primary; sql_type: 'uuid']
	name       string
	created_at string @[default: 'CURRENT_TIMESTAMP'; sql_type: 'TIMESTAMP']
}

fn main() {
	db := pg.connect(pg.Config{
		host: 'localhost'
		port: 5432
		user: 'user'
		password: 'password'
		dbname: 'dbname'
	})!

	defer {
		db.close()
	}

	sql db {
		create table Member
	}!

	new_member := Member{
		name: 'John Doe'
	}

	sql db {
		insert new_member into Member
	}!

	selected_members := sql db {
		select from Member where name == 'John Doe' limit 1
	}!
	john_doe := selected_members.first()

	sql db {
		update Member set name = 'Hitalo' where id == john_doe.id
	}!
}

Function Call API

You can utilize the Function Call API to work with ORM. It provides the capability to dynamically construct SQL statements. The Function Call API supports common operations such as Create Table/Drop Table/Insert/Delete/Update/Select, and offers convenient yet powerful features for constructing WHERE clauses, SET clauses, SELECT clauses, and more.

A complete example is available here.

Below, we illustrate its usage through several examples.

1. Define your struct with the same method definitions as before:

@[table: 'sys_users']
struct User {
	id      int      @[primary;serial]
	name    string
	age     int
	role    string
	status  int
	salary  int
	title   string
	score   int
	created_at ?time.Time @[sql_type: 'TIMESTAMP']
}

2. Create a database connection:

    mut db := sqlite.connect(':memory:')!
    defer { db.close() or {} }
  1. Create a QueryBuilder (which also completes struct mapping):
	mut qb := orm.new_query[User](db)
  1. Create a database table:
	qb.create()!
  1. Insert multiple records into the table:
	qb.insert_many(users)!
  1. Delete records (note: delete() must follow where()):
	qb.where('name = ?','John')!.delete()!
  1. Query records (you can specify fields of interest via select):
// Returns []User with only 'name' populated; other fields are zero values.
	only_names := qb.select('name')!.query()!
  1. Update records (note: update() must be placed last):
	qb.set('age = ?, title = ?', 71, 'boss')!.where('name = ?','John')!.update()!
  1. Drop the table:
	qb.drop()!
  1. Chainable method calls: Most Function Call API support chainable calls, allowing easy method chaining:
	final_users :=
	qb
		.drop()!
		.create()!
		.insert_many(users)!
		.set('name = ?', 'haha')!.where('name = ?', 'Tom')!.update()!
		.where('age >= ?', 30)!.delete()!
		.query()!
  1. Writing complex nested WHERE clauses: The API includes a built-in parser to handle intricate WHERE clause conditions. For example:
	where('created_at IS NULL && ((salary > ? && age < ?) || (role LIKE ?))', 2000, 30, '%employee%')!

Note the use of placeholders ?. The conditional expressions support logical operators including AND, OR, ||, and &&.