Type annotation strings
About the String in List["Hero"]
¶
In the first Relationship attribute, we declare it with List["Hero"]
, putting the Hero
in quotes instead of just normally there:
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: int | None = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: list["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: int | None = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: int | None = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: int | None = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Team | None = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
# Code below omitted 👇
from typing import Optional
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: list["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Optional[Team] = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
# Code below omitted 👇
from typing import List, Optional
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: List["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Optional[Team] = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
# Code below omitted 👇
👀 Full file preview
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: int | None = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: list["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: int | None = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: int | None = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: int | None = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Team | None = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
sqlite_file_name = "database.db"
sqlite_url = f"sqlite:///{sqlite_file_name}"
engine = create_engine(sqlite_url, echo=True)
def create_db_and_tables():
SQLModel.metadata.create_all(engine)
def create_heroes():
with Session(engine) as session:
team_preventers = Team(name="Preventers", headquarters="Sharp Tower")
team_z_force = Team(name="Z-Force", headquarters="Sister Margaret's Bar")
hero_deadpond = Hero(
name="Deadpond", secret_name="Dive Wilson", team=team_z_force
)
hero_rusty_man = Hero(
name="Rusty-Man", secret_name="Tommy Sharp", age=48, team=team_preventers
)
hero_spider_boy = Hero(name="Spider-Boy", secret_name="Pedro Parqueador")
session.add(hero_deadpond)
session.add(hero_rusty_man)
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
session.refresh(hero_deadpond)
session.refresh(hero_rusty_man)
session.refresh(hero_spider_boy)
print("Created hero:", hero_deadpond)
print("Created hero:", hero_rusty_man)
print("Created hero:", hero_spider_boy)
hero_spider_boy.team = team_preventers
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
def main():
create_db_and_tables()
create_heroes()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
from typing import Optional
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: list["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Optional[Team] = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
sqlite_file_name = "database.db"
sqlite_url = f"sqlite:///{sqlite_file_name}"
engine = create_engine(sqlite_url, echo=True)
def create_db_and_tables():
SQLModel.metadata.create_all(engine)
def create_heroes():
with Session(engine) as session:
team_preventers = Team(name="Preventers", headquarters="Sharp Tower")
team_z_force = Team(name="Z-Force", headquarters="Sister Margaret's Bar")
hero_deadpond = Hero(
name="Deadpond", secret_name="Dive Wilson", team=team_z_force
)
hero_rusty_man = Hero(
name="Rusty-Man", secret_name="Tommy Sharp", age=48, team=team_preventers
)
hero_spider_boy = Hero(name="Spider-Boy", secret_name="Pedro Parqueador")
session.add(hero_deadpond)
session.add(hero_rusty_man)
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
session.refresh(hero_deadpond)
session.refresh(hero_rusty_man)
session.refresh(hero_spider_boy)
print("Created hero:", hero_deadpond)
print("Created hero:", hero_rusty_man)
print("Created hero:", hero_spider_boy)
hero_spider_boy.team = team_preventers
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
def main():
create_db_and_tables()
create_heroes()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
from typing import List, Optional
from sqlmodel import Field, Relationship, Session, SQLModel, create_engine
class Team(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
headquarters: str
heroes: List["Hero"] = Relationship(back_populates="team")
class Hero(SQLModel, table=True):
id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, primary_key=True)
name: str = Field(index=True)
secret_name: str
age: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, index=True)
team_id: Optional[int] = Field(default=None, foreign_key="team.id")
team: Optional[Team] = Relationship(back_populates="heroes")
sqlite_file_name = "database.db"
sqlite_url = f"sqlite:///{sqlite_file_name}"
engine = create_engine(sqlite_url, echo=True)
def create_db_and_tables():
SQLModel.metadata.create_all(engine)
def create_heroes():
with Session(engine) as session:
team_preventers = Team(name="Preventers", headquarters="Sharp Tower")
team_z_force = Team(name="Z-Force", headquarters="Sister Margaret's Bar")
hero_deadpond = Hero(
name="Deadpond", secret_name="Dive Wilson", team=team_z_force
)
hero_rusty_man = Hero(
name="Rusty-Man", secret_name="Tommy Sharp", age=48, team=team_preventers
)
hero_spider_boy = Hero(name="Spider-Boy", secret_name="Pedro Parqueador")
session.add(hero_deadpond)
session.add(hero_rusty_man)
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
session.refresh(hero_deadpond)
session.refresh(hero_rusty_man)
session.refresh(hero_spider_boy)
print("Created hero:", hero_deadpond)
print("Created hero:", hero_rusty_man)
print("Created hero:", hero_spider_boy)
hero_spider_boy.team = team_preventers
session.add(hero_spider_boy)
session.commit()
def main():
create_db_and_tables()
create_heroes()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
What's that about? Can't we just write it normally as List[Hero]
?
By that point, in that line in the code, the Python interpreter doesn't know of any class Hero
, and if we put it just there, it would try to find it unsuccessfully, and then fail. ðŸ˜
But by putting it in quotes, in a string, the interpreter sees it as just a string with the text "Hero"
inside.
But the editor and other tools can see that the string is actually a type annotation inside, and provide all the autocompletion, type checks, etc. 🎉
And of course, SQLModel can also understand it in the string correctly. ✨
That is actually part of Python, it's the current official solution to handle it.
Info
There's a lot of work going on in Python itself to make that simpler and more intuitive, and find ways to make it possible to not wrap the class in a string.