1 from functools
import partial
3 from sqlalchemy
.ext
.associationproxy
import association_proxy
4 from sqlalchemy
.orm
import aliased
, compile_mappers
, mapper
, relationship
, synonym
5 from sqlalchemy
.orm
.collections
import attribute_mapped_collection
6 from sqlalchemy
.orm
.session
import Session
, object_session
7 from sqlalchemy
.schema
import Column
, ForeignKey
, Table
8 from sqlalchemy
.sql
.expression
import and_
, bindparam
, select
9 from sqlalchemy
.types
import Integer
11 def create_translation_table(_table_name
, foreign_class
, relation_name
,
12 language_class
, **kwargs
):
13 """Creates a table that represents some kind of data attached to the given
14 foreign class, but translated across several languages. Returns the new
15 table's mapped class. It won't be declarative, but it will have a
16 `__table__` attribute so you can retrieve the Table object.
18 `foreign_class` must have a `__singlename__`, currently only used to create
19 the name of the foreign key column.
20 TODO remove this requirement
22 Also supports the notion of a default language, which is attached to the
23 session. This is English by default, for historical and practical reasons.
25 Usage looks like this:
29 create_translation_table('foo_bars', Foo, 'bars',
33 # Now you can do the following:
38 foo.name_map['en'] = "new name"
39 del foo.name_map['en']
41 q.options(joinedload(Foo.bars_local))
42 q.options(joinedload(Foo.bars))
44 The following properties are added to the passed class:
46 - `(relation_name)`, a relation to the new table. It uses a dict-based
47 collection class, where the keys are language identifiers and the values
48 are rows in the created tables.
49 - `(relation_name)_local`, a relation to the row in the new table that
50 matches the current default language.
51 - `(relation_name)_class`, the class created by this function.
53 Note that these are distinct relations. Even though the former necessarily
54 includes the latter, SQLAlchemy doesn't treat them as linked; loading one
55 will not load the other. Modifying both within the same transaction has
58 For each column provided, the following additional attributes are added to
61 - `(column)_map`, an association proxy onto `foo_bars`.
62 - `(column)`, an association proxy onto `foo_bars_local`.
64 Pardon the naming disparity, but the grammar suffers otherwise.
66 Modifying these directly is not likely to be a good idea.
68 # n.b.: language_class only exists for the sake of tests, which sometimes
69 # want to create tables entirely separate from the pokedex metadata
71 foreign_key_name
= foreign_class
.__singlename__
+ '_id'
72 # A foreign key "language_id" will clash with the language_id we naturally
73 # put in every table. Rename it something else
74 if foreign_key_name
== 'language_id':
75 # TODO change language_id below instead and rename this
76 foreign_key_name
= 'lang_id'
78 Translations
= type(_table_name
, (object,), {
79 '_language_identifier': association_proxy('language', 'identifier'),
82 # Create the table object
83 table
= Table(_table_name
, foreign_class
.__table__
.metadata
,
84 Column(foreign_key_name
, Integer
, ForeignKey(foreign_class
.id),
85 primary_key
=True, nullable
=False),
86 Column('language_id', Integer
, ForeignKey(language_class
.id),
87 primary_key
=True, nullable
=False),
89 Translations
.__table__
= table
92 # Column objects have a _creation_order attribute in ascending order; use
93 # this to get the (unordered) kwargs sorted correctly
94 kwitems
= kwargs
.items()
95 kwitems
.sort(key
=lambda kv
: kv
[1]._creation_order
)
96 for name
, column
in kwitems
:
98 table
.append_column(column
)
100 # Construct ye mapper
101 mapper(Translations
, table
, properties
={
102 # TODO change to foreign_id
103 'object_id': synonym(foreign_key_name
),
104 # TODO change this as appropriate
105 'language': relationship(language_class
,
106 primaryjoin
=table
.c
.language_id
== language_class
.id,
109 # TODO does this need to join to the original table?
112 # Add full-table relations to the original class
114 setattr(foreign_class
, relation_name
+ '_table', Translations
)
116 setattr(foreign_class
, relation_name
, relationship(Translations
,
117 primaryjoin
=foreign_class
.id == Translations
.object_id
,
118 collection_class
=attribute_mapped_collection('language'),
123 # This is a bit clever; it uses bindparam() to make the join clause
124 # modifiable on the fly. db sessions know the current language identifier
125 # populates the bindparam. The manual alias and join are (a) to make the
126 # condition nice (sqla prefers an EXISTS) and to make the columns play nice
127 # when foreign_class == language_class.
128 local_relation_name
= relation_name
+ '_local'
129 language_class_a
= aliased(language_class
)
130 setattr(foreign_class
, local_relation_name
, relationship(Translations
,
132 foreign_class
.id == Translations
.object_id
,
133 Translations
.language_id
== select(
134 [language_class_a
.id],
135 language_class_a
.identifier
==
136 bindparam('_default_language', required
=True),
144 # Add per-column proxies to the original class
145 for name
, column
in kwitems
:
146 # Class.(column) -- accessor for the default language's value
147 setattr(foreign_class
, name
,
148 association_proxy(local_relation_name
, name
))
150 # Class.(column)_map -- accessor for the language dict
151 # Need a custom creator since Translations doesn't have an init, and
152 # these are passed as *args anyway
153 def creator(language
, value
):
155 row
.language
= language
156 setattr(row
, name
, value
)
158 setattr(foreign_class
, name
+ '_map',
159 association_proxy(relation_name
, name
, creator
=creator
))
164 class MultilangSession(Session
):
165 """A tiny Session subclass that adds support for a default language."""
166 default_language
= 'en'
168 def execute(self
, clause
, params
=None, *args
, **kwargs
):
171 params
.setdefault('_default_language', self
.default_language
)
172 return super(MultilangSession
, self
).execute(
173 clause
, params
, *args
, **kwargs
)