QSqlDatabase#
The QSqlDatabase
class handles a connection to a database. More…
Synopsis#
Functions#
def
close
()def
commit
()def
connectOptions
()def
connectionName
()def
databaseName
()def
driver
()def
driverName
()def
exec
([query=””])def
exec_
([query=””])def
hostName
()def
isOpen
()def
isOpenError
()def
isValid
()def
lastError
()def
numericalPrecisionPolicy
()def
open
()def
open
(user, password)def
password
()def
port
()def
primaryIndex
(tablename)def
record
(tablename)def
rollback
()def
setConnectOptions
([options=””])def
setDatabaseName
(name)def
setHostName
(host)def
setNumericalPrecisionPolicy
(precisionPolicy)def
setPassword
(password)def
setPort
(p)def
setUserName
(name)def
tables
([type=QSql.Tables])def
transaction
()def
userName
()
Static functions#
def
addDatabase
(type[, connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])def
addDatabase
(driver[, connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])def
cloneDatabase
(other, connectionName)def
cloneDatabase
(other, connectionName)def
connectionNames
()def
contains
([connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])def
database
([connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)[, open=true]])def
drivers
()def
isDriverAvailable
(name)def
registerSqlDriver
(name, creator)def
removeDatabase
(connectionName)
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
The QSqlDatabase
class provides an interface for accessing a database through a connection. An instance of QSqlDatabase
represents the connection. The connection provides access to the database via one of the supported database drivers , which are derived from QSqlDriver
. Alternatively, you can subclass your own database driver from QSqlDriver
. See How to Write Your Own Database Driver for more information.
Create a connection (i.e., an instance of QSqlDatabase
) by calling one of the static addDatabase()
functions, where you specify the driver or type of driver to use (depending on the type of database) and a connection name. A connection is known by its own name, not by the name of the database it connects to. You can have multiple connections to one database. QSqlDatabase
also supports the concept of a default connection, which is the unnamed connection. To create the default connection, don’t pass the connection name argument when you call addDatabase()
. Subsequently, the default connection will be assumed if you call any static member function without specifying the connection name. The following snippet shows how to create and open a default connection to a PostgreSQL database:
db = QSqlDatabase.addDatabase("QPSQL") db.setHostName("acidalia") db.setDatabaseName("customdb") db.setUserName("mojito") db.setPassword("J0a1m8") ok = db.open()
Once the QSqlDatabase
object has been created, set the connection parameters with setDatabaseName()
, setUserName()
, setPassword()
, setHostName()
, setPort()
, and setConnectOptions()
. Then call open()
to activate the physical connection to the database. The connection is not usable until you open it.
The connection defined above will be the default connection, because we didn’t give a connection name to addDatabase()
. Subsequently, you can get the default connection by calling database()
without the connection name argument:
db = QSqlDatabase.database()
QSqlDatabase
is a value class. Changes made to a database connection via one instance of QSqlDatabase
will affect other instances of QSqlDatabase
that represent the same connection. Use cloneDatabase()
to create an independent database connection based on an existing one.
Warning
It is highly recommended that you do not keep a copy of the QSqlDatabase
around as a member of a class, as this will prevent the instance from being correctly cleaned up on shutdown. If you need to access an existing QSqlDatabase
, it should be accessed with database()
. If you chose to have a QSqlDatabase
member variable, this needs to be deleted before the QCoreApplication
instance is deleted, otherwise it may lead to undefined behavior.
If you create multiple database connections, specify a unique connection name for each one, when you call addDatabase()
. Use database()
with a connection name to get that connection. Use removeDatabase()
with a connection name to remove a connection. QSqlDatabase
outputs a warning if you try to remove a connection referenced by other QSqlDatabase
objects. Use contains()
to see if a given connection name is in the list of connections.
Some utility methods:
returns the list of tables
returns a table’s primary index
returns meta-information about a table’s fields
starts a transaction
saves and completes a transaction
cancels a transaction
hasFeature()
checks if a driver supports transactions
returns information about the last error
returns the names of the available SQL drivers
checks if a particular driver is available
registers a custom-made driver
Note
When using transactions, you must start the transaction before you create your query.
See also
QSqlDriver
QSqlQuery
Qt SQL Threads and the SQL Module
- class PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase#
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase(driver)
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase(other)
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase(type)
- Parameters:
other –
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase
type – str
driver –
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDriver
Creates an empty, invalid QSqlDatabase
object. Use addDatabase()
, removeDatabase()
, and database()
to get valid QSqlDatabase
objects.
This is an overloaded function.
Creates a database connection using the given driver
.
Creates a copy of other
.
This is an overloaded function.
Creates a QSqlDatabase
connection that uses the driver referred to by type
. If the type
is not recognized, the database connection will have no functionality.
The currently available driver types are:
Driver Type
Description
QDB2
IBM DB2
QIBASE
Borland InterBase Driver
QMYSQL
MySQL Driver
QOCI
Oracle Call Interface Driver
QODBC
ODBC Driver (includes Microsoft SQL Server)
QPSQL
PostgreSQL Driver
QSQLITE
SQLite version 3 or above
Additional third party drivers, including your own custom drivers, can be loaded dynamically.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection#
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.addDatabase(type[, connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])#
- Parameters:
type – str
connectionName – str
- Return type:
Adds a database to the list of database connections using the driver type
and the connection name connectionName
. If there already exists a database connection called connectionName
, that connection is removed.
The database connection is referred to by connectionName
. The newly added database connection is returned.
If type
is not available or could not be loaded, isValid()
returns false
.
If connectionName
is not specified, the new connection becomes the default connection for the application, and subsequent calls to database()
without the connection name argument will return the default connection. If a connectionName
is provided here, use database(connectionName
) to retrieve the connection.
Warning
If you add a connection with the same name as an existing connection, the new connection replaces the old one. If you call this function more than once without specifying connectionName
, the default connection will be the one replaced.
Before using the connection, it must be initialized. e.g., call some or all of setDatabaseName()
, setUserName()
, setPassword()
, setHostName()
, setPort()
, and setConnectOptions()
, and, finally, open()
.
See also
database()
removeDatabase()
Threads and the SQL Module
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.addDatabase(driver[, connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])
- Parameters:
driver –
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDriver
connectionName – str
- Return type:
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
This overload is useful when you want to create a database connection with a driver
you instantiated yourself. It might be your own database driver, or you might just need to instantiate one of the Qt drivers yourself. If you do this, it is recommended that you include the driver code in your application. For example, you can create a PostgreSQL connection with your own QPSQL driver like this:
con = PQconnectdb("host=server user=bart password=simpson dbname=springfield") drv = QPSQLDriver(con) db = QSqlDatabase.addDatabase(drv) # becomes the default() connection() query = QSqlQuery() query.exec("SELECT NAME, ID FROM STAFF")
The above code sets up a PostgreSQL connection and instantiates a QPSQLDriver object. Next, addDatabase()
is called to add the connection to the known connections so that it can be used by the Qt SQL classes. When a driver is instantiated with a connection handle (or set of handles), Qt assumes that you have already opened the database connection.
Note
We assume that qtdir
is the directory where Qt is installed. This will pull in the code that is needed to use the PostgreSQL client library and to instantiate a QPSQLDriver object, assuming that you have the PostgreSQL headers somewhere in your include search path.
Remember that you must link your application against the database client library. Make sure the client library is in your linker’s search path, and add lines like these to your .pro
file:
unix:LIBS += -lpq win32:LIBS += libpqdll.lib
The method described works for all the supplied drivers. The only difference will be in the driver constructor arguments. Here is a table of the drivers included with Qt, their source code files, and their constructor arguments:
Driver
Class name
Constructor arguments
File to include
QPSQL
QPSQLDriver
PGconn *connection
qsql_psql.cpp
QMYSQL
QMYSQLDriver
MYSQL *connection
qsql_mysql.cpp
QOCI
QOCIDriver
OCIEnv *environment, OCISvcCtx *serviceContext
qsql_oci.cpp
QODBC
QODBCDriver
SQLHANDLE environment, SQLHANDLE connection
qsql_odbc.cpp
QDB2
QDB2
SQLHANDLE environment, SQLHANDLE connection
qsql_db2.cpp
QSQLITE
QSQLiteDriver
sqlite *connection
qsql_sqlite.cpp
QIBASE
QIBaseDriver
isc_db_handle connection
qsql_ibase.cpp
Warning
Adding a database connection with the same connection name as an existing connection, causes the existing connection to be replaced by the new one.
Warning
The SQL framework takes ownership of the driver
. It must not be deleted. To remove the connection, use removeDatabase()
.
See also
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.cloneDatabase(other, connectionName)#
- Parameters:
other – str
connectionName – str
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Clones the database connection other
and stores it as connectionName
. All the settings from the original database, e.g. databaseName()
, hostName()
, etc., are copied across. Does nothing if other
is an invalid database. Returns the newly created database connection.
Note
The new connection has not been opened. Before using the new connection, you must call open()
.
This overload is useful when cloning the database in another thread to the one that is used by the database represented by other
.
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.cloneDatabase(other, connectionName)
- Parameters:
other –
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase
connectionName – str
- Return type:
Clones the database connection other
and stores it as connectionName
. All the settings from the original database, e.g. databaseName()
, hostName()
, etc., are copied across. Does nothing if other
is an invalid database. Returns the newly created database connection.
Note
The new connection has not been opened. Before using the new connection, you must call open()
.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.close()#
Closes the database connection, freeing any resources acquired, and invalidating any existing QSqlQuery
objects that are used with the database.
This will also affect copies of this QSqlDatabase
object.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.commit()#
- Return type:
bool
Commits a transaction to the database if the driver supports transactions and a transaction()
has been started. Returns true
if the operation succeeded. Otherwise it returns false
.
Note
For some databases, the commit will fail and return false
if there is an active query
using the database for a SELECT
. Make the query inactive
before doing the commit.
Call lastError()
to get information about errors.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.connectOptions()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection options string used for this connection. The string may be empty.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.connectionName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection name, which may be empty.
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.connectionNames()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list containing the names of all connections.
See also
contains()
database()
Threads and the SQL Module
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.contains([connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)])#
- Parameters:
connectionName – str
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if the list of database connections contains connectionName
; otherwise returns false
.
See also
connectionNames()
database()
Threads and the SQL Module
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.database([connectionName=QLatin1StringView(QSqlDatabase.defaultConnection)[, open=true]])#
- Parameters:
connectionName – str
open – bool
- Return type:
Returns the database connection called connectionName
. The database connection must have been previously added with addDatabase()
. If open
is true (the default) and the database connection is not already open it is opened now. If no connectionName
is specified the default connection is used. If connectionName
does not exist in the list of databases, an invalid connection is returned.
See also
isOpen()
Threads and the SQL Module
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.databaseName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection’s database name, which may be empty.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.driver()#
- Return type:
Returns the database driver used to access the database connection.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.driverName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection’s driver name.
See also
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.drivers()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of all the available database drivers.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.exec([query=""])#
- Parameters:
query – str
- Return type:
Executes a SQL statement on the database and returns a QSqlQuery
object. Use lastError()
to retrieve error information. If query
is empty, an empty, invalid query is returned and lastError()
is not affected.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.exec_([query=""])#
- Parameters:
query – str
- Return type:
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.hostName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection’s host name; it may be empty.
See also
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.isDriverAvailable(name)#
- Parameters:
name – str
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if a driver called name
is available; otherwise returns false
.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.isOpen()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if the database connection is currently open; otherwise returns false
.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.isOpenError()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if there was an error opening the database connection; otherwise returns false
. Error information can be retrieved using the lastError()
function.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.isValid()#
- Return type:
bool
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Returns true
if the QSqlDatabase
has a valid driver.
Example:
db = QSqlDatabase() print(db.isValid() ) # Returns false db = QSqlDatabase.database("sales") print(db.isValid() # Returns \c true if "sales" connection exists) QSqlDatabase.removeDatabase("sales") print(db.isValid() ) # Returns false
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.lastError()#
- Return type:
Returns information about the last error that occurred on the database.
Failures that occur in conjunction with an individual query are reported by lastError()
.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.numericalPrecisionPolicy()#
- Return type:
Returns the current default precision policy for the database connection.
See also
NumericalPrecisionPolicy
setNumericalPrecisionPolicy()
numericalPrecisionPolicy()
setNumericalPrecisionPolicy()
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.open()#
- Return type:
bool
Opens the database connection using the current connection values. Returns true
on success; otherwise returns false
. Error information can be retrieved using lastError()
.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.open(user, password)
- Parameters:
user – str
password – str
- Return type:
bool
This is an overloaded function.
Opens the database connection using the given user
name and password
. Returns true
on success; otherwise returns false
. Error information can be retrieved using the lastError()
function.
This function does not store the password it is given. Instead, the password is passed directly to the driver for opening the connection and it is then discarded.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.password()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection’s password. An empty string will be returned if the password was not set with setPassword()
, and if the password was given in the open()
call, or if no password was used.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.port()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the connection’s port number. The value is undefined if the port number has not been set.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.primaryIndex(tablename)#
- Parameters:
tablename – str
- Return type:
Returns the primary index for table tablename
. If no primary index exists, an empty QSqlIndex
is returned.
Note
Some drivers, such as the QPSQL driver, may may require you to pass tablename
in lower case if the table was not quoted when created. See the Qt SQL driver documentation for more information.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.record(tablename)#
- Parameters:
tablename – str
- Return type:
Returns a QSqlRecord
populated with the names of all the fields in the table (or view) called tablename
. The order in which the fields appear in the record is undefined. If no such table (or view) exists, an empty record is returned.
Note
Some drivers, such as the QPSQL driver, may may require you to pass tablename
in lower case if the table was not quoted when created. See the Qt SQL driver documentation for more information.
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.registerSqlDriver(name, creator)#
- Parameters:
name – str
creator –
PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDriverCreatorBase
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
This function registers a new SQL driver called name
, within the SQL framework. This is useful if you have a custom SQL driver and don’t want to compile it as a plugin.
Example:
QSqlDatabase.registerSqlDriver("MYDRIVER", QSqlDriverCreator()<QSqlDriver>) QVERIFY(QSqlDatabase.drivers().contains("MYDRIVER")) db = QSqlDatabase.addDatabase("MYDRIVER") QVERIFY(db.isValid())
QSqlDatabase
takes ownership of the creator
pointer, so you mustn’t delete it yourself.
See also
- static PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.removeDatabase(connectionName)#
- Parameters:
connectionName – str
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Removes the database connection connectionName
from the list of database connections.
Warning
There should be no open queries on the database connection when this function is called, otherwise a resource leak will occur.
Example:
# WRONG db = QSqlDatabase.database("sales") query = QSqlQuery("SELECT NAME, DOB FROM EMPLOYEES", db) QSqlDatabase.removeDatabase("sales") # will output a warning # "db" is now a dangling invalid database connection, # "query" contains an invalid result set
The correct way to do it:
db = QSqlDatabase.database("sales") query = QSqlQuery("SELECT NAME, DOB FROM EMPLOYEES", db) # Both "db" and "query" are destroyed because they are out of scope QSqlDatabase.removeDatabase("sales") # correct
To remove the default connection, which may have been created with a call to addDatabase()
not specifying a connection name, you can retrieve the default connection name by calling connectionName()
on the database returned by database()
. Note that if a default database hasn’t been created an invalid database will be returned.
See also
database()
connectionName()
Threads and the SQL Module
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.rollback()#
- Return type:
bool
Rolls back a transaction on the database, if the driver supports transactions and a transaction()
has been started. Returns true
if the operation succeeded. Otherwise it returns false
.
Note
For some databases, the rollback will fail and return false
if there is an active query
using the database for a SELECT
. Make the query inactive
before doing the rollback.
Call lastError()
to get information about errors.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setConnectOptions([options=""])#
- Parameters:
options – str
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Sets database-specific options
. This must be done before the connection is opened, otherwise it has no effect. Another possibility is to close the connection, call QSqlDatabase::setConnectOptions(), and open()
the connection again.
The format of the options
string is a semicolon separated list of option names or option=value pairs. The options depend on the database client used:
ODBC
MySQL
PostgreSQL
SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE
SQL_ATTR_LOGIN_TIMEOUT
SQL_ATTR_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT
SQL_ATTR_CURRENT_CATALOG
SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID
SQL_ATTR_PACKET_SIZE
SQL_ATTR_TRACEFILE
SQL_ATTR_TRACE
SQL_ATTR_CONNECTION_POOLING
SQL_ATTR_ODBC_VERSION
CLIENT_COMPRESS
CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS
CLIENT_IGNORE_SPACE
CLIENT_ODBC
CLIENT_NO_SCHEMA
CLIENT_INTERACTIVE
UNIX_SOCKET
MYSQL_OPT_RECONNECT
MYSQL_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT
MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT
MYSQL_OPT_WRITE_TIMEOUT
MYSQL_OPT_LOCAL_INFILE
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_KEY
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CERT
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CA
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CAPATH
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CIPHER
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CRL
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CRLPATH
SSL_KEY (deprecated, use MYSQL_OPT_SSL_KEY)
SSL_CERT (deprecated, use MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CERT)
SSL_CA (deprecated, use MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CA)
SSL_CAPATH (deprecated, use MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CAPATH)
SSL_CIPHER (deprecated, use MYSQL_OPT_SSL_CIPHER)
connect_timeout
options
tty
requiressl
service
DB2
OCI
SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE
SQL_ATTR_LOGIN_TIMEOUT
OCI_ATTR_PREFETCH_ROWS
OCI_ATTR_PREFETCH_MEMORY
SQLite
Interbase
QSQLITE_BUSY_TIMEOUT
QSQLITE_OPEN_READONLY
QSQLITE_OPEN_URI
QSQLITE_ENABLE_SHARED_CACHE
QSQLITE_ENABLE_REGEXP
QSQLITE_NO_USE_EXTENDED_RESULT_CODES
ISC_DPB_LC_CTYPE
ISC_DPB_SQL_ROLE_NAME
Examples:
db.setConnectOptions("SSL_KEY=client-key.pemSSL_CERT=client-cert.pem;SSL_CA=ca-cert.pem;CLIENT_IGNORE_SPACE=1"); # use an SSL connection to the server if not db.open(): db.setConnectOptions() # clears the connect option string # ... # ... # PostgreSQL connection db.setConnectOptions("requiressl=1") # enable PostgreSQL SSL connections if not db.open(): db.setConnectOptions() # clear options # ... # ... # ODBC connection db.setConnectOptions("SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE=SQL_MODE_READ_ONLYSQL_ATTR_TRACE=SQL_OPT_TRACE_ON"); # set ODBC options if not db.open(): db.setConnectOptions() # don't try to set this option # ...
Refer to the client library documentation for more information about the different options.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setDatabaseName(name)#
- Parameters:
name – str
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Sets the connection’s database name to name
. To have effect, the database name must be set before the connection is opened
. Alternatively, you can close()
the connection, set the database name, and call open()
again.
Note
The database name is not the connection name. The connection name must be passed to addDatabase()
at connection object create time.
For the QSQLITE driver, if the database name specified does not exist, then it will create the file for you unless the QSQLITE_OPEN_READONLY option is set.
Additionally, name
can be set to ":memory:"
which will create a temporary database which is only available for the lifetime of the application.
For the QOCI (Oracle) driver, the database name is the TNS Service Name.
For the QODBC driver, the name
can either be a DSN, a DSN filename (in which case the file must have a .dsn
extension), or a connection string.
For example, Microsoft Access users can use the following connection string to open an .mdb
file directly, instead of having to create a DSN entry in the ODBC manager:
# ... db = QSqlDatabase.addDatabase("QODBC") db.setDatabaseName("DRIVER={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb, *.accdb)};FIL={MS Access};DBQ=myaccessfile.mdb") if db.open(): # success! # ...
There is no default value.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setHostName(host)#
- Parameters:
host – str
Sets the connection’s host name to host
. To have effect, the host name must be set before the connection is opened
. Alternatively, you can close()
the connection, set the host name, and call open()
again.
There is no default value.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(precisionPolicy)#
- Parameters:
precisionPolicy –
NumericalPrecisionPolicy
Sets the default numerical precision policy used by queries created on this database connection to precisionPolicy
.
Note: Drivers that don’t support fetching numerical values with low precision will ignore the precision policy. You can use hasFeature()
to find out whether a driver supports this feature.
Note: Setting the default precision policy to precisionPolicy
doesn’t affect any currently active queries.
See also
NumericalPrecisionPolicy
numericalPrecisionPolicy()
setNumericalPrecisionPolicy()
numericalPrecisionPolicy()
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setPassword(password)#
- Parameters:
password – str
Sets the connection’s password to password
. To have effect, the password must be set before the connection is opened
. Alternatively, you can close()
the connection, set the password, and call open()
again.
There is no default value.
Warning
This function stores the password in plain text within Qt. Use the open()
call that takes a password as parameter to avoid this behavior.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setPort(p)#
- Parameters:
p – int
Sets the connection’s port number to port
. To have effect, the port number must be set before the connection is opened
. Alternatively, you can close()
the connection, set the port number, and call open()
again..
There is no default value.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.setUserName(name)#
- Parameters:
name – str
Sets the connection’s user name to name
. To have effect, the user name must be set before the connection is opened
. Alternatively, you can close()
the connection, set the user name, and call open()
again.
There is no default value.
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.tables([type=QSql.Tables])#
- Parameters:
type –
TableType
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of the database’s tables, system tables and views, as specified by the parameter type
.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.transaction()#
- Return type:
bool
Begins a transaction on the database if the driver supports transactions. Returns true
if the operation succeeded. Otherwise it returns false
.
See also
- PySide6.QtSql.QSqlDatabase.userName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the connection’s user name; it may be empty.
See also