That sounds even nicer, and since I'm just starting out with no legacy
code I've been meaning to try dropping 0.8 in even before it is final. It
sounds like I could just do something like
event.listen(MyDeclarativeSubclass, load, myStamperFunc).
I popped in 0.8b2 and tried something
On Jan 11, 2013, at 10:19 AM, YKdvd wrote:
That sounds even nicer, and since I'm just starting out with no legacy code
I've been meaning to try dropping 0.8 in even before it is final. It sounds
like I could just do something like event.listen(MyDeclarativeSubclass,
load, myStamperFunc).
On Jan 11, 2013, at 2:26 AM, YKdvd wrote:
On Friday, January 11, 2013 2:34:09 AM UTC-4, Michael Bayer wrote:
you can associate the instance event with the mapper() callable or Mapper
class, and it will take effect for all mapped classes.
I think that would work for my case, although
On Friday, January 11, 2013 11:25:06 AM UTC-4, Michael Bayer wrote:
in theory. It's new stuff and was very tricky to get it to work, so feel
free to send a brief test along.
Here's a minimal example I quickly put together - it retrieves from the
database, but the handler doesn't seem to
On Jan 11, 2013, at 11:35 AM, YKdvd wrote:
On Friday, January 11, 2013 11:25:06 AM UTC-4, Michael Bayer wrote:
in theory. It's new stuff and was very tricky to get it to work, so feel
free to send a brief test along.
Here's a minimal example I quickly put together - it retrieves from
In the MySQL system I'm redoing with SQLAlchemy, there is effectively a
master' schema that exists once top-level stuff (including a table
describing projects) , and project schemas (one identical set of tables
per project), which have project-level stuff. When an object is retrieved
from a
On Jan 11, 2013, at 1:22 AM, YKdvd wrote:
SQLA's event system has the after_attach session event. Hooking into this
works for new instances I attach to a session with add(), but does't fire
when items are loaded from a query - presumably attached means direct
userland attachment only,
On Friday, January 11, 2013 2:34:09 AM UTC-4, Michael Bayer wrote:
you can associate the instance event with the mapper() callable or
Mapper class, and it will take effect for all mapped classes.
I think that would work for my case, although I'm a little fuzzy as to the
exact syntax to