I think its a neat idea.  its like youre turning ORM into a row data gateway.  is there another PyWebOff going on ?

On Mar 9, 2006, at 2:41 PM, Jonathan Ellis wrote:

Ah!  Thanks, that would have taken me forever to notice.

I finished my pyweboff demo with it.  I like how it flows.  What do you think of the idea?

On 3/8/06, Michael Bayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
call commit() on objectstore, or the session itself, i.e.

objectstore.get_session().commit()

the ORM-level commit is completely different from the engine-level commit() :) .



On Mar 9, 2006, at 12:33 AM, Jonathan Ellis wrote:

I'm trying to create an api (sqlalchemy.simple?) that allows unsophisticated db manipulation without explicit table classes.  (Code attached.)  Seems to work fine except I can't get inserts to work.  My objects go into the UnitOfWork but they still do not get committed.  I suspect it's something simple to get them marked "dirty" for commit, but my code diving patience for the evening is exhausted.  Help? :)

Demo of the problem:

CREATE TABLE books (
    id                serial PRIMARY KEY,
    title            text NOT NULL,
    published_year    char(4) NOT NULL,
    authors            text NOT NULL
);

from sqlalchemy import create_engine
engine = create_engine('postgres', {'database': 'pyweboff', 'user': 'spyce', 'password': 'spyce'})
db = DbSoup(engine)
db.books(title='foo', published_year='1111', authors='asdf')
from sqlalchemy import objectstore
print objectstore.get_session().uow.new # there it is!
db.commit()
# but no new rows in books!

--
Jonathan Ellis
http://spyced.blogspot.com
<soup.py>




--
Jonathan Ellis
http://spyced.blogspot.com

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