Book Image

MySQL for Python

By : Albert Lukaszewski
Book Image

MySQL for Python

By: Albert Lukaszewski

Overview of this book

Python is a dynamic programming language, which is completely enterprise ready, owing largely to the variety of support modules that are available to extend its capabilities. In order to build productive and feature-rich Python applications, we need to use MySQL for Python, a module that provides database support to our applications. Although you might be familiar with accessing data in MySQL, here you will learn how to access data through MySQL for Python efficiently and effectively.This book demonstrates how to boost the productivity of your Python applications by integrating them with the MySQL database server, the world's most powerful open source database. It will teach you to access the data on your MySQL database server easily with Python's library for MySQL using a practical, hands-on approach. Leaving theory to the classroom, this book uses real-world code to solve real-world problems with real-world solutions.The book starts by exploring the various means of installing MySQL for Python on different platforms and how to use simple database querying techniques to improve your programs. It then takes you through data insertion, data retrieval, and error-handling techniques to create robust programs. The book also covers automation of both database and user creation, and administration of access controls. As the book progresses, you will learn to use many more advanced features of Python for MySQL that facilitate effective administration of your database through Python. Every chapter is illustrated with a project that you can deploy in your own situation.By the end of this book, you will know several techniques for interfacing your Python applications with MySQL effectively so that powerful database management through Python becomes easy to achieve and easy to maintain.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
MySQL for Python
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Chapter 11. SELECT Alternatives

We have already seen how to restrict the data that MySQL returns by using a WHERE clause. Rather than retrieve the entire table and sort through it in Python, we passed the burden onto the server. Using WHERE restricted the number of rows that match. This is just like when we specify columns instead of using an asterisk after SELECT—it saves us from receiving the entire record for every match.

WHERE causes MySQL to ignore any row that does not match our selection. Specifying the columns then indicates to MySQL, which parts of the affected rows to return. In addition to WHERE, MySQL supports other ways of narrowing one's returns. It also allows us to match and complement the data using other tables, including combining tables or results from different queries.

In this chapter, we will see:

  • How we can restrict results using WHERE and HAVING, and what the differences are between them

  • When it is best to use WHERE and when one might use HAVING

  • How to create temporary...