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Better ways to print out column names when using cx_Oracle

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-02 18:23 出处:网络
Found an example using cx_Oracle, this example shows all the information of Cursor.description. import cx_Oracle

Found an example using cx_Oracle, this example shows all the information of Cursor.description.

import cx_Oracle
from pprint import pprint

connection = cx_Oracle.Connection("%s/%s@%s" % (dbuser, dbpasswd, oracle_sid))
cursor = cx_Oracle.Cursor(connection)
sql = "SELECT * FROM your_table"
cursor.execute(sql)
data = cursor.fetchall()
print "(name, type_code, display_size, internal_size, precision, scale, null_ok)"
pprint(cursor.description)
pprint(data)
cursor.close()
connection.close(开发者_运维知识库)

What I wanted to see was the list of Cursor.description[0](name), so I changed the code:

import cx_Oracle
import pprint

connection = cx_Oracle.Connection("%s/%s@%s" % (dbuser, dbpasswd, oracle_sid))
cursor = cx_Oracle.Cursor(connection)
sql = "SELECT * FROM your_table"
cursor.execute(sql)
data = cursor.fetchall()
col_names = []
for i in range(0, len(cursor.description)):
    col_names.append(cursor.description[i][0])
pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(width=1024)
pp.pprint(col_names)
pp.pprint(data)
cursor.close()
connection.close()

I think there will be better ways to print out the names of columns. Please get me alternatives to the Python beginner. :-)


You can use list comprehension as an alternative to get the column names:

col_names = [row[0] for row in cursor.description]

Since cursor.description returns a list of 7-element tuples you can get the 0th element which is a column name.


Here the code.

import csv
import sys
import cx_Oracle

db = cx_Oracle.connect('user/pass@host:1521/service_name')
SQL = "select * from dual"
print(SQL)
cursor = db.cursor()
f = open("C:\dual.csv", "w")
writer = csv.writer(f, lineterminator="\n", quoting=csv.QUOTE_NONNUMERIC)
r = cursor.execute(SQL)

#this takes the column names
col_names = [row[0] for row in cursor.description]
writer.writerow(col_names)

for row in cursor:
   writer.writerow(row)
f.close()


The SQLAlchemy source code is a good starting point for robust methods of database introspection. Here is how SQLAlchemy reflects table names from Oracle:

SELECT table_name FROM all_tables
WHERE nvl(tablespace_name, 'no tablespace') NOT IN ('SYSTEM', 'SYSAUX')
AND OWNER = :owner
AND IOT_NAME IS NULL
0

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