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sqlite modern cpp wrapper

This library is a lightweight modern wrapper around sqlite C api .

#include<iostream>
#include <sqlite_modern_cpp.h>
using namespace  sqlite;
using namespace std;

int main() {

	try {
		// creates a database file 'dbfile.db' if it does not exists.
		database db("dbfile.db");

		// executes the query and creates a 'user' table
		db <<
			"create table if not exists user ("
			"   _id integer primary key autoincrement not null,"
			"   age int,"
			"   name text,"
			"   weight real"
			");";

		// inserts a new user record.
		// binds the fields to '?' .
		// note that only types allowed for bindings are :
		//      int ,long, long long, float, double
		//      string , u16string
		// sqlite3 only supports utf8 and utf16 strings, you should use std::string for utf8 and std::u16string for utf16.
		// note that u"my text" is a utf16 string literal of type char16_t * .
		db << "insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);"
			<< 20
			<< u"bob"
			<< 83.25;

		int age = 21;
		float weight = 68.5;
		string name = "jack";
		db << u"insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);" // utf16 query string
			<< age
			<< name
			<< weight;

		cout << "The new record got assigned id " << db.last_insert_rowid() << endl;

		// slects from user table on a condition ( age > 18 ) and executes
		// the lambda for each row returned .
		db << "select age,name,weight from user where age > ? ;"
			<< 18
			>> [&](int age, string name, double weight) {
			cout << age << ' ' << name << ' ' << weight << endl;
		};

		// selects the count(*) from user table
		// note that you can extract a single culumn single row result only to : int,long,long,float,double,string,u16string
		int count = 0;
		db << "select count(*) from user" >> count;
		cout << "cout : " << count << endl;

		// you can also extract multiple column rows
		db << "select age, name from user where _id=1;" >> tie(age, name);
		cout << "Age = " << age << ", name = " << name << endl;

		// this also works and the returned value will be automatically converted to string
		string str_count;
		db << "select count(*) from user" >> str_count;
		cout << "scount : " << str_count << endl;
	}
	catch (exception& e) {
		cout << e.what() << endl;
	}
}

Prepared Statements

It is possible to retain and reuse statments this will keep the query plan and in case of an complex query or many uses might increase the performance significantly.

		database db(":memory:");

		// if you use << on a sqlite::database you get a prepared statment back
		// this will not be executed till it gets destroyed or you execute it explicitly
		auto ps = db << "select a,b from table where something = ? and anotherthing = ?"; // get a prepared parsed and ready statment

		// first if needed bind values to it
		ps << 5;
		int tmp = 8;
		ps << tmp;

		// now you can execute it with `operator>>` or `execute()`. 
		// If the statment was executed once it will not be executed again when it goes out of scope.
		// But beware that it will execute on destruction if it wasn't executed!
		ps >> [&](int a,int b){ ... };

		// after a successfull execution the statment needs to be reset to be execute again. This will reset the bound values too!
		ps.reset();
		
		// If you dont need the returned values you can execute it like this
		ps.execute(); // the statment will not be reset!

		// there is a convinience operator to execute and reset in one go
		ps++;

		// To disable the execution of a statment when it goes out of scope and wasn't used
		ps.used(true); // or false if you want it to execute even if it was used 

		// Usage Example:

		auto ps = db << "insert into complex_table_with_lots_of_indices values (?,?,?)";
		
8000
int i = 0;
		while( i < 100000 ){
			ps << long_list[i++] << long_list[i++] << long_list[i++];
			ps++;
		}

Shared Connections

If you need the handle to the database connection to execute sqlite3 commands directly you can get a managed shared_ptr to it, so it will not close as long as you have a referenc to it.

Take this example on how to deal with a database backup using SQLITEs own functions in a save and modern way.

	try {
		database backup("backup");		//Open the database file we want to backup to

		auto con = db.connection();		// get a handle to the DB we want to backup in our scope
										// this way we are sure the DB is open and ok while we backup
		
		// Init Backup and make sure its freed on exit or exceptions!
		auto state = 
			std::unique_ptr<sqlite3_backup,decltype(&sqlite3_backup_finish)>(
			sqlite3_backup_init(backup.connection().get(), "main", con.get(), "main"),
			sqlite3_backup_finish
			);

		if(state) {
			int rc;
			// Each iteration of this loop copies 500 database pages from database db to the backup database.
			do {
				rc = sqlite3_backup_step(state.get(), 500);
				std::cout << "Remaining " << sqlite3_backup_remaining(state.get()) << "/" << sqlite3_backup_pagecount(state.get()) << "\n";
			} while(rc == SQLITE_OK || rc == SQLITE_BUSY || rc == SQLITE_LOCKED);
		}
	} // Release allocated resources.

Transactions

You can use transactions with begin;, commit; and rollback; commands. (don't forget to put all the semicolons at the end of each query).

		db << "begin;"; // begin a transaction ...   
		db << "insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);"
			<< 20
			<< u"bob"
			<< 83.25f;
		db << "insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);" // utf16 string
			<< 21
			<< u"jack"
			<< 68.5;
		db << "commit;"; // commit all the changes.
                
		db << "begin;"; // begin another transaction ....
		db << "insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);" // utf16 string
			<< 19
			<< u"chirs"
			<< 82.7;
		db << "rollback;"; // cancel this transaction ...

Dealing with NULL values

If you have databases where some rows may be null, you can use boost::optional to retain the NULL value between C++ variables and the database. Note that you must enable the boost support by defining _MODERN_SQLITE_BOOST_OPTIONAL_SUPPORT befor importing the header.

	#define _MODERN_SQLITE_BOOST_OPTIONAL_SUPPORT
	#include <sqlite_modern_cpp.h>
	
	struct User {
		long long _id;
		boost::optional<int> age;
		boost::optional<string> name;
		boost::optional<real> weight;
	};
	
	{
		User user;
		user.name = "bob";
		
		// Same database as above
		database db("dbfile.db");
		
		// Here, age and weight will be inserted as NULL in the database.
		db << "insert into user (age,name,weight) values (?,?,?);"
			<< user.age
			<< user.name
			<< user.weight;
			
		user._id = db.last_insert_rowid();
	}
	
	{
		// Here, the User instance will retain the NULL value(s) from the database.
		db << "select _id,age,name,weight from user where age > ? ;"
			<< 18
			>> [&](long long id,
				boost::optional<int> age, 
				boost::optional<string> name
				boost::optional<real> weight) {
			
			User user;
			user._id = id;
			user.age = age;
			user.name = move(name);
			user.weight = weight;
			
			cout << "id=" << user._id
				<< " age = " << (user.age ? to_string(*user.age) ? string("NULL"))
				<< " name = " << (user.name ? *user.name : string("NULL"))
				<< " weight = " << (user.weight ? to_string(*user.weight) : string(NULL))
				<< endl;
		};
	}

Errors

On error, the library throws an error class indicating the type of error. The error classes are derived from the SQLITE3 error names, so if the error code is SQLITE_CONSTRAINT, the error class thrown is sqlite::exceptions::constraint. Note that all errors are derived from sqlite::sqlite_exception and that itself is derived from std::runtime_exception.

node: for NDK use the full path to your database file : sqlite::database db("/data/data/com.your.package/dbfile.db").

Building and Installing

The usual way works for installing:

./configure && make && sudo make install

Note, there's nothing to make, so you there's no need to run configure and you can simply point your compiler at the hdr/ directory.

##License

MIT license - http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php

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