Visitor and Traversal Utilities

The sqlalchemy.sql.visitors module consists of classes and functions that serve the purpose of generically traversing a Core SQL expression structure. This is not unlike the Python ast module in that is presents a system by which a program can operate upon each component of a SQL expression. Common purposes this serves are locating various kinds of elements such as Table or BindParameter objects, as well as altering the state of the structure such as replacing certain FROM clauses with others.

Note

the sqlalchemy.sql.visitors module is an internal API and is not fully public. It is subject to change and may additionally not function as expected for use patterns that aren’t considered within SQLAlchemy’s own internals.

The sqlalchemy.sql.visitors module is part of the internals of SQLAlchemy and it is not usually used by calling application code. It is however used in certain edge cases such as when constructing caching routines as well as when building out custom SQL expressions using the Custom SQL Constructs and Compilation Extension.

Visitor/traversal interface and library functions.

Object NameDescription

anon_map

alias of cache_anon_map

cloned_traverse(obj, opts, visitors)

Clone the given expression structure, allowing modifications by visitors for mutable objects.

ExternalTraversal

Base class for visitor objects which can traverse externally using the traverse() function.

InternalTraversal

Defines visitor symbols used for internal traversal.

iterate(obj[, opts])

Traverse the given expression structure, returning an iterator.

replacement_traverse(obj, opts, replace)

Clone the given expression structure, allowing element replacement by a given replacement function.

traverse(obj, opts, visitors)

Traverse and visit the given expression structure using the default iterator.

traverse_using(iterator, obj, visitors)

Visit the given expression structure using the given iterator of objects.

Visitable

Base class for visitable objects.

class sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.ExternalTraversal

Base class for visitor objects which can traverse externally using the traverse() function.

Direct usage of the traverse() function is usually preferred.

Members

chain(), iterate(), traverse(), visitor_iterator

Class signature

class sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.ExternalTraversal (sqlalchemy.util.langhelpers.MemoizedSlots)

class sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.InternalTraversal

Defines visitor symbols used for internal traversal.

The InternalTraversal class is used in two ways. One is that it can serve as the superclass for an object that implements the various visit methods of the class. The other is that the symbols themselves of InternalTraversal are used within the _traverse_internals collection. Such as, the Case object defines _traverse_internals as

  1. _traverse_internals = [
  2. ("value", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
  3. ("whens", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement_tuples),
  4. ("else_", InternalTraversal.dp_clauseelement),
  5. ]

Above, the Case class indicates its internal state as the attributes named value, whens, and else_. They each link to an InternalTraversal method which indicates the type of datastructure referred towards.

Using the _traverse_internals structure, objects of type InternalTraversible will have the following methods automatically implemented:

  • HasTraverseInternals.get_children()

  • HasTraverseInternals._copy_internals()

  • HasCacheKey._gen_cache_key()

Subclasses can also implement these methods directly, particularly for the HasTraverseInternals._copy_internals() method, when special steps are needed.

New in version 1.4.

Members

dp_annotations_key, dp_anon_name, dp_boolean, dp_clauseelement, dp_clauseelement_list, dp_clauseelement_tuple, dp_clauseelement_tuples, dp_dialect_options, dp_dml_multi_values, dp_dml_ordered_values, dp_dml_values, dp_fromclause_canonical_column_collection, dp_fromclause_ordered_set, dp_has_cache_key, dp_has_cache_key_list, dp_has_cache_key_tuples, dp_ignore, dp_inspectable, dp_inspectable_list, dp_multi, dp_multi_list, dp_named_ddl_element, dp_operator, dp_plain_dict, dp_plain_obj, dp_prefix_sequence, dp_propagate_attrs, dp_statement_hint_list, dp_string, dp_string_clauseelement_dict, dp_string_list, dp_string_multi_dict, dp_table_hint_list, dp_type, dp_unknown_structure

Class signature

class sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.InternalTraversal (enum.Enum)

class sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.Visitable

Base class for visitable objects.

Visitable is used to implement the SQL compiler dispatch functions. Other forms of traversal such as for cache key generation are implemented separately using the HasTraverseInternals interface.

Changed in version 2.0: The Visitable class was named Traversible in the 1.4 series; the name is changed back to Visitable in 2.0 which is what it was prior to 1.4.

Both names remain importable in both 1.4 and 2.0 versions.

attribute sqlalchemy.sql.visitors..sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.anon_map

alias of cache_anon_map

function sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.cloned_traverse(obj: Optional[ExternallyTraversible], opts: Mapping[str, Any], visitors: Mapping[str, Callable[[Any], None]]) → Optional[ExternallyTraversible]

Clone the given expression structure, allowing modifications by visitors for mutable objects.

Traversal usage is the same as that of traverse(). The visitor functions present in the visitors dictionary may also modify the internals of the given structure as the traversal proceeds.

The cloned_traverse() function does not provide objects that are part of the Immutable interface to the visit methods (this primarily includes ColumnClause, Column, TableClause and Table objects). As this traversal is only intended to allow in-place mutation of objects, Immutable objects are skipped. The Immutable._clone() method is still called on each object to allow for objects to replace themselves with a different object based on a clone of their sub-internals (e.g. a ColumnClause that clones its subquery to return a new ColumnClause).

Changed in version 2.0: The cloned_traverse() function omits objects that are part of the Immutable interface.

The central API feature used by the cloned_traverse() and replacement_traverse() functions, in addition to the ClauseElement.get_children() function that is used to achieve the iteration, is the ClauseElement._copy_internals() method. For a ClauseElement structure to support cloning and replacement traversals correctly, it needs to be able to pass a cloning function into its internal members in order to make copies of them.

See also

traverse()

replacement_traverse()

function sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.iterate(obj: Optional[ExternallyTraversible], opts: Mapping[str, Any] = {}) → Iterator[ExternallyTraversible]

Traverse the given expression structure, returning an iterator.

Traversal is configured to be breadth-first.

The central API feature used by the iterate() function is the ClauseElement.get_children() method of ClauseElement objects. This method should return all the ClauseElement objects which are associated with a particular ClauseElement object. For example, a Case structure will refer to a series of ColumnElement objects within its “whens” and “else_” member variables.

  • Parameters:

    • objClauseElement structure to be traversed

    • opts – dictionary of iteration options. This dictionary is usually empty in modern usage.

function sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.replacement_traverse(obj: Optional[ExternallyTraversible], opts: Mapping[str, Any], replace: _TraverseTransformCallableType[Any]) → Optional[ExternallyTraversible]

Clone the given expression structure, allowing element replacement by a given replacement function.

This function is very similar to the cloned_traverse() function, except instead of being passed a dictionary of visitors, all elements are unconditionally passed into the given replace function. The replace function then has the option to return an entirely new object which will replace the one given. If it returns None, then the object is kept in place.

The difference in usage between cloned_traverse() and replacement_traverse() is that in the former case, an already-cloned object is passed to the visitor function, and the visitor function can then manipulate the internal state of the object. In the case of the latter, the visitor function should only return an entirely different object, or do nothing.

The use case for replacement_traverse() is that of replacing a FROM clause inside of a SQL structure with a different one, as is a common use case within the ORM.

function sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.traverse(obj: Optional[ExternallyTraversible], opts: Mapping[str, Any], visitors: Mapping[str, Callable[[Any], None]]) → Optional[ExternallyTraversible]

Traverse and visit the given expression structure using the default iterator.

e.g.:

  1. from sqlalchemy.sql import visitors
  2. stmt = select(some_table).where(some_table.c.foo == 'bar')
  3. def visit_bindparam(bind_param):
  4. print("found bound value: %s" % bind_param.value)
  5. visitors.traverse(stmt, {}, {"bindparam": visit_bindparam})

The iteration of objects uses the iterate() function, which does a breadth-first traversal using a stack.

  • Parameters:

    • objClauseElement structure to be traversed

    • opts – dictionary of iteration options. This dictionary is usually empty in modern usage.

    • visitors – dictionary of visit functions. The dictionary should have strings as keys, each of which would correspond to the __visit_name__ of a particular kind of SQL expression object, and callable functions as values, each of which represents a visitor function for that kind of object.

function sqlalchemy.sql.visitors.traverse_using(iterator: Iterable[ExternallyTraversible], obj: Optional[ExternallyTraversible], visitors: Mapping[str, Callable[[Any], None]]) → Optional[ExternallyTraversible]

Visit the given expression structure using the given iterator of objects.

traverse_using() is usually called internally as the result of the traverse() function.

  • Parameters:

    • iterator – an iterable or sequence which will yield ClauseElement structures; the iterator is assumed to be the product of the iterate() function.

    • obj – the ClauseElement that was used as the target of the iterate() function.

    • visitors – dictionary of visit functions. See traverse() for details on this dictionary.

See also

traverse()