On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 4:59 PM wrote:
>
> This is definitely along the right track but it conflicts a little bit with
> the recommended pandas api, for example:
> query = session.query(Account)
> return pd.read_sql(query.statement, query.session.bind)
>
> I can still follow your method a
This is definitely along the right track but it conflicts a little bit with
the recommended pandas api, for example:
query = session.query(Account)
return pd.read_sql(query.statement, query.session.bind)
I can still follow your method and add each row to a dataframe instead but
its not a
On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 2:55 PM wrote:
>
> I have a model, Account, with two foreign keys / relationships to another
> model, Users.
>
> class Account(object):
> @declared_attr
> def customer_id(cls):
> return Column(ForeignKey(User.id))
> @declared_attr
> def custom
I have a model, Account, with two foreign keys / relationships to another
model, Users.
class Account(object):
@declared_attr
def customer_id(cls):
return Column(ForeignKey(User.id))
@declared_attr
def customer(cls):
return relationship(User, lazy='joined'