I see the difference between getting an object (with all the columns)
and doing an SQL statement.
As fas as I can see, yes it is bounded.
The code is:
from sqlalchemy import *
metadata = MetaData()
docs = Table('docs', metadata)
docs.append_column(Column('DocID', Integer, primary_key=True))
from sqlalchemy import *
metadata = MetaData()
docs = Table('docs', metadata)
docs.append_column(Column('DocID', Integer, primary_key=True))
docs.append_column(Column('Path', String(120)))
docs.append_column(Column('Complete', Boolean))
class Doc(object):
def __init__(self, id,
On Jul 25, 2007, at 8:51 AM, alex.schenkman wrote:
I see the difference between getting an object (with all the columns)
and doing an SQL statement.
As fas as I can see, yes it is bounded.
The code is:
from sqlalchemy import *
metadata = MetaData()
docs = Table('docs', metadata)