Radically simple, django/peewee-like, easy and incomplete ORM for Pyrus.
With pyrus-orm, you can read, create and modify tasks.
Works with pyrus-api under the hood.
- Define models with:
- simple fields (text, number, dates, checkmark, flag, ...)
- catalog fields, single item
- catalog fields, multiple items
- "title" fields (pyrus-orm ignores the nested structure of 'title' fields, all its contents are treated as usual root-level fields)
- multiple choice fields (without nested fields at this moment)
- Operations with models:
- Create and save
- Read from registry by ID
- Modify and save changes
- Filtering:
- by include_archived and steps fields
- by value of simple or catalog fields
- less than, greater than
- value in a list
- ranges
pip install pyrus-orm
class Book(PyrusModel):
title = TextField(1) # 1 is a field ID in pyrus's form
time = TimeField(2)
date = DateField(3)
number = NumericField(4)
round_number = IntegerField(5)
author = CatalogField(6, catalog=<catalog id>)
class Meta:
form_id = <form_id>
pyrus_api = PyrusAPI(...)
session = PyrusORMSession(pyrus_api)
set_session_global(session)
book = Book(
title='Don Quixote',
date='1605-01-01',
author=Book.author.find({'Name': 'Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda'})
)
book.save()
book.id
>>> <task_id>
book = Book.objects.get(id=...)
# simple field
book.title
>>> 'Don Quixote'
book.title = 'Don Quixote, Part Two'
book.save('title changed')
# catalog field
book.author
>>> CatalogItem(item_id=..., values={'Name': 'Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda'}) # values comes from the catalog definition
book.author.find_and_set({'Name': 'Miguel de Cervantes'}) # may raise ValueError if no value found
book.save('changed an author to the real one')
Enums can be mapped to catalog items by ID or by custom property name.
No catalog lookups are preformed on reading or writing of such fields.
class Genre(Enum):
fiction = 100001
nonfiction = 100002
class Book(PyrusModel):
genre = CatalogEnumField(<field_id>, catalog_id=<catalog_id>, enum=Genre, id_field='item_id')
book = Book.objects.get(id=...)
book.genre
>>> Genre.fiction
book.genre = Genre.nonfiction
book.save()
book.genre
>>> Genre.nonfiction
(imagine book has a property 'media' with field 'Name')
class Media(Enum):
paper = 'paper'
papirus = 'papirus'
pdf = 'pdf'
class Book(PyrusModel):
media = CatalogEnumField(<field_id>, catalog_id=<catalog_id>, enum=Genre, id_field='Name')
Only basic filtering is supported:
Book.objects.get_filtered(
title='Don Quixote',
)
>>> [Book(...), ...]
Book.objects.get_filtered(
genre=Book.genre.find({'Name': 'Fiction'})
)
>>> [Book(...), ...]
Book.objects.get_filtered(
...
include_archived=True,
steps=[1, 2],
)
>>> [Book(...), ...]
# Read values
# Non-empty value
book.author
>>> CatalogItem(item_id=..., values={<your custom values here>})
assert bool(book.author) == True
# Empty value
book.author
>>> CatalogEmptyValue()
assert bool(book.author) == False
# Get all possible values (works for empty fields as well)
book.author.catalog()
>>> [CatalogItem(...), CatalogItem(...), ...]
# Find a value in a catalog
new_author = book.author.catalog().find({'Name': 'Miguel de Cervantes'})
new_author
>>> CatalogItem(item_id=..., values={'Name': 'Miguel de Cervantes'}) # or None
book.author = new_author
book.save()
# Find and set shortcut
book.author.catalog().find_and_set({'Name': 'William Shakespeare'})
book.author.find_and_set({'Name': 'NonExistent'})
>>> ValueError raised
# Set value to a specific item_id
book.author = CatalogItem(item_id=123456)