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Minor typos in sqlite3.rst

Self-explanatory.
pull/1192/head
Nick Luchsinger 10 years ago
parent
commit
37fb0516f4
  1. 22
      docs/patterns/sqlite3.rst

22
docs/patterns/sqlite3.rst

@ -3,9 +3,9 @@
Using SQLite 3 with Flask
=========================
In Flask you can implement the opening of database connections on demand
and closing it when the context dies (usually at the end of the request)
easily.
In Flask you can easily implement the opening of database connections on
demand, closing them when the context dies (usually at the end of the
request).
Here is a simple example of how you can use SQLite 3 with Flask::
@ -26,8 +26,8 @@ Here is a simple example of how you can use SQLite 3 with Flask::
if db is not None:
db.close()
All the application needs to do in order to now use the database is having
an active application context (which is always true if there is an request
All the application needs to do in order to now use the database is have
an active application context (which is always true if there is a request
in flight) or to create an application context itself. At that point the
``get_db`` function can be used to get the current database connection.
Whenever the context is destroyed the database connection will be
@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ Connect on Demand
-----------------
The upside of this approach (connecting on first use) is that this will
only opening the connection if truly necessary. If you want to use this
only open the connection if truly necessary. If you want to use this
code outside a request context you can use it in a Python shell by opening
the application context by hand::
@ -71,8 +71,8 @@ Easy Querying
Now in each request handling function you can access `g.db` to get the
current open database connection. To simplify working with SQLite, a
row factory function is useful. It is executed for every result returned
from the database to convert the result. For instance in order to get
dictionaries instead of tuples this could be inserted into ``get_db``::
from the database to convert the result. For instance, in order to get
dictionaries instead of tuples, this could be inserted into ``get_db``::
def make_dicts(cursor, row):
return dict((cursor.description[idx][0], value)
@ -93,9 +93,9 @@ getting the cursor, executing and fetching the results::
cur.close()
return (rv[0] if rv else None) if one else rv
This handy little function in combination with a row factory makes working
with the database much more pleasant than it is by just using the raw
cursor and connection objects.
This handy little function, in combination with a row factory, makes
working with the database much more pleasant than it is by just using the
raw cursor and connection objects.
Here is how you can use it::

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