# Rusqlite [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/jgallagher/rusqlite.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jgallagher/rusqlite) Rusqlite is an ergonomic wrapper for using SQLite from Rust. It attempts to expose an interface similar to [rust-postgres](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-postgres). View the full [API documentation](http://jgallagher.github.io/rusqlite/rusqlite/index.html). ```rust extern crate rusqlite; extern crate time; use time::Timespec; use rusqlite::Connection; #[derive(Debug)] struct Person { id: i32, name: String, time_created: Timespec, data: Option> } fn main() { let conn = Connection::open_in_memory().unwrap(); conn.execute("CREATE TABLE person ( id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, name TEXT NOT NULL, time_created TEXT NOT NULL, data BLOB )", &[]).unwrap(); let me = Person { id: 0, name: "Steven".to_string(), time_created: time::get_time(), data: None }; conn.execute("INSERT INTO person (name, time_created, data) VALUES ($1, $2, $3)", &[&me.name, &me.time_created, &me.data]).unwrap(); let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT id, name, time_created, data FROM person").unwrap(); let mut person_iter = stmt.query_map(&[], |row| { Person { id: row.get(0), name: row.get(1), time_created: row.get(2), data: row.get(3) } }).unwrap(); for person in person_iter { println!("Found person {:?}", person.unwrap()); } } ``` ### Design of Rows and Row To retrieve the result rows from a query, SQLite requires you to call [sqlite3_step()](https://www.sqlite.org/c3ref/step.html) on a prepared statement. You can only retrieve the values of the "current" row. From the Rust point of view, this means that each row is only valid until the next row is fetched. [rust-sqlite3](https://github.com/dckc/rust-sqlite3) solves this the correct way with lifetimes. However, this means that the result rows do not satisfy the [Iterator](http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html) trait, which means you cannot (as easily) loop over the rows, or use many of the helpful Iterator methods like `map` and `filter`. Instead, Rusqlite's `Rows` handle does conform to `Iterator`. It ensures safety by performing checks at runtime to ensure you do not try to retrieve the values of a "stale" row, and will panic if you do so. A specific example that will panic: ```rust fn bad_function_will_panic(conn: &Connection) -> Result { let mut stmt = try!(conn.prepare("SELECT id FROM my_table")); let mut rows = try!(stmt.query(&[])); let row0 = try!(rows.next().unwrap()); // row 0 is valid now... let row1 = try!(rows.next().unwrap()); // row 0 is now STALE, and row 1 is valid let my_id = row0.get(0); // WILL PANIC because row 0 is stale Ok(my_id) } ``` There are other, less obvious things that may result in a panic as well, such as calling `collect()` on a `Rows` and then trying to use the collected rows. Strongly consider using the method `query_map()` instead, if you can. `query_map()` returns an iterator over rows-mapped-to-some-type. This iterator does not have any of the above issues with panics due to attempting to access stale rows. ## Author John Gallagher, johnkgallagher@gmail.com ## License Rusqlite is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.