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SQLite Datatypes and its Corresponding Python Types

SQLite is a C-language-based library that provides a portable and serverless SQL database engine. It has a file-based architecture; hence it reads and writes to a disk. Since SQLite is a zero-configuration database, no installation or setup is needed before its usage. Starting from Python 2.5.x, SQLite3 comes default with python.

In this article, we will discuss SQLite DataTypes and their corresponding Python Types

Storage Class in SQLite

A storage class can be called a collection of similar DataTypes. SQLite provides the following storage classes:

Storage Class

Value Stored

NULL

NULL

INTEGER

Signed Integer (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 8 bytes depending on magnitude)

REAL

Floating point value (8 byte IEEE floating-point numbers)

TEXT

TEXT string (encoded in UTF-8, UTF-16BE or UTF-16LE

BLOB (Binary Large Object)

Data stored exactly the way it was input, generally in binary format

The term Storage Class can be used mutually with DataType.

Corresponding Python Datatypes

The SQLite DataTypes and their corresponding Python types are as follows

Storage Class

Python Datatype

NULL

None

INTEGER

int

REAL

float

TEXT

str

BLOB

bytes

The type() function can be used in python to get the class of an argument. In the program below, the type() function is used to print the classes of every value we store in a database.

Note: The program below uses the Lazyroar logo as logo.png from this page for a demonstration.

Let’s take an example in which we are creating a database with the name ‘gfg’ and then create a table named exam_hall having some columns which are as follows:

  1. NAME (TEXT),
  2. PIN (INTEGER),
  3. OCCUPANCY (REAL),
  4. LOGO (BLOB).

Then we insert some rows in it and check the data types of the values fetched with the help of SQL queries in Python.

Python3




# Python3 program to demonstrate SQLite3 datatypes
# and corresponding Python3 types
  
# import the sqlite3 package
import sqlite3  
  
# create connection to database
cnt = sqlite3.connect('gfg.db')  
  
# Create a exam_hall relation
cnt.execute('''CREATE TABLE exam_hall(
NAME TEXT,
PIN INTEGER,
OCCUPANCY REAL,
LOGO BLOB);''')
  
# Open the logo file in read, binary mode
# read the image as binary data into a variable
fileh = open('/content/JSBinCollaborativeJavaScriptDebugging6-300x160.png', 'rb')
img = fileh.read()
  
# Insert tuples for the relation
cnt.execute('''INSERT INTO exam_hall VALUES(
'centre-a',1125,98.6,?)''', (img,))
cnt.execute('''INSERT INTO exam_hall VALUES(
NULL,1158,80.5,?)''', (img,))
  
# Query the data, print the data and its type
# note: Printing the image binary data is impractical due to its huge size
# instead number of bytes are being printed using len()
cursor = cnt.execute('''SELECT * FROM exam_hall;''')
for i in cursor:
    print(str(i[0])+" "+str(i[1])+" "+str(i[2])+" "+str(len(i[3])))
    print(str(type(i[0]))+" "+str(type(i[1]))+" " +
          str(type(i[2]))+" "+str(type(i[3]))+"\n")


Output:

From the output of this program, the following observations can be made:

  1. ‘centre-a’ that was inserted as TEXT has been interpreted by python as str
  2. 1125, 1158 that were inserted as INTEGER have been interpreted by python as int
  3. 98.6, 80.5 that were inserted as REAL have been interpreted by python as float
  4. NULL was interpreted by python as NoneType
  5. The logo image which was inserted in binary format as BLOB has been interpreted by python as bytes.
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