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Home/ Questions/Q 7679699
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T17:56:17+00:00 2026-05-31T17:56:17+00:00

Is there a Pythonic way (I mean, no pure SQL query) to define an

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Is there a “Pythonic” way (I mean, no “pure SQL” query) to define an SQL view with SQLAlchemy?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T17:56:19+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    Update: SQLAlchemy now has a great usage recipe here on this topic, which I recommend. It covers different SQL Alchemy versions up to the latest and has ORM integration (see comments below this answer and other answers). And if you look through the version history, you can also learn why using literal_binds is iffy (in a nutshell: binding parameters should be left to the database), but still arguably any other solution would make most users of the recipe not happy. I leave the below answer mostly for historical reasons.

    Original answer: Creating a (read-only non-materialized) view is not supported out of the box as far as I know. But adding this functionality in SQLAlchemy 0.7 is straightforward (similar to the example I gave here). You just have to write a compiler extension CreateView. With this extension, you can then write (assuming that t is a table object with a column id)

    createview = CreateView('viewname', t.select().where(t.c.id>5))
    engine.execute(createview)
    
    v = Table('viewname', metadata, autoload=True)
    for r in engine.execute(v.select()):
        print r
    

    Here is a working example:

    from sqlalchemy import Table
    from sqlalchemy.ext.compiler import compiles
    from sqlalchemy.sql.expression import Executable, ClauseElement
    
    class CreateView(Executable, ClauseElement):
        def __init__(self, name, select):
            self.name = name
            self.select = select
    
    @compiles(CreateView)
    def visit_create_view(element, compiler, **kw):
        return "CREATE VIEW %s AS %s" % (
             element.name,
             compiler.process(element.select, literal_binds=True)
             )
    
    # test data
    from sqlalchemy import MetaData, Column, Integer
    from sqlalchemy.engine import create_engine
    engine = create_engine('sqlite://')
    metadata = MetaData(engine)
    t = Table('t',
              metadata,
              Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True),
              Column('number', Integer))
    t.create()
    engine.execute(t.insert().values(id=1, number=3))
    engine.execute(t.insert().values(id=9, number=-3))
    
    # create view
    createview = CreateView('viewname', t.select().where(t.c.id>5))
    engine.execute(createview)
    
    # reflect view and print result
    v = Table('viewname', metadata, autoload=True)
    for r in engine.execute(v.select()):
        print r
    

    If you want, you can also specialize for a dialect, e.g.

    @compiles(CreateView, 'sqlite')
    def visit_create_view(element, compiler, **kw):
        return "CREATE VIEW IF NOT EXISTS %s AS %s" % (
             element.name,
             compiler.process(element.select, literal_binds=True)
             )
    
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