With SQLAlchemy, I’m finding that sometimes I mis-type a name of an attribute which is mapped to a column, which results in rather difficult to catch errors:
class Thing(Base):
foo = Column(String)
thing = Thing()
thing.bar = "Hello" # a typo, I actually meant thing.foo
assert thing.bar == "Hello" # works here, as thing.bar is a transient attribute created by the assignment above
session.add(thing)
session.commit() # thing.bar is not saved in the database, obviously
...
# much later
thing = session.query(Thing)...one()
assert thing.foo == "Hello" # fails
assert thing.bar == "Hello" # fails, there's no even such attribute
Is there a way to configure the mapped class so assigning to anything which is not mapped to an SQLAlchemy column would raise an exception?
Ok, the solution seems to be to override
__setattr__method of the base class, which allows us to check if the atribute already exists before setting it.Sort of “strict mode” for SQLAlchemy…