Getting Started on JVM with SQLite
First apply the gradle plugin in your project.
buildscript {
repositories {
google()
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath 'com.squareup.sqldelight:gradle-plugin:1.5.4'
}
}
apply plugin: 'com.squareup.sqldelight'
sqldelight {
Database { // This will be the name of the generated database class.
packageName = "com.example"
}
}
Put your SQL statements in a .sq
file under src/main/sqldelight
. Typically the first statement in the SQL file creates a table.
-- src/main/sqldelight/com/example/sqldelight/hockey/data/Player.sq
CREATE TABLE hockeyPlayer (
player_number INTEGER NOT NULL,
full_name TEXT NOT NULL
);
CREATE INDEX hockeyPlayer_full_name ON hockeyPlayer(full_name);
INSERT INTO hockeyPlayer (player_number, full_name)
VALUES (15, 'Ryan Getzlaf');
From this SQLDelight will generate a Database
Kotlin class with an associated Schema
object that can be used to create your database and run your statements on it. Doing this also requires a driver, which SQLDelight provides implementations of:
dependencies {
implementation "com.squareup.sqldelight:sqlite-driver:1.5.4"
}
val driver: SqlDriver = JdbcSqliteDriver(JdbcSqliteDriver.IN_MEMORY)
Database.Schema.create(driver)
SQL statements inside a .sq
file can be labeled to have a typesafe function generated for them available at runtime.
selectAll:
SELECT *
FROM hockeyPlayer;
insert:
INSERT INTO hockeyPlayer(player_number, full_name)
VALUES (?, ?);
insertFullPlayerObject:
INSERT INTO hockeyPlayer(player_number, full_name)
VALUES ?;
Files with labeled statements in them will have a queries file generated from them that matches the .sq
file name - putting the above sql into Player.sq
generates PlayerQueries.kt
. To get a reference to PlayerQueries
you need to wrap the driver we made above:
// In reality the database and driver above should be created a single time
// and passed around using your favourite dependency injection/service
// locator/singleton pattern.
val database = Database(driver)
val playerQueries: PlayerQueries = database.playerQueries
println(playerQueries.selectAll().executeAsList())
// Prints [HockeyPlayer(15, "Ryan Getzlaf")]
playerQueries.insert(player_number = 10, full_name = "Corey Perry")
println(playerQueries.selectAll().executeAsList())
// Prints [HockeyPlayer(15, "Ryan Getzlaf"), HockeyPlayer(10, "Corey Perry")]
val player = HockeyPlayer(10, "Ronald McDonald")
playerQueries.insertFullPlayerObject(player)
And that's it! Check out the other pages on the sidebar for other functionality.