Struqtural: High level database interface library
Emile van Sebille
emile at fenx.com
Sat Jul 17 13:36:43 EDT 2010
On 7/17/2010 6:25 AM sturlamolden said...
> On 17 Jul, 07:29, Nathan Rice<nathan.alexander.r... at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Let’s push things to the edge now with a quick demo of many to many
>> relationship support. For this example we’re going to be using the
>> following XML:
>>
>> <Departments>
>> <Department>
>> <DeptNum>123</DeptNum>
>> <DeptName>Sales</DeptName>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>143</Number>
>> <Name>Raul Lopez</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>687</Number>
>> <Name>John Smith</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>947</Number>
>> <Name>Ming Chu</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> </Department>
>> <Department>
>> <DeptNum>456</DeptNum>
>> <DeptName>Marketing</DeptName>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>157</Number>
>> <Name>Jim Jones</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>687</Number>
>> <Name>John Smith</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> <Employee>
>> <Number>947</Number>
>> <Name>Ming Chu</Name>
>> </Employee>
>> </Department>
>> </Departments>
>
>
> Oh yes, I'd rather write pages of that rather than some SQL in a
> Python string.
>
That's not the point. I've got examples of XML content that I don't
create that could be tamed quite easily (if I understand from a quick
once over).
This looks really interesting. I've got to go read more now...
Emile
More information about the Python-list
mailing list