Retrieving rows

To generate a database access method, annotate a query with a specific comment.

CREATE TABLE authors (
  id         SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
  bio        text   NOT NULL,
  birth_year int    NOT NULL
);


-- name: GetAuthor :one
SELECT * FROM authors
WHERE id = $1;

-- name: ListAuthors :many
SELECT * FROM authors
ORDER BY id;

A few new pieces of code are generated beyond the Author struct. An interface for the underlying database is generated. The *sql.DB and *sql.Tx types satisfy this interface.

The database access methods are added to a Queries struct, which is created using the New method.

Note that the * in our query has been replaced with explicit column names. This change ensures that the query will never return unexpected data.

Our query was annotated with :one, meaning that it should only return a single row. We scan the data from that one into a Author struct.

Since the get query has a single parameter, the GetAuthor method takes a single int as an argument.

Since the list query has no parameters, the ListAuthors method accepts no arguments.

package db

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
)

type Author struct {
	ID        int
	Bio       string
	BirthYear int
}

type DBTX interface {
	QueryContext(context.Context, string, ...interface{}) (*sql.Rows, error)
	QueryRowContext(context.Context, string, ...interface{}) *sql.Row
}

func New(db DBTX) *Queries {
	return &Queries{db: db}
}

type Queries struct {
	db DBTX
}

const getAuthor = `-- name: GetAuthor :one
SELECT id, bio, birth_year FROM authors
WHERE id = $1
`

func (q *Queries) GetAuthor(ctx context.Context, id int) (Author, error) {
	row := q.db.QueryRowContext(ctx, getAuthor, id)
	var i Author
	err := row.Scan(&i.ID, &i.Bio, &i.BirthYear)
	return i, err
}

const listAuthors = `-- name: ListAuthors :many
SELECT id, bio, birth_year FROM authors
ORDER BY id
`

func (q *Queries) ListAuthors(ctx context.Context) ([]Author, error) {
	rows, err := q.db.QueryContext(ctx, listAuthors)
	if err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	defer rows.Close()
	var items []Author
	for rows.Next() {
		var i Author
		if err := rows.Scan(&i.ID, &i.Bio, &i.BirthYear); err != nil {
			return nil, err
		}
		items = append(items, i)
	}
	if err := rows.Close(); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	if err := rows.Err(); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	return items, nil
}

Selecting columns

CREATE TABLE authors (
  id         SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
  bio        text   NOT NULL,
  birth_year int    NOT NULL
);

-- name: GetBioForAuthor :one
SELECT bio FROM authors
WHERE id = $1;

-- name: GetInfoForAuthor :one
SELECT bio, birth_year FROM authors
WHERE id = $1;

When selecting a single column, only that value that returned. The GetBioForAuthor method takes a single int as an argument and returns a string and an error.

When selecting multiple columns, a row record (method-specific struct) is returned. In this case, GetInfoForAuthor returns a struct with two fields: Bio and BirthYear.

package db

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"
)

type DBTX interface {
	QueryRowContext(context.Context, string, ...interface{}) *sql.Row
}

func New(db DBTX) *Queries {
	return &Queries{db: db}
}

type Queries struct {
	db DBTX
}

const getBioForAuthor = `-- name: GetBioForAuthor :one
SELECT bio FROM authors
WHERE id = $1
`

func (q *Queries) GetBioForAuthor(ctx context.Context, id int) (string, error) {
	row := q.db.QueryRowContext(ctx, getBioForAuthor, id)
	var i string
	err := row.Scan(&i)
	return i, err
}

const getInfoForAuthor = `-- name: GetInfoForAuthor :one
SELECT bio, birth_year FROM authors
WHERE id = $1
`

type GetInfoForAuthorRow struct {
	Bio       string
	BirthYear int
}

func (q *Queries) GetInfoForAuthor(ctx context.Context, id int) (GetInfoForAuthorRow, error) {
	row := q.db.QueryRowContext(ctx, getInfoForAuthor, id)
	var i GetInfoForAuthorRow
	err := row.Scan(&i.Bio, &i.BirthYear)
	return i, err
}

Passing a slice as a parameter to a query

In PostgreSQL, ANY allows you to check if a value exists in an array expression. Queries using ANY with a single parameter will generate method signatures with slices as arguments. Use the postgres data types, eg: int, varchar, etc.

CREATE TABLE authors (
  id         SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
  bio        text   NOT NULL,
  birth_year int    NOT NULL
);

-- name: ListAuthorsByIDs :many
SELECT * FROM authors
WHERE id = ANY($1::int[]);

The above SQL will generate the following code:

package db

import (
	"context"
	"database/sql"

	"github.com/lib/pq"
)

type Author struct {
	ID        int
	Bio       string
	BirthYear int
}

type DBTX interface {
	QueryContext(context.Context, string, ...interface{}) (*sql.Rows, error)
	QueryRowContext(context.Context, string, ...interface{}) *sql.Row
}

func New(db DBTX) *Queries {
	return &Queries{db: db}
}

type Queries struct {
	db DBTX
}

const listAuthors = `-- name: ListAuthorsByIDs :many
SELECT id, bio, birth_year FROM authors
WHERE id = ANY($1::int[])
`

func (q *Queries) ListAuthorsByIDs(ctx context.Context, ids []int) ([]Author, error) {
	rows, err := q.db.QueryContext(ctx, listAuthors, pq.Array(ids))
	if err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	defer rows.Close()
	var items []Author
	for rows.Next() {
		var i Author
		if err := rows.Scan(&i.ID, &i.Bio, &i.BirthYear); err != nil {
			return nil, err
		}
		items = append(items, i)
	}
	if err := rows.Close(); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	if err := rows.Err(); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	return items, nil
}