Use SQLite from Gleam!
This library is a Gleam wrapper around the excellent Erlang library esqlite, which in turn is a wrapper around the SQLite C library. It is implemented as a NIF, which means that the SQLite database engine is linked to the erlang virtual machine.
gleam add sqlight
pub fn main() {
use conn <- sqlight.with_connection(":memory:")
let cat_decoder = dynamic.tuple2(dynamic.string, dynamic.int)
let sql = "
create table cats (name text, age int);
insert into cats (name, age) values
('Nubi', 4),
('Biffy', 10),
('Ginny', 6);
"
assert Ok(Nil) = sqlight.exec(sql, conn)
let sql = "
select name, age from cats
where age < ?
"
assert Ok([#("Nubi", 4), #("Ginny", 6)]) =
sqlight.query(sql, on: conn, with: [sqlight.int(7)], expecting: cat_decoder)
}
Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/sqlight.
SQLite is a implementation of SQL as a library. This means that you don't run a separate SQL server that your program communicates with, but you embed the SQL implementation directly in your program. SQLite stores its data in a single file. The file format is portable between different machine architectures. It supports atomic transactions and it is possible to access the file by multiple processes and different programs.
You can also use in-memory databases with SQLite, which may be useful for testing.
SQLite does not have a native boolean type. Instead, it uses ints, where 0 is
False and 1 is True. Because of this the Gleam stdlib decoder for bools will not
work, instead the sqlight.decode_bool
function should be used as it supports
both ints and bools.