From 12cf076118570eebbff08c6b3090e0d4798447a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cyfraeviolae Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2024 03:17:55 -0400 Subject: no venv --- .../SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA | 242 --------------------- 1 file changed, 242 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA (limited to 'venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA') diff --git a/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA b/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA deleted file mode 100644 index 252f3b7..0000000 --- a/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/SQLAlchemy-2.0.29.dist-info/METADATA +++ /dev/null @@ -1,242 +0,0 @@ -Metadata-Version: 2.1 -Name: SQLAlchemy -Version: 2.0.29 -Summary: Database Abstraction Library -Home-page: https://www.sqlalchemy.org -Author: Mike Bayer -Author-email: mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com -License: MIT -Project-URL: Documentation, https://docs.sqlalchemy.org -Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/ -Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable -Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers -Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License -Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy -Classifier: Topic :: Database :: Front-Ends -Requires-Python: >=3.7 -Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst -License-File: LICENSE -Requires-Dist: typing-extensions >=4.6.0 -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; platform_machine == "aarch64" or (platform_machine == "ppc64le" or (platform_machine == "x86_64" or (platform_machine == "amd64" or (platform_machine == "AMD64" or (platform_machine == "win32" or platform_machine == "WIN32"))))) -Requires-Dist: importlib-metadata ; python_version < "3.8" -Provides-Extra: aiomysql -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'aiomysql' -Requires-Dist: aiomysql >=0.2.0 ; extra == 'aiomysql' -Provides-Extra: aioodbc -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'aioodbc' -Requires-Dist: aioodbc ; extra == 'aioodbc' -Provides-Extra: aiosqlite -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'aiosqlite' -Requires-Dist: aiosqlite ; extra == 'aiosqlite' -Requires-Dist: typing-extensions !=3.10.0.1 ; extra == 'aiosqlite' -Provides-Extra: asyncio -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'asyncio' -Provides-Extra: asyncmy -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'asyncmy' -Requires-Dist: asyncmy !=0.2.4,!=0.2.6,>=0.2.3 ; extra == 'asyncmy' -Provides-Extra: mariadb_connector -Requires-Dist: mariadb !=1.1.2,!=1.1.5,>=1.0.1 ; extra == 'mariadb_connector' -Provides-Extra: mssql -Requires-Dist: pyodbc ; extra == 'mssql' -Provides-Extra: mssql_pymssql -Requires-Dist: pymssql ; extra == 'mssql_pymssql' -Provides-Extra: mssql_pyodbc -Requires-Dist: pyodbc ; extra == 'mssql_pyodbc' -Provides-Extra: mypy -Requires-Dist: mypy >=0.910 ; extra == 'mypy' -Provides-Extra: mysql -Requires-Dist: mysqlclient >=1.4.0 ; extra == 'mysql' -Provides-Extra: mysql_connector -Requires-Dist: mysql-connector-python ; extra == 'mysql_connector' -Provides-Extra: oracle -Requires-Dist: cx-oracle >=8 ; extra == 'oracle' -Provides-Extra: oracle_oracledb -Requires-Dist: oracledb >=1.0.1 ; extra == 'oracle_oracledb' -Provides-Extra: postgresql -Requires-Dist: psycopg2 >=2.7 ; extra == 'postgresql' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_asyncpg -Requires-Dist: greenlet !=0.4.17 ; extra == 'postgresql_asyncpg' -Requires-Dist: asyncpg ; extra == 'postgresql_asyncpg' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_pg8000 -Requires-Dist: pg8000 >=1.29.1 ; extra == 'postgresql_pg8000' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_psycopg -Requires-Dist: psycopg >=3.0.7 ; extra == 'postgresql_psycopg' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_psycopg2binary -Requires-Dist: psycopg2-binary ; extra == 'postgresql_psycopg2binary' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_psycopg2cffi -Requires-Dist: psycopg2cffi ; extra == 'postgresql_psycopg2cffi' -Provides-Extra: postgresql_psycopgbinary -Requires-Dist: psycopg[binary] >=3.0.7 ; extra == 'postgresql_psycopgbinary' -Provides-Extra: pymysql -Requires-Dist: pymysql ; extra == 'pymysql' -Provides-Extra: sqlcipher -Requires-Dist: sqlcipher3-binary ; extra == 'sqlcipher' - -SQLAlchemy -========== - -|PyPI| |Python| |Downloads| - -.. |PyPI| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/sqlalchemy - :target: https://pypi.org/project/sqlalchemy - :alt: PyPI - -.. |Python| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/sqlalchemy - :target: https://pypi.org/project/sqlalchemy - :alt: PyPI - Python Version - -.. |Downloads| image:: https://static.pepy.tech/badge/sqlalchemy/month - :target: https://pepy.tech/project/sqlalchemy - :alt: PyPI - Downloads - - -The Python SQL Toolkit and Object Relational Mapper - -Introduction -------------- - -SQLAlchemy is the Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper -that gives application developers the full power and -flexibility of SQL. SQLAlchemy provides a full suite -of well known enterprise-level persistence patterns, -designed for efficient and high-performing database -access, adapted into a simple and Pythonic domain -language. - -Major SQLAlchemy features include: - -* An industrial strength ORM, built - from the core on the identity map, unit of work, - and data mapper patterns. These patterns - allow transparent persistence of objects - using a declarative configuration system. - Domain models - can be constructed and manipulated naturally, - and changes are synchronized with the - current transaction automatically. -* A relationally-oriented query system, exposing - the full range of SQL's capabilities - explicitly, including joins, subqueries, - correlation, and most everything else, - in terms of the object model. - Writing queries with the ORM uses the same - techniques of relational composition you use - when writing SQL. While you can drop into - literal SQL at any time, it's virtually never - needed. -* A comprehensive and flexible system - of eager loading for related collections and objects. - Collections are cached within a session, - and can be loaded on individual access, all - at once using joins, or by query per collection - across the full result set. -* A Core SQL construction system and DBAPI - interaction layer. The SQLAlchemy Core is - separate from the ORM and is a full database - abstraction layer in its own right, and includes - an extensible Python-based SQL expression - language, schema metadata, connection pooling, - type coercion, and custom types. -* All primary and foreign key constraints are - assumed to be composite and natural. Surrogate - integer primary keys are of course still the - norm, but SQLAlchemy never assumes or hardcodes - to this model. -* Database introspection and generation. Database - schemas can be "reflected" in one step into - Python structures representing database metadata; - those same structures can then generate - CREATE statements right back out - all within - the Core, independent of the ORM. - -SQLAlchemy's philosophy: - -* SQL databases behave less and less like object - collections the more size and performance start to - matter; object collections behave less and less like - tables and rows the more abstraction starts to matter. - SQLAlchemy aims to accommodate both of these - principles. -* An ORM doesn't need to hide the "R". A relational - database provides rich, set-based functionality - that should be fully exposed. SQLAlchemy's - ORM provides an open-ended set of patterns - that allow a developer to construct a custom - mediation layer between a domain model and - a relational schema, turning the so-called - "object relational impedance" issue into - a distant memory. -* The developer, in all cases, makes all decisions - regarding the design, structure, and naming conventions - of both the object model as well as the relational - schema. SQLAlchemy only provides the means - to automate the execution of these decisions. -* With SQLAlchemy, there's no such thing as - "the ORM generated a bad query" - you - retain full control over the structure of - queries, including how joins are organized, - how subqueries and correlation is used, what - columns are requested. Everything SQLAlchemy - does is ultimately the result of a developer-initiated - decision. -* Don't use an ORM if the problem doesn't need one. - SQLAlchemy consists of a Core and separate ORM - component. The Core offers a full SQL expression - language that allows Pythonic construction - of SQL constructs that render directly to SQL - strings for a target database, returning - result sets that are essentially enhanced DBAPI - cursors. -* Transactions should be the norm. With SQLAlchemy's - ORM, nothing goes to permanent storage until - commit() is called. SQLAlchemy encourages applications - to create a consistent means of delineating - the start and end of a series of operations. -* Never render a literal value in a SQL statement. - Bound parameters are used to the greatest degree - possible, allowing query optimizers to cache - query plans effectively and making SQL injection - attacks a non-issue. - -Documentation -------------- - -Latest documentation is at: - -https://www.sqlalchemy.org/docs/ - -Installation / Requirements ---------------------------- - -Full documentation for installation is at -`Installation `_. - -Getting Help / Development / Bug reporting ------------------------------------------- - -Please refer to the `SQLAlchemy Community Guide `_. - -Code of Conduct ---------------- - -Above all, SQLAlchemy places great emphasis on polite, thoughtful, and -constructive communication between users and developers. -Please see our current Code of Conduct at -`Code of Conduct `_. - -License -------- - -SQLAlchemy is distributed under the `MIT license -`_. - -- cgit v1.2.3