I'm struck by Haskell's terseness and elegance. But I work in a .Net house, so I use F# when I can get away with it--I may be the only one of hundreds across the country who uses it.
Does ADO.NET or F# offer something as terse and elegant as HDBC's executeMany
? I'm making my way through Real World Haskell. In chapter 21 it offers this example:
ghci> conn <- connectSqlite3 "test1.db"
ghci> stmt <- prepare conn "INSERT INTO test VALUES (?, ?)"
ghci> executeMany stmt [[toSql 5, toSql "five's nice"], [toSql 6, SqlNull]]
ghci> commit conn
ghci> disconnect conn
I'd like to get this elegance and terseness in my F#. I've seen a lot of hype around using parameterized queries to avoid SQL injection attacks. I'm not using them in this case for three reasons:
- I find parameterized queries in .Net ugly and burdensome.
- My data comes from the corporate office, so it's (mostly) clean.
- My table has 34 columns. I despise the idea of parameterizing a query with 34 columns.
Here's my F# code:
module Data
open System
open System.Data
open System.Data.OleDb
open System.Text.RegularExpressions
type Period = Prior | Current
let Import period records db =
use conn = new OleDbConnection(@"Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source=" + db + ";Persist Security Info=False;")
let execNonQuery s =
let comm = new OleDbCommand(s, conn) in
comm.ExecuteNonQuery() |> ignore
let enquote = sprintf "\"%s\""
let escapeQuotes s = Regex.Replace(s, "\"", "\"\"")
let join (ss:string[]) = String.Join(",", ss)
let table = match period with
| Prior -> "tblPrior"
| Current -> "tblCurrent"
let statements =
[| for r in records do
let vs = r |> Array.map (escapeQuotes >> enquote) |> join
let vs' = vs + sprintf ",\"14\",#%s#" (DateTime.Now.ToString "yyyy-MM-dd") in
yield sprintf "INSERT INTO %s ( [Field01], [Field02], [Field03] [Field04], [Field05], [Field06], [Field07], [Field08], [Field09], [Field10], [Field11], [Field12], [Field13], [Field14], [Field15], [Field16], [Field17], [Field18], [Field19], [Field20], [Field21], [Field22], [Field23], [Field24], [Field25], [Field26], [Field27], [Field28], [Field29], [Field30], [Field31], [Field32], [Field33], [Field34] ) VALUES (%s)" table vs' |] in
do conn.Open()
execNonQuery (sprintf "DELETE FROM %s" table)
statements |> Array.iter execNonQuery
I've renamed the fields of the table(s) for security reasons.
Because all the fields on the table are text, I can easily Array.map them to escape and quote the values.
At between 9,000 and 10,000 records per day to import to each of the two tables, I want to do this as efficiently as possible. Hence my interest in the executeMany
of Haskell. Too, though, I like the idea behind parameterized queries, and I like the way Hasekll has implemented them. Is there something equivalent in terseness and elegance in F#?