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id ▼ | node_id | number | title | user | state | locked | assignee | milestone | comments | created_at | updated_at | closed_at | author_association | pull_request | body | repo | type | active_lock_reason | performed_via_github_app | reactions | draft | state_reason |
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831751367 | MDU6SXNzdWU4MzE3NTEzNjc= | 246 | Escaping FTS search strings | DeNeutoy 16001974 | closed | 0 | 4 | 2021-03-15T12:15:09Z | 2021-08-18T18:57:13Z | 2021-08-18T18:43:12Z | CONTRIBUTOR | Thanks for the excellent library, it's very nice to use! I've been building some in memory search functionality for a data annotation tool i'm making, and I got tripped up a little bit with escaping the full text search queries. First I tried using `db.quote(q)`, which doesn't work, because sqlite FTS has it's own (separate)[ query syntax](https://www2.sqlite.org/fts5.html#full_text_query_syntax). You can see this happening here also: http://search-24ways.herokuapp.com/24ways-f8f455f/articles?_search=acces%2A I got around this by aggressively escaping quotes inside the query string like this: ```python quoted = q.replace('"', '""') quoted = f'"{quoted}"' print(quoted) results = db["data"].search(quoted, columns=["id"]) return [x["id"] for x in results] ``` This works in the sense it doesn't crash, but it also removes access to the search query syntax. Given the well specified definition, it might be possible for sqlite-utils to provide a `db.quote_query(q)` which would intelligently escape a query whilst leaving the syntax intact. This would be very nice! | sqlite-utils 140912432 | issue | {"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/sqlite-utils/issues/246/reactions", "total_count": 0, "+1": 0, "-1": 0, "laugh": 0, "hooray": 0, "confused": 0, "heart": 0, "rocket": 0, "eyes": 0} | completed | ||||||
832687563 | MDExOlB1bGxSZXF1ZXN0NTkzODA1ODA0 | 247 | FTS quote functionality from datasette | DeNeutoy 16001974 | closed | 0 | 2 | 2021-03-16T11:17:34Z | 2021-08-18T18:43:12Z | 2021-08-18T18:43:12Z | CONTRIBUTOR | simonw/sqlite-utils/pulls/247 | Addresses #246 - this is a bit of a kludge because it doesn't actually *validate* the FTS string, just makes sure that it will not crash when executed, but I figured that building a query parser is a bit out of the scope of sqlite-utils and if you actually want to use the query language, you probably need to parse that yourself. | sqlite-utils 140912432 | pull | {"url": "https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/sqlite-utils/issues/247/reactions", "total_count": 0, "+1": 0, "-1": 0, "laugh": 0, "hooray": 0, "confused": 0, "heart": 0, "rocket": 0, "eyes": 0} | 0 |
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