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    This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.

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    Tableview reload

    Pythonista
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    • JonB
      JonB last edited by

      Ok, where to begin?

      Your data source is providing cells based on ids , which you never update. So, of course your data source will never know about the update. When you add the rows, you should also update ids and ids1 . Even better than using a global variable, you should create an instance of your data source, and then add ids as an attribute to your instance.

      Other issues:

       self.cells = [ui.TableViewCell('value1') #'subtitle'
                        for _ in range(len(self.data))]
      

      This is not doing what you think... cell for row gets called EVERY time a cell comes into view. You are creating and throwing away a zillion TableViewCells. If you want to reuse cells, fine, but create them in __init__ . But then don’t forget to append to it in your button callback.

      You should never call reload, until your data source is prepared to provide the new rows (or in case of delete, your data source must know the rows are deleted). If you keep your data up to date, then you never actually need to call reload, unless you have somehow changed your entire table.

      Tableviews can be a bit tricky — the whole idea is that the table view and tableviewcells are not the data, they are just a lightweight view showing a window to the data. Don’t worry about trying to cache the table view cells — just create a new cell, fill in the info about the row, and return it. The OS magic then handles displaying the cell. The OS will query your data source before the first view to figure out how many cells there will be, and then figures out how many cells will fit on the screen, and only asks for that many cells. As you scroll, it is asking for cells. If you call add or delete, it will ask for data about the inserted cells.

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      • Rufat
        Rufat last edited by

        Thank you so much, I’l try to figure it out. Just can’t find any live example in the web. But how it works for deleting? And same thing (System) doesn’t work for adding the rows.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Rufat
          Rufat last edited by

          I did it, thank you so much!

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          • JonB
            JonB last edited by

            You should post your solution (or a link to gist) back here to help others that might have similar issues.

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            • Rufat
              Rufat last edited by Rufat

              Here is how it works for me.

                   import ui
                   import sqlite3 as db
                   import dialogs
              
                   conn = db.connect('pythonsqlite.db')
                   conn.row_factory = lambda cursor, row: row[0]
                   c = conn.cursor()
                  ids = c.execute('SELECT name FROM Names').fetchall()
                  ids1 = c.execute('SELECT surname FROM Names').fetchall()
              
              
                class MyTableViewDataSource (object):
                 def __init__(self):
              	self.items = ids		
              	self.items1 = ids1
              	
              def tableview_number_of_sections(self, tableview):
              	# Return the number of sections (defaults to 1)
              	return 1
              
              def tableview_number_of_rows(self, tableview, section):
              	# Return the number of rows in the section
              	return len(self.items)
              
              def tableview_cell_for_row(self, tableview, section, row):
              	# Create and return a cell for the given section/row
              	cell = ui.TableViewCell('subtitle')
              	cell.text_label.text = self.items[row]
              	cell.detail_text_label.text = self.items1[row]
              	return cell
              
              def tableview_title_for_header(self, tableview, section):
              	# Return a title for the given section.
              	# If this is not implemented, no section headers will be shown.
              	return ('Name')
              	
              
              def tableview_can_delete(self, tableview, section, row):
              	# Return True if the user should be able to delete the given row.
              	return True
              
              def tableview_can_move(self, tableview, section, row):
              	# Return True if a reordering control should be shown for the given row (in editing mode).
              	return True
              
              def tableview_delete(self, tableview, section, row):
              	# Called when the user confirms deletion of the given row.
              	#my = ("Name=""'"+tableview.data_source.data[row]+"'")
              	#print(my)
              	print ('Delete row ' + tableview.data_source.items[row])
              	sqliteConnection = db.connect('pythonsqlite.db')
              	cursor = sqliteConnection.cursor()
              	print("Connected to SQLite")
              	
              	# Deleting single record now
              	sql_delete_query = "DELETE from Names where Name=""'"+tableview.data_source.items[row]+"'"
              	print(sql_delete_query)
              	cursor.execute(sql_delete_query)
              	sqliteConnection.commit()
              	print("Record deleted successfully ")
              	
              	del tableview.data_source.items[row]
              	del tableview.data_source.items1[row]
              	cursor.close()
              	tableview.reload()
              	pass
              
              def tableview_move_row(self, tableview, from_section, from_row, to_section, to_row):
              	# Called when the user moves a row with the reordering control (in editing mode).
              	pass
              	
              def add(self, sender):
              	item = dialogs.input_alert('Add your name')
              	item1 = dialogs.input_alert('Add your surname')
              	if not item == None:
              		self.items.append(item)
              		self.items1.append(item1)
              		view['tableview1'].reload()
              	sqliteConnection = db.connect('pythonsqlite.db')
              	cursor = sqliteConnection.cursor()
              	print("Connected to SQLite")
              	# adding single record now
              	sql_add_data = "INSERT INTO Names (Name, Surname) VALUES "+"("+"'"+item+"'"+", "+"'"+item1+"'"+")"
              	cursor.execute(sql_add_data)
              	sqliteConnection.commit()
              	cursor.close()
              	
              
                  view = ui.load_view('MyForm')
                  source = MyTableViewDataSource()
                  view.right_button_items = [ui.ButtonItem(title='add', action=source.add)]
                  view['tableview1'].data_source = source
                  view.present('sheet')
              
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              • soydepr
                soydepr last edited by

                But. Can you bring a dB from another place and drop it in Pythonista and how u do it

                cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cvp
                  cvp @soydepr last edited by cvp

                  @soydepr you can import the db file into Pythonista but you could even open/access it without importing it, like explained here for a script.

                  Here under, how to import

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                  • soydepr
                    soydepr last edited by soydepr

                    @cvp said:

                    import

                    For me the file is not accessible greyes out
                    https://imgur.com/KTy2w8o all my dB files are not selectables

                    cvp 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • cvp
                      cvp @soydepr last edited by cvp

                      @soydepr said:

                      greyes out

                      You're right, sorry

                      If you use "external files", it will work

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • cvp
                        cvp @soydepr last edited by cvp

                        @soydepr other solution: you can share a .db file from the Files app to Pythonista and run the standard "import file" script

                        soydepr 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • soydepr
                          soydepr @cvp last edited by

                          @cvp is original solution a bug ,

                          Thanks I confirm your other solution does work

                          cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • cvp
                            cvp @soydepr last edited by cvp

                            @soydepr you can also try

                            	f = dialogs.pick_document() 
                            

                            .db files are not grayed

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • soydepr
                              soydepr last edited by

                              This post is deleted!
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