According to psycopg2: insert multiple rows with one query, it is much more efficient to use psycopg2's execute instead of executemany . Can others confirm?
The above StackOverflow question suggests using mogrify for creating statements of the sort:
INSERT INTO table VALUES (value1, value2), (value3, value4)
Is it possible to generate such a statement using the regular execute function? I thought something of the form
cursor.execute("""INSERT INTO table VALUES (%s, %s), (%s, %s)""", ((value1,value2),(value3,value4)))
would work.
UPDATE:
For instance, I tried I passing into execute the sql statement:
insert into history (timestamp) values (%s),(%s);
with the folowing tuple:
(('2014-04-27 14:07:30.000000',), ('2014-04-27 14:07:35.000000',))
but all I got back was the error:
no results to fetch
To use the execute method place the data to be inserted in a list. A list will be adapted by psycopg2 to an array. Then you unnest the array and cast the values as necessary
import psycopg2
insert = """
insert into history ("timestamp")
select value
from unnest(%s) s(value timestamp)
returning *
;"""
data = [('2014-04-27 14:07:30.000000',), ('2014-04-27 14:07:35.000000',)]
conn = psycopg2.connect("host=localhost4 port=5432 dbname=cpn")
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.execute(insert, (data,))
print cursor.fetchall()
conn.commit()
conn.close()
Not sure if the performance difference from executemany will be significant. But I think the above is neater. The returning
clause will, as the name suggests, return the inserted tuples.
BTW timestamp
is a reserved word and should not be used as a column name.