Development workflow with postgres: tables.sql, seed.sql & drop.sql

When working with your app it is helpful to be able to deal with all of your data easily.

We'll create a workflow to easily wipe away your development data and start fresh.

Note: Create a database - easy way

Use postgres' createdb command- the -U flag is the username

createdb DATABASE_NAME -U USERNAME

Create a DB called pokemons

createdb pokemons -U akira

Save your DB tables:

When you want to add a table (including the first table in your DB we will be writing that sql in a file: tables.sql

We will be using one new piece of syntax to do that: CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS

CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS students (
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    name TEXT,
    phone VARCHAR(15),
    email TEXT
);

So you can simply run the file each time you add a table, and only the uncreated tables will get created.

To run the file on the command line:

psql -d DATABASE_NAME -U USERNAME -f tables.sql

Start the db with some dummy data - seed.sql

Write some lines of SQL that will populate the db with some small data.

This is normally things such as a first default user and other things you need to get up and running with your app.

It works the same way as tables.sql above, but it's only for data.

Inside of seed.sql:

INSERT INTO movies (title, description, rating) VALUES('Cars', 'a movie', 9);

That way we always have some dummy data to start out our app with.

Run the file:

psql -d DATABASE_NAME -U USERNAME -f tables.sql

Clear away your changes:

In development it can be very useful to clear away the data you are writing into your db easily- just run this sql, then run your tables.sql above.

DROP DATABASE dbname;

Tips for working with your DB in node

Return the thing you created: RETURNING

client.query(insertQuery, (err, result) => {
  // inside of result is the newly inserted thing

Return the id of the result of the insert.

INSERT INTO movies (title, description, rating) VALUES('Cars', 'a movie', 9) RETURNING id;

Return the result of the insert.

INSERT INTO movies (title, description, rating) VALUES('Cars', 'a movie', 9) RETURNING *;

Date Data Type

When you set data type date in postgres, you get out a javascript Date object.

```

Use `DEFAULT now()` to automatically have a `created_at` column in your database.

const createTableText = timestamptz_col TIMESTAMPTZ DEFAULT now(), created_at TIMESTAMPTZ DEFAULT now() ); // create our temp table client.query(createTableText, (err, result) => { // read the row back out client.query('SELECT * FROM dates', (err, res) => { console.log(result.rows) // { // date_col: 2017-05-29T05:00:00.000Z, // timestamp_col: 2017-05-29T23:18:13.263Z, // timestamptz_col: 2017-05-29T23:18:13.263Z // } }) });


You can also use the plain js date data type to insert rows.

// insert the current time into it const now = new Date() const insertText = 'INSERT INTO dates(date_col, timestamp_col, timestamtz_col' client.query(insertText, [now, now, now], (err, res) => { console.log( res.rows ); });


### Pairing Exercise:
Recreate the same app as before, but using the DB setup techniques we just discussed. Copy the code you wrote from the other exercise.

mkdir nodepg cd nodepg npm init npm install pg touch index.js touch tables.sql touch seed.sql createdb testdb -U USERNAME psql -d DATABASE_NAME -U USERNAME -f tables.sql psql -d DATABASE_NAME -U USERNAME -f seed.sql


Use tables.sql to record the tables you need.

Example:

CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS students ( id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, name TEXT, phone VARCHAR(15), email TEXT );


Use seed.sql to put some starting dummy data in the DB.

Example:

INSERT INTO students (name, phone, email) VALUES ('hello', 'bye', 'monkey');


Using the syntax above, run your `index.js` script that runs all your sql commands.

node index.js ```

Use DROP to wipe it away and start again.

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