Introduction
This post explores Prisma, an ORM, which stands for Object Relational Mapper. If you're not familiar with ORMs the idea is you can communicate with your database using JavaScript objects and function calls rather than having to write raw SQL queries. This has the benefit of being much simpler to write and improve your productivity.
Getting Started with Prisma
To get started install the Prisma CLI as a dev dependency in your TypeScript project:
npm install prisma --save-dev
Set up the Prisma ORM with the init
command of the Prisma CLI:
npx prisma init --datasource-provider sqlite
This will create a .env
file and a prisma
directory with a schema.prisma
file.
The .env
file will contain the environment variable for the DATABASE_URL
with the path to the SQLite database:
DATABASE_URL="file:./dev.db"
One-to-Many relationship
The schema.prisma
file will contain the Prisma schema where you can define your data model.
Here's an example of this showing a one-to-many relationship between users and posts:
model User {
id String @id @default(uuid())
email String @unique
name String?
posts Post[]
}
model Post {
id String @id @default(uuid())
title String
content String?
published Boolean @default(false)
author User @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])
authorId String
}
The models map to tables in the SQLite database. Inside the model are the column names with their data types and field attributes. For example, you can ensure fields are unique by setting the @unique
attribute and default values using @default
.
The @relation
attribute is used to show the connection between two models. In this example, authorId
is a foreign key column in the Post
table and references the primary key id
in the User
table. You can explore this more in Prisma Studio later.
To push the changes in the Prisma schema file to the database run the npx prisma db push
command. This is useful for quick iterations. When you're ready to commit to the changes you can create a migration using the npx prisma migrate dev --name init
command where init
is the name of the migration. This way you can keep track of schema changes over time.
Prisma Studio
Run the npx prisma studio
command to explore your database in a special web app. This will allow you view/add/edit the data in your database.
Querying Data
Here's an example of using select
to select specific fields.
const postTitles = await prisma.post.findMany({
select: {
title: true
}
});
You can also perform other CRUD operations such as creating, reading, updating and deleting data in a similar way.
Raw Queries
💡 There may be times where what you want to do is not supported in which case you can drop down to SQL with the raw query API.
Conclusion
This post explored getting started with Prisma and some of its features. Share your experiences working with Prisma or other ORMs in the comments.
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