Basic API
Find, update and delete records.
The examples use the following prisma schema:
model Post {
id String @id @default(cuid())
createdAt DateTime @default(now())
updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt
published Boolean
title String
content String?
comments Comment[]
}
model Comment {
id String @id @default(cuid())
createdAt DateTime @default(now())
content String
post Post @relation(fields: [postID], references: [id])
postID String
}
Reading data
Find many records
posts, err := client.Post.FindMany(
db.Post.Title.Equals("hi"),
).Exec(ctx)
If no records are found, the query above returns a slice without returning an error (like normal SQL queries).
Find a unique record
FindUnique finds a record which is guaranteed to be unique, like @id fields or fields marked with @unique.
post, err := client.Post.FindUnique(
db.Post.ID.Equals("123"),
).Exec(ctx)
if errors.Is(err, db.ErrNotFound) {
log.Printf("no record with id 123")
} else if err != nil {
log.Printf("error occurred: %s", err)
}
Find a single record
FindFirst finds the first record found. It has the same query capabilities as FindMany, but acts as a convenience method to return just the first record found.
post, err := client.Post.FindFirst(
db.Post.Title.Equals("hi"),
).Exec(ctx)
if errors.Is(err, db.ErrNotFound) {
log.Printf("no record with title 'hi' found")
} else if err != nil {
log.Printf("error occurred: %s", err)
}
log.Printf("post: %+v", post)
This returns an ErrNotFound
error (exported by the generated client) if there was no such record.
Query API
The query operations change based on the data types in your schema. For example, integers and floats will have greater than and less than operations, while strings have prefix and suffix operations.
posts, err := client.Post.FindMany(
// query for posts containing the title "What"
db.Post.Title.Contains("What"),
).Exec(ctx)
To explore more query filters, see all possible query filters.
Querying for relations
You can query for relations by using "Some" or "Every" to query for records where only some or all of the records match respectively. You can nest those queries as deep as you like.
// get posts which have at least one comment with a content "My Content" and that post's titles are all "What up?"
posts, err := client.Post.FindMany(
db.Post.Title.Equals("What up?"),
db.Post.Comments.Some(
db.Comment.Content.Equals("My Content"),
),
).Exec(ctx)
To explore querying for relations in detail, see more relation query examples.