pghstore-clj is a small helper library to help you work with PostgresSQL's hstore data type with the postgresql JDBC adapter (I use version 9.1-901.jdbc4) in Clojure. It provides two simple helpers to help you get your data into and out of a hash-map.
Add pghstore-clj to your project.clj file in leiningen:
[pghstore-clj "0.1.0"]
Once installed, you can use it like so:
user> (use '[pghstore-clj.core])
nil
user> (def h (to-hstore {:color "blue" :size "small"}))
#'user/h
user> h
#<PGobject "color"=>"blue", "size"=>"small">
user> (from-hstore h)
{:color "blue", :size "small"}
user>
Korma example
If you have a table named "products" with an hstore column called "attributes", a korma insertion statement might look like this:
(insert products
(values {:name "computer"
:attributes (to-hstore {:color "black" :manufacturer "samsung"})}))
When you pull the row back out again, just call "from-hstore" on the value at attributes.
user> row
{:name "computer", :attributes #<PGobject "color"=>"black", "manufacturer"=>"samsung">}
user> (from-hstore (:attributes row))
{:color "black", :manufacturer "samsung"}
user>
If you are using Korma's defentity
function, you can apply the hstore translation at the entity rather than at query-time. For the above products example, your entity might look something like so:
(defentity products
(prepare #(update-in % [:attributes] to-hstore))
(transform #(update-in % [:attributes] from-hstore)))
With this in place, the translation is transparent and you can insert plain data structures:
(insert products
(values {:name "computer"
:attributes {:color "black" :manufacturer "samsung"}}))
Ideally, these transformation functions would be applied at the JDBC level, so that you only have to work with hashes - This is going to take a bit more work.
Copyright © 2012 Blake Smith
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.