The MySQLCursorPrepared class inherits from
        MySQLCursor.
      
This class is available as of Connector/Python 1.1.0. The C extension supports it as of Connector/Python 8.0.17.
In MySQL, there are two ways to execute a prepared statement:
- Use the binary client/server protocol to send and receive data. To repeatedly execute the same statement with different data for different executions, this is more efficient than using - PREPAREand- EXECUTE. For information about the binary protocol, see C API Prepared Statement Interface.
        In Connector/Python, there are two ways to create a cursor that enables
        execution of prepared statements using the binary protocol. In
        both cases, the cursor() method of the
        connection object returns a
        MySQLCursorPrepared object:
      
- 
The simpler syntax uses a prepared=Trueargument to thecursor()method. This syntax is available as of Connector/Python 1.1.2.import mysql.connector cnx = mysql.connector.connect(database='employees') cursor = cnx.cursor(prepared=True)
- 
Alternatively, create an instance of the MySQLCursorPreparedclass using thecursor_classargument to thecursor()method. This syntax is available as of Connector/Python 1.1.0.import mysql.connector from mysql.connector.cursor import MySQLCursorPrepared cnx = mysql.connector.connect(database='employees') cursor = cnx.cursor(cursor_class=MySQLCursorPrepared)
        A cursor instantiated from the
        MySQLCursorPrepared class works like this:
      
- The first time you pass a statement to the cursor's - execute()method, it prepares the statement. For subsequent invocations of- execute(), the preparation phase is skipped if the statement is the same.
- The - execute()method takes an optional second argument containing a list of data values to associate with parameter markers in the statement. If the list argument is present, there must be one value per parameter marker.
Example:
cursor = cnx.cursor(prepared=True)
stmt = "SELECT fullname FROM employees WHERE id = %s" # (1)
cursor.execute(stmt, (5,))                            # (2)
# ... fetch data ...
cursor.execute(stmt, (10,))                           # (3)
# ... fetch data ...- The - %swithin the statement is a parameter marker. Do not put quote marks around parameter markers.
- For the first call to the - execute()method, the cursor prepares the statement. If data is given in the same call, it also executes the statement and you should fetch the data.
- For subsequent - execute()calls that pass the same SQL statement, the cursor skips the preparation phase.
        Prepared statements executed with
        MySQLCursorPrepared can use the
        format (%s) or
        qmark (?) parameterization
        style. This differs from nonprepared statements executed with
        MySQLCursor, which can use the
        format or pyformat
        parameterization style.
      
        To use multiple prepared statements simultaneously, instantiate
        multiple cursors from the MySQLCursorPrepared
        class.
      
        The MySQL client/server protocol has an option to send prepared
        statement parameters via the
        COM_STMT_SEND_LONG_DATA command. To use this
        from Connector/Python scripts, send the parameter in question using the
        IOBase interface. Example:
      
from io import IOBase
...
cur = cnx.cursor(prepared=True)
cur.execute("SELECT (%s)", (io.BytesIO(bytes("A", "latin1")), ))