Interactive SQL Examples in JavaScript
Anton Zhiyanov
Posted on March 6, 2023
Reading about SQL is fun, but trying out live examples is even better! So I created JavaScript widgets that turn static SQL code in your articles into interactive examples.
Widgets are an independent part of the Sqlime project — they have zero dependencies on the Sqlime itself.
It looks something like this:
┌───────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ select * from employees │
│ order by salary │
│ limit 5; │
│ │
│ run ► │
└───────────────────────────────────────────┘
┌────┬───────┬────────┬────────────┬────────┐
│ id │ name │ city │ department │ salary │
├────┼───────┼────────┼────────────┼────────┤
│ 11 │ Diane │ London │ hr │ 70 │
│ 12 │ Bob │ London │ hr │ 78 │
│ 21 │ Emma │ London │ it │ 84 │
│ 22 │ Grace │ Berlin │ it │ 90 │
│ 31 │ Cindy │ Berlin │ sales │ 96 │
└────┴───────┴────────┴────────────┴────────┘
Here is a working example. Give it a try.
And here are the four steps to creating executable SQL examples in your own articles or documentation:
1. Include Sqlime JS widgets
You'll need three JavaScript files:
-
sqlite3.js
— SQLite compiled for the browser. -
sqlime-db.js
— the database web component. -
sqlime-examples.js
— the interactive example web component.
Include them from CDN or (better) download and host locally:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@antonz/sqlite@3.40.0/dist/sqlite3.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/sqlime@0.1.2/dist/sqlime-db.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/sqlime@0.1.2/dist/sqlime-examples.js"></script>
You'll also need to download and serve the SQLite WASM file if you're hosting locally:
https://unpkg.com/@antonz/sqlite@3.40.0/dist/sqlite3.wasm
sqlite3.wasm
is used internally by the sqlite3.js
script, so place them in the same folder.
I suggest you host SQLite locally because it weighs ≈1Mb, and CDNs tend to be quite slow with such large files.
You can install all of these using npm
:
npm install @antonz/sqlite
npm install sqlime
Note. @antonz/sqlite
is a copy of the official SQLite WASM build, provided as an NPM package for convenience. You can download and use the build from the SQLite website if you prefer.
2. Write an article as usual
Suppose you are writing a short post about ranking data in SQL:
<p>To rank data in SQL, we use the
<code>rank()</code> window function:</p>
<pre class="example">select
rank() over w as "rank",
name, department, salary
from employees
window w as (order by salary desc)
order by "rank", id;</pre>
<p>the article goes on...</p>
Which renders as ordinary HTML:
To rank data in SQL, we use the rank()
window function:
select
rank() over w as "rank",
name, department, salary
from employees
window w as (order by salary desc)
order by "rank", id;
the article goes on...
3. Load the database
You can create a database from a binary SQLite file or SQL script. I'll go with the latter and use employees.sql, which creates the employees
table and populates it with data.
Load the database using the sqlime-db
web component:
<sqlime-db name="employees" path="./employees.sql"></sqlime-db>
-
name
is the name we'll use later to refer to the database. -
path
is the URL path to the SQL (or binary) database file.
4. Init the examples
The only thing left is to convert your HTML pre
code snippets into interactive examples. Use the sqlime-examples
web component to do this:
<sqlime-examples db="employees" selector="pre.example" editable></sqlime-examples>
-
db
is the name of the database we defined earlier. -
selector
is the CSS selector for your SQL code snippets. -
editable
makes the examples editable (remove for read-only).
And that's it!
sqlime-examples
converts all the snippets with the specified selector, so you only need to include it once (unless you have multiple databases to run your examples on).
Summary
Executable SQL examples are an excellent fit for any kind of documentation:
- They are more informative than static snippets.
- They increase engagement and encourage experimentation,
- They are lightweight, easy to set up, and do not require a server.
Try adding interactive SQL to your articles, or ask a question on GitHub if you have one.
Follow @ohmypy on Twitter to keep up with new posts
Posted on March 6, 2023
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