Cursor
Summary
A cursor is a data access object that can be used to iterate through the set of rows in a table or to insert new rows into a table. Cursors have three forms: search, insert, or update. Cursors are commonly used to read and update attributes.
Discussion
Legacy:
The Cursor object is superseded by the cursors in the arcpy.da module and only remains for use in legacy scripts.
Methods
deleteRow(row)
Deletes a row in the database. The row corresponding to the current position of the cursor will be deleted.
| Name | Explanation | Data type |
|---|---|---|
|
row |
The row that will be deleted. |
Row |
insertRow(row)
Inserts a new row into the database.
| Name | Explanation | Data type |
|---|---|---|
|
row |
The row that will be inserted. |
Row |
newRow()
Creates an empty Row object.
Return value
| Data type | Explanation |
|---|---|
|
Row |
A new empty |
next()
Returns the next object at the current index.
Return value
| Data type | Explanation |
|---|---|
|
Object |
The next object at the current index. |
reset()
Sets the current enumeration index (used by the next method) back to the first element.
updateRow(row)
The updateRow method can be used to update the row at the current position of an update cursor.
| Name | Explanation | Data type |
|---|---|---|
|
row |
The row used to update the current position of the cursor. |
Row |
Code sample
Use a search cursor to view field values in rows.
import arcpy
# Set the workspace
arcpy.env.workspace = "c:/base/data.gdb"
# Create the search cursor
cursor = arcpy.SearchCursor("roads", '"TYPE" <> 4')
# Iterate through the rows in the cursor
for row in cursor:
print("Name: {0}, CFCC code: {1}".format(row.NAME, row.CFCC))
del cursor, row
Use an update cursor to change field values in rows.
import arcpy
# Set the workspace
arcpy.env.workspace = "c:/base/data.gdb"
# Create the update cursor
cursor = arcpy.UpdateCursor("roads")
# Update the road buffer distance field based on road type.
# Road type is either 1,2,3,4 Distance is in meters.
for row in cursor:
row.setValue("BUFFER_DIST", row.getValue("TYPE") * 100)
cursor.updateRow(row)
# Delete cursor and row objects
del cursor, row
Use an insert cursor to create rows in a table.
import datetime
import arcpy
# Create insert cursor for table
cursor = arcpy.InsertCursor("c:/base/data.gdb/roads_maint")
# Create 25 new rows. Set default values on distance and CFCC code
for i in range(1000, 1025):
row = cursor.newRow()
row.setValue('rowid', i)
row.setValue('distance', 100)
row.setValue('CFCC', 'A10')
row.setValue('LastInsp', datetime.datetime.now())
cursor.insertRow(row)
# Delete cursor and row objects
del cursor, row