From the sqlite FAQ:
From within a C/C++ program (or a script using Tcl/Ruby/Perl/Python bindings) you can get access to table and index names by doing a SELECT
on a special table named "SQLITE_MASTER". Every SQLite database has an SQLITE_MASTER
table that defines the schema for the database. The SQLITE_MASTER
table looks like this:
CREATE TABLE sqlite_master (
type TEXT,
name TEXT,
tbl_name TEXT,
rootpage INTEGER,
sql TEXT
);
So to get a list of all table names execute:
SELECT name FROM sqlite_master
WHERE type='table'
ORDER BY name;
To get column names for a given table, use the pragma table_info
command:
This pragma returns one row for each column in the named table. Columns in the result set include the column name, data type, whether or not the column can be NULL, and the default value for the column.
This command works just fine from python:
>>> import sqlite3
>>> conn = sqlite3.connect(':mem:')
>>> for row in conn.execute("pragma table_info('sqlite_master')").fetchall():
... print row
...
(0, u'type', u'text', 0, None, 0)
(1, u'name', u'text', 0, None, 0)
(2, u'tbl_name', u'text', 0, None, 0)
(3, u'rootpage', u'integer', 0, None, 0)
(4, u'sql', u'text', 0, None, 0)
Unfortunately pragma
statements do not work with parameters; you'll have to manually insert the table name (make sure it's not sourced from an untrusted source and escape it properly).