syntaqlite 0.0.8

Parser, formatter, validator, and language server for SQLite SQL — built on SQLite's own grammar
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  syntaqlite

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A parser, formatter, validator, and language server for SQLite SQL, built on SQLite's own grammar and tokenizer. If SQLite accepts it, syntaqlite parses it. If SQLite rejects it, so does syntaqlite.

Docs · Playground · VS Code Extension · MCP Server

Note: syntaqlite is at 0.x — APIs and CLI flags may change before 1.0.

Why syntaqlite

Developer tooling for SQLite treats it as a second-class language. Most tools build a generic SQL parser and bolt SQLite on as a "flavor" — hand-written grammars, regex-based tokenizers, or subsets of SQL that approximate SQLite rather than matching it. That falls apart because SQLite has a deep surface area of syntax that generic parsers don't handle.

syntaqlite uses SQLite's own Lemon-generated grammar and tokenizer, compiled from C. The parser doesn't approximate SQLite — it is SQLite's grammar compiled into a reusable library.

SQLite SQL is also not one fixed language. It has 22 compile-time flags that change what syntax the parser accepts, another 12 that gate built-in functions, and the language constantly evolves across versions. Because SQLite is embedded, you can't assume everyone is on the latest version — Android 15 ships SQLite 3.44.3, seven major versions behind latest. syntaqlite tracks all of this:

syntaqlite --sqlite-version 3.32.0 validate \
  -e "DELETE FROM users WHERE id = 1 RETURNING *;"
error: syntax error near 'RETURNING'
 --> <stdin>:1:32
  |
1 | DELETE FROM users WHERE id = 1 RETURNING *;
  |                                ^~~~~~~~~

RETURNING was added in SQLite 3.35.0 — Android 13 still ships SQLite 3.32.2.

We've tested against ~396K statements from SQLite's upstream test suite with ~99.7% agreement on parse acceptance. See the detailed comparison for how syntaqlite stacks up against other tools in parser accuracy, formatter correctness, validator quality, and performance.

What it does

Validate — catch errors without a database (docs)

Finds unknown tables, columns, and functions against your schema — the same errors sqlite3_prepare would catch, but without needing a database. Unlike sqlite3, syntaqlite finds all errors in one pass:

CREATE TABLE orders (id, status, total, created_at);

WITH
  monthly_stats(month, revenue, order_count) AS (
    SELECT strftime('%Y-%m', o.created_at), SUM(o.total)
    FROM orders o WHERE o.status = 'completed'
    GROUP BY strftime('%Y-%m', o.created_at)
  )
SELECT ms.month, ms.revenue, ms.order_count,
  ROUDN(ms.revenue / ms.order_count, 2) AS avg_order
FROM monthly_stats ms;

sqlite3 stops at the first error and misses the function typo entirely:

Error: in prepare, table monthly_stats has 2 values for 3 columns

syntaqlite finds both — CTE column count mismatch and the ROUDN typo — with source locations and suggestions:

error: table 'monthly_stats' has 2 values for 3 columns
  |
2 | monthly_stats(month, revenue,
  | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~

warning: unknown function 'ROUDN'
   |
14 | ROUDN(ms.revenue / ms.order_count,
   | ^~~~~
   = help: did you mean 'round'?

Format (docs)

Deterministic formatting with configurable line width, keyword casing, and indentation:

echo "select u.id,u.name, p.title from users u join posts p on u.id=p.user_id
where u.active=1 and p.published=true order by p.created_at desc limit 10" \
  | syntaqlite fmt
SELECT u.id, u.name, p.title
FROM users u
  JOIN posts p ON u.id = p.user_id
WHERE u.active = 1
  AND p.published = true
ORDER BY p.created_at DESC
LIMIT 10;

Version and compile-flag aware (docs)

Pin the parser to a specific SQLite version or enable compile-time flags to match your exact build:

# Reject syntax your target SQLite version doesn't support
syntaqlite --sqlite-version 3.32.0 validate query.sql

# Enable optional syntax from compile-time flags
syntaqlite --sqlite-cflag SQLITE_ENABLE_MATH_FUNCTIONS validate query.sql

Validate SQL inside other languages (experimental)

SQL lives inside Python and TypeScript strings in most real codebases. syntaqlite extracts and validates it, handling interpolation holes:

# app.py
def get_user_stats(user_id: int):
    return conn.execute(
        f"SELECT nme, ROUDN(score, 2) FROM users WHERE id = {user_id}"
    )
syntaqlite validate --experimental-lang python app.py
warning: unknown function 'ROUDN'
 --> app.py:3:23
  |
3 |         f"SELECT nme, ROUDN(score, 2) FROM users WHERE id = {user_id}"
  |                       ^~~~~
  = help: did you mean 'round'?

Editor integration (docs)

Full language server — no database connection required. Diagnostics, format on save, completions, and semantic highlighting.

VS Code — install the syntaqlite extension from the marketplace.

Claude Codesyntaqlite plugin install · Claude Desktop / Cursorpip install syntaqlite[mcp] (docs)

Other editors — point your LSP client at:

syntaqlite lsp

Parse (docs)

Full abstract syntax tree with side tables for tokens, comments, and whitespace — for code generation, migration tooling, or static analysis.

syntaqlite parse -e "SELECT 1 + 2" --output text

Install (all methods)

Homebrew

brew install LalitMaganti/tap/syntaqlite

Shell (macOS / Linux)

curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -LsSf https://github.com/LalitMaganti/syntaqlite/releases/latest/download/syntaqlite-cli-installer.sh | sh

PowerShell (Windows)

powershell -ExecutionPolicy ByPass -c "irm https://github.com/LalitMaganti/syntaqlite/releases/latest/download/syntaqlite-cli-installer.ps1 | iex"

Cargo

cargo install syntaqlite-cli

Use as a library (docs)

Rust (API docs)

[dependencies]
syntaqlite = { version = "0.0.8", features = ["fmt"] }

JavaScript / WASM (API docs)

npm install @syntaqlite/js

C — the parser, tokenizer, formatter, and validator all have C APIs. See the C API docs for details.

Architecture (docs)

The parser and tokenizer are written in C, directly wrapping SQLite's own grammar. Everything else — formatter, validator, LSP — is written in Rust with C bindings available.

The split is intentional. The C parser is as portable as SQLite itself: it can run inside database engines, embedded systems, or anywhere SQLite runs. The Rust layer moves fast for developer tooling where the standard library and the crate ecosystem matter.

Building from source

tools/install-build-deps
tools/cargo build

Contributing

See the contributing guide for architecture overview and testing instructions.

License

Apache 2.0. SQLite components are public domain under the SQLite blessing. See LICENSE for details.