Deletes a single item in a table by primary key. You can perform a conditional delete operation that deletes the item if it exists, or if it has an expected attribute value.
See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/dynamodb_delete_item/ for full documentation.
dynamodb_delete_item(
TableName,
Key,
Expected = NULL,
ConditionalOperator = NULL,
ReturnValues = NULL,
ReturnConsumedCapacity = NULL,
ReturnItemCollectionMetrics = NULL,
ConditionExpression = NULL,
ExpressionAttributeNames = NULL,
ExpressionAttributeValues = NULL,
ReturnValuesOnConditionCheckFailure = NULL
)
[required] The name of the table from which to delete the item. You can also provide the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the table in this parameter.
[required] A map of attribute names to AttributeValue
objects, representing the
primary key of the item to delete.
For the primary key, you must provide all of the key attributes. For example, with a simple primary key, you only need to provide a value for the partition key. For a composite primary key, you must provide values for both the partition key and the sort key.
This is a legacy parameter. Use ConditionExpression
instead. For more
information, see
Expected
in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
This is a legacy parameter. Use ConditionExpression
instead. For more
information, see
ConditionalOperator
in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
Use ReturnValues
if you want to get the item attributes as they
appeared before they were deleted. For
delete_item
, the valid values are:
NONE
- If ReturnValues
is not specified, or if its value is
NONE
, then nothing is returned. (This setting is the default for
ReturnValues
.)
ALL_OLD
- The content of the old item is returned.
There is no additional cost associated with requesting a return value aside from the small network and processing overhead of receiving a larger response. No read capacity units are consumed.
The ReturnValues
parameter is used by several DynamoDB operations;
however, delete_item
does not recognize any
values other than NONE
or ALL_OLD
.
Determines whether item collection metrics are returned. If set to
SIZE
, the response includes statistics about item collections, if any,
that were modified during the operation are returned in the response. If
set to NONE
(the default), no statistics are returned.
A condition that must be satisfied in order for a conditional
delete_item
to succeed.
An expression can contain any of the following:
Functions:
attribute_exists | attribute_not_exists | attribute_type | contains | begins_with | size
These function names are case-sensitive.
Comparison operators: = | <> | < | > | <= | >= | BETWEEN | IN
Logical operators: AND | OR | NOT
For more information about condition expressions, see Condition Expressions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
One or more substitution tokens for attribute names in an expression.
The following are some use cases for using ExpressionAttributeNames
:
To access an attribute whose name conflicts with a DynamoDB reserved word.
To create a placeholder for repeating occurrences of an attribute name in an expression.
To prevent special characters in an attribute name from being misinterpreted in an expression.
Use the # character in an expression to dereference an attribute name. For example, consider the following attribute name:
Percentile
The name of this attribute conflicts with a reserved word, so it cannot
be used directly in an expression. (For the complete list of reserved
words, see Reserved Words
in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide). To work around this, you
could specify the following for ExpressionAttributeNames
:
{"#P":"Percentile"}
You could then use this substitution in an expression, as in this example:
#P = :val
Tokens that begin with the : character are expression attribute values, which are placeholders for the actual value at runtime.
For more information on expression attribute names, see Specifying Item Attributes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
One or more values that can be substituted in an expression.
Use the : (colon) character in an expression to dereference an attribute value. For example, suppose that you wanted to check whether the value of the ProductStatus attribute was one of the following:
Available | Backordered | Discontinued
You would first need to specify ExpressionAttributeValues
as follows:
{ ":avail":{"S":"Available"}, ":back":{"S":"Backordered"}, ":disc":{"S":"Discontinued"} }
You could then use these values in an expression, such as this:
ProductStatus IN (:avail, :back, :disc)
For more information on expression attribute values, see Condition Expressions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
An optional parameter that returns the item attributes for a
delete_item
operation that failed a condition
check.
There is no additional cost associated with requesting a return value aside from the small network and processing overhead of receiving a larger response. No read capacity units are consumed.