[5092] | 1 | :mod:`waeup.sirp.catalog` -- Cataloging support for WAeUP SIRP |
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| 2 | ************************************************************** |
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| 3 | |
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| 4 | .. module:: waeup.sirp.catalog |
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| 5 | |
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| 6 | Components that support cataloging and searching objects inside a |
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| 7 | WAeUP SIRP site. |
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| 8 | |
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| 9 | .. :doctest: |
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[5140] | 10 | .. :layer: waeup.sirp.testing.WAeUPSIRPUnitTestLayer |
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[5092] | 11 | |
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| 12 | .. contents:: |
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| 13 | |
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| 14 | Classes |
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| 15 | ======= |
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| 16 | |
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| 17 | :class:`WAeUPQuery` |
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| 18 | ------------------- |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | .. class:: WAeUPQuery() |
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| 21 | |
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| 22 | .. attribute:: grok.implements(hurry.query.interfaces.IQuery) |
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| 23 | |
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| 24 | A `hurry.query.query.Query` compatible query that also supports |
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| 25 | retrival of plain ``Bree`` result sets as used inside a catalog. |
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| 26 | |
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| 27 | Like `hurry.query.query.Query` objects, `WAeUPQuery` is some kind |
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| 28 | of a meta query or 'compound query' that can give the cataloged |
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| 29 | objects (or their int ids) matching one or more 'subqueries'. |
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| 30 | |
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| 31 | This way you can search for objects (or their int ids) that match |
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| 32 | several criteria at the same time. See ``examples`` section below. |
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| 33 | |
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| 34 | A singleton instance of this class is also available as global |
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| 35 | utility. |
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| 36 | |
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| 37 | .. method:: searchResults(query) |
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| 38 | |
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| 39 | Get the cataloged objects determined by ``query``. |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | .. method:: apply(query) |
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| 42 | |
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| 43 | Get the list of int ids (a `BTree` result set) for objects |
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| 44 | determined by ``query``. |
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| 45 | |
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| 46 | The list of int ids is less expensive to compute than the |
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| 47 | complete search results and sufficient, for instance, when you |
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| 48 | only need the number of objects that match a query and not the |
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| 49 | objects themselves. |
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| 50 | |
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| 51 | Examples |
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| 52 | ======== |
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| 53 | |
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| 54 | Getting a general query object |
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| 55 | ------------------------------ |
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| 56 | |
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| 57 | We can get a WAeUPQuery object by asking for an unnamed global utility |
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| 58 | implementing `hurry.query.interfaces.IQuery`: |
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| 59 | |
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| 60 | >>> from hurry.query.interfaces import IQuery |
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| 61 | >>> from zope.component import getUtility |
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| 62 | >>> q = getUtility(IQuery) |
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| 63 | >>> q |
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| 64 | <waeup.sirp.catalog.WAeUPQuery object at 0x...> |
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| 65 | |
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| 66 | This query can get 'subqueries' and delivers the objects found or |
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| 67 | their ids. To show this we have to setup a catalog with some entries. |
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| 68 | |
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| 69 | |
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| 70 | Setting up a catalog and feeding it |
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| 71 | ----------------------------------- |
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| 72 | |
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| 73 | >>> from zope.catalog.interfaces import ICatalog |
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| 74 | >>> from zope.catalog.catalog import Catalog |
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| 75 | >>> mycat = Catalog() |
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| 76 | |
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| 77 | We register this catalog with the component architechture as a utility |
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| 78 | named 'mycatalog': |
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| 79 | |
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| 80 | >>> from zope.component import provideUtility |
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| 81 | >>> provideUtility(mycat, ICatalog, 'mycatalog') |
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| 82 | |
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| 83 | We setup a special content type whose instances we will catalog later: |
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| 84 | |
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| 85 | >>> from zope.interface import Interface, Attribute, implements |
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| 86 | >>> from zope.container.contained import Contained |
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| 87 | >>> class IMammoth(Interface): |
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| 88 | ... name = Attribute('name') |
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| 89 | ... age = Attribute('age') |
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| 90 | |
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| 91 | >>> class Mammoth(Contained): |
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| 92 | ... implements(IMammoth) |
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| 93 | ... def __init__(self, name, age): |
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| 94 | ... self.name = name |
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| 95 | ... self.age = age |
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| 96 | ... def __cmp__(self, other): |
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| 97 | ... return cmp(self.name, other.name) |
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| 98 | |
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| 99 | By including the __cmp__ method we make sure search results can be |
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| 100 | stably sorted. |
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| 101 | |
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| 102 | We also setup a `zope.intid.interfaces.IIntIds` utility. This is not |
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| 103 | necessary for plain catalogs, but when we want to use WAeUPQuery (or |
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| 104 | `hurry.query.query.Query` objects), as to get a unique mapping from |
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| 105 | objects (stored in ZODB) to integer numbers (stored in catalogs), |
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| 106 | these query objects lookup a global IIntIds utiliy: |
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| 107 | |
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| 108 | >>> from zope import interface |
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| 109 | >>> import zope.intid.interfaces |
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| 110 | >>> class DummyIntId(object): |
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| 111 | ... interface.implements(zope.intid.interfaces.IIntIds) |
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| 112 | ... MARKER = '__dummy_int_id__' |
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| 113 | ... def __init__(self): |
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| 114 | ... self.counter = 0 |
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| 115 | ... self.data = {} |
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| 116 | ... def register(self, obj): |
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| 117 | ... intid = getattr(obj, self.MARKER, None) |
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| 118 | ... if intid is None: |
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| 119 | ... setattr(obj, self.MARKER, self.counter) |
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| 120 | ... self.data[self.counter] = obj |
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| 121 | ... intid = self.counter |
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| 122 | ... self.counter += 1 |
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| 123 | ... return intid |
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| 124 | ... def getObject(self, intid): |
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| 125 | ... return self.data[intid] |
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| 126 | ... def __iter__(self): |
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| 127 | ... return iter(self.data) |
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| 128 | >>> intid = DummyIntId() |
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| 129 | >>> from zope.component import provideUtility |
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| 130 | >>> provideUtility(intid, zope.intid.interfaces.IIntIds) |
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| 131 | |
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| 132 | Now we can catalog some mammoths. Here we create a herd and catalog |
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| 133 | each item of it: |
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| 134 | |
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| 135 | >>> from zope.catalog.field import FieldIndex |
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| 136 | >>> mycat['mammoth_name'] = FieldIndex('name', IMammoth) |
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| 137 | >>> mycat['mammoth_age'] = FieldIndex('age', IMammoth) |
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| 138 | |
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| 139 | >>> herd = [ |
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| 140 | ... Mammoth(name='Fred', age=33), |
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| 141 | ... Mammoth(name='Hank', age=30), |
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| 142 | ... Mammoth(name='Wilma', age=28), |
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| 143 | ... ] |
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| 144 | |
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| 145 | >>> for mammoth in herd: |
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| 146 | ... mycat.index_doc(intid.register(mammoth), mammoth) |
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| 147 | |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | Searching for result sets |
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| 150 | ------------------------- |
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| 151 | |
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| 152 | Finally we can perform queries: |
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| 153 | |
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| 154 | >>> from hurry.query import Eq |
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| 155 | >>> from zope.component import getUtility |
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| 156 | >>> subquery1 = Eq(('mycatalog', 'mammoth_name'), 'Fred') |
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| 157 | |
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| 158 | The latter means: search for objects whose name is ``'Fred'`` in the |
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| 159 | ``mammoth_name`` index of a catalog registered as a utility named |
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| 160 | ``mycatalog``. |
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| 161 | |
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| 162 | >>> from hurry.query import Between |
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| 163 | >>> subquery2 = Between(('mycatalog', 'mammoth_age'), 30, 33) |
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| 164 | |
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| 165 | This means: ask for objects cataloged in an index named 'mammoth_age', |
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| 166 | whose cataloged value is between 30 and 33 (including this values). |
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| 167 | |
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| 168 | >>> r1 = q.apply(subquery2) |
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| 169 | >>> r1 |
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| 170 | IFSet([0, 1]) |
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| 171 | |
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| 172 | Using ``apply()`` above, we get a set of values stored in an |
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| 173 | ``IFBTree``: |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | >>> type(r1) |
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| 176 | <type 'BTrees.IFBTree.IFSet'> |
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| 177 | |
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| 178 | ``IFBTree`` objects implement a rather efficient integer to float |
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| 179 | mapping where also integers are allowed as values. For each object |
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| 180 | found (i.e. mammoths whose age is between 30 and 33), we get the |
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| 181 | number of its entry. |
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| 182 | |
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| 183 | To get the real object, we can use intids here, because we setup an |
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| 184 | appropriate IIntIds utility before: |
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| 185 | |
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| 186 | >>> [intid.getObject(x).name for x in r1] |
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| 187 | ['Fred', 'Hank'] |
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| 188 | |
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| 189 | We can (and should) also use the `searchResults()` method explained |
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| 190 | below to do that. |
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| 191 | |
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| 192 | Retrieving BTree sets can, however, make sense, if you want to know |
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| 193 | only the number of results for a particular query or whether there are |
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| 194 | results at all in a more efficient way: |
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| 195 | |
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| 196 | >>> len(r1) |
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| 197 | 2 |
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| 198 | |
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| 199 | Searching for objects |
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| 200 | --------------------- |
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| 201 | |
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| 202 | Very often we don't want to know the catalog-internal 'ids' of |
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| 203 | searched objects but the objects themselves. |
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| 204 | |
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| 205 | This can be done by using the ``searchResults`` method of |
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| 206 | ``WAeUPQuery``: |
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| 207 | |
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| 208 | >>> r2 = q.searchResults(subquery1) |
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| 209 | >>> r2 |
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| 210 | <zope.catalog.catalog.ResultSet instance at 0x...> |
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| 211 | |
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| 212 | >>> list(r2) |
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| 213 | [<Mammoth object at 0x...>] |
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| 214 | |
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| 215 | We got one result item, we can immediately ask for further infos. To |
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| 216 | access a result item by its index number, we have to turn the |
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| 217 | ResultSet into an ordinary list before: |
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| 218 | |
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| 219 | >>> entry = list(r2)[0] |
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| 220 | >>> entry.name, entry.age |
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| 221 | ('Fred', 33) |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | We can also use ``subquery2`` as above: |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | >>> r3 = q.searchResults(subquery2) |
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| 226 | >>> [(x.name, x.age) for x in r3] |
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| 227 | [('Fred', 33), ('Hank', 30)] |
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[5094] | 228 | |
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| 229 | or use both queries at once: |
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| 230 | |
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| 231 | >>> r4 = q.searchResults(subquery1 & subquery2) |
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| 232 | >>> [(x.name, x.age) for x in r4] |
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| 233 | [('Fred', 33)] |
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| 234 | |
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| 235 | which will give us, of course, the same result set as with subquery1. |
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