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Aurel
jio
Commits
87caa37b
Commit
87caa37b
authored
Dec 23, 2013
by
Marco Mariani
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document keys and schemas
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docs/index.rst
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87caa37b
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@@ -42,6 +42,7 @@ jIO documentation
available_storages
gid_storage
complex_queries
keys
metadata
developers
style_guide
...
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docs/keys.rst
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87caa37b
Search Keys
===========
Features like case insensitive, accent-removing, full-text searches and more can be implemented
by customizing jIO's query behavior.
Let's start with a simple search:
.. code-block:: javascript
var query = {
type: 'simple',
key: 'someproperty',
value: comparison_value,
operator: '='
}
Each of the ``.someproperty`` attribute in objects' metadata is compared with
``comparison_value`` through a function defined by the '=' operator.
Such comparison functions (=, !=, <...) are predefined in jIO, but you can provide your own:
.. code-block:: javascript
var strictEqual = function (object_value, comparison_value,
wildcard_character) {
return comparison_value === object_value;
};
var query = {
type: 'simple',
key: {
read_from: 'someproperty',
default_match: strictEqual
},
value: comparison_value
}
Note: ``default_match`` will only be used if no ``operator`` is specified.
You may decide to interpret the ``wildcard_character`` or just ignore it, as in this case.
If you need to convert or preprocess the values before comparison, you can provide
a conversion function:
.. code-block:: javascript
var numberType = function (obj) {
return parseFloat('3.14');
};
var query = {
type: 'simple',
key: {
read_from: 'someproperty',
cast_to: numberType
},
value: comparison_value
}
In this case, the operator is still the default '='.
You can combine ``cast_to`` and ``default_match``:
.. code-block:: javascript
var query = {
type: 'simple',
key: {
read_from: 'someproperty',
cast_to: numberType,
default_match: strictEqual
},
value: comparison_value
}
Now the query returns all objects for which the following is true:
.. code-block:: javascript
strictEqual(numberType(metadata.someproperty),
numberType(comparison_value))
For a more useful example, the following function removes the accents
from any string:
.. code-block:: javascript
var accentFold = function (s) {
var map = [
[new RegExp('[àáâãäå]', 'gi'), 'a'],
[new RegExp('æ', 'gi'), 'ae'],
[new RegExp('ç', 'gi'), 'c'],
[new RegExp('[èéêë]', 'gi'), 'e'],
[new RegExp('[ìíîï]', 'gi'), 'i'],
[new RegExp('ñ', 'gi'), 'n'],
[new RegExp('[òóôõö]', 'gi'), 'o'],
[new RegExp('œ', 'gi'), 'oe'],
[new RegExp('[ùúûü]', 'gi'), 'u'],
[new RegExp('[ýÿ]', 'gi'), 'y']
];
map.forEach(function (o) {
var rep = function (match) {
if (match.toUpperCase() === match) {
return o[1].toUpperCase();
}
return o[1];
};
s = s.replace(o[0], rep);
});
return s;
};
A more robust solution to manage diacritics is recommended for production
environments, with unicode normalization, like (untested):
https://github.com/walling/unorm/
Key Schemas
-----------
Instead of providing the key object for each attribute you want to filter,
you can group all of them in a schema object for reuse:
.. code-block:: javascript
var key_schema = {
key_set: {
date_day: {
read_from: 'date',
cast_to: 'dateType',
default_match: 'sameDay'
},
date_month: {
read_from: 'date',
cast_to: 'dateType',
default_match: 'sameMonth'
}
},
cast_lookup: {
dateType: function (obj) {
if (Object.prototype.toString.call(obj) === '[object Date]') {
return obj;
}
return new Date(obj);
}
},
match_lookup: {
sameDay: function (a, b) {
return (
(a.getFullYear() === b.getFullYear()) &&
(a.getMonth() === b.getMonth()) &&
(a.getDate() === b.getDate())
);
},
sameMonth: function (a, b) {
return (
(a.getFullYear() === b.getFullYear()) &&
(a.getMonth() === b.getMonth())
);
}
}
}
With this schema, we have created two 'virtual' metadata attributes,
``date_day`` and ``date_month``. When queried, they match values that
happen to be in the same day, ignoring the time, or the same month, ignoring
both time and day.
A key_schema object can have three properties:
* ``key_set`` - required.
* ``cast_lookup`` - optional, a mapping of name: function that will
be used if cast_to is a string. If cast_lookup is not provided,
then cast_to must be a function.
* ``match_lookup`` - optional, a mapping of name: function that will
be used if default_match is a string. If match_lookup is not provided,
then default_match must be a function.
Using a schema
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A schema can be used:
* In a query constructor. The same schema will be applied to all the sub-queries:
.. code-block:: javascript
complex_queries.QueryFactory.create({...}, key_schema).exec(...);
* In the ``jIO.createJIO()`` method. The same schema will be used
by all the queries created with the ``.allDocs()`` method:
.. code-block:: javascript
var jio = jIO.createJIO({
type: 'local',
username: '...',
application_name: '...',
key_schema: key_schema
});
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