Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
jio
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Guillaume Royer
jio
Commits
87caa37b
Commit
87caa37b
authored
Dec 23, 2013
by
Marco Mariani
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
document keys and schemas
parent
1a445a10
Changes
2
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
2 changed files
with
216 additions
and
0 deletions
+216
-0
docs/index.rst
docs/index.rst
+1
-0
docs/keys.rst
docs/keys.rst
+215
-0
No files found.
docs/index.rst
View file @
87caa37b
...
...
@@ -42,6 +42,7 @@ jIO documentation
available_storages
gid_storage
complex_queries
keys
metadata
developers
style_guide
...
...
docs/keys.rst
0 → 100644
View file @
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
});
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment