Class: ThinkingSphinx::Attribute
- Defined in:
- lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb
Overview
Attributes - eternally useful when it comes to filtering, sorting or grouping. This class isn’t really useful to you unless you’re hacking around with the internals of Thinking Sphinx - but hey, don’t let that stop you.
One key thing to remember - if you’re using the attribute manually to generate SQL statements, you’ll need to set the base model, and all the associations. Which can get messy. Use Index.link!, it really helps.
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#query_source ⇒ Object
Returns the value of attribute query_source.
Attributes inherited from Property
#admin, #alias, #associations, #columns, #faceted, #model
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #all_datetimes? ⇒ Boolean
- #all_ints? ⇒ Boolean
- #all_strings? ⇒ Boolean
-
#config_value(offset = nil, delta = false) ⇒ Object
Returns the configuration value that should be used for the attribute.
- #include_as_association? ⇒ Boolean
-
#initialize(source, columns, options = {}) ⇒ Attribute
constructor
To create a new attribute, you’ll need to pass in either a single Column or an array of them, and some (optional) options.
- #live_value(instance) ⇒ Object
-
#to_select_sql ⇒ Object
Get the part of the SELECT clause related to this attribute.
-
#type ⇒ Object
Returns the type of the column.
- #type_to_config ⇒ Object
- #updatable? ⇒ Boolean
Methods inherited from Property
#admin?, #changed?, #public?, #to_facet, #to_group_sql, #unique_name
Constructor Details
#initialize(source, columns, options = {}) ⇒ Attribute
To create a new attribute, you’ll need to pass in either a single Column or an array of them, and some (optional) options.
Valid options are:
-
:as => :alias_name
-
:type => :attribute_type
-
:source => :field, :query, :ranged_query
Alias is only required in three circumstances: when there’s another attribute or field with the same name, when the column name is ‘id’, or when there’s more than one column.
Type is not required, unless you want to force a column to be a certain type (but keep in mind the value will not be CASTed in the SQL statements). The only time you really need to use this is when the type can’t be figured out by the column - ie: when not actually using a database column as your source.
Source is only used for multi-value attributes (MVA). By default this will use a left-join and a group_concat to obtain the values. For better performance during indexing it can be beneficial to let Sphinx use a separate query to retrieve all document,value-pairs. Either :query or :ranged_query will enable this feature, where :ranged_query will cause the query to be executed incremental.
Example usage:
Attribute.new(
Column.new(:created_at)
)
Attribute.new(
Column.new(:posts, :id),
:as => :post_ids
)
Attribute.new(
Column.new(:posts, :id),
:as => :post_ids,
:source => :ranged_query
)
Attribute.new(
[Column.new(:pages, :id), Column.new(:articles, :id)],
:as => :content_ids
)
Attribute.new(
Column.new("NOW()"),
:as => :indexed_at,
:type => :datetime
)
If you’re creating attributes for latitude and longitude, don’t forget that Sphinx expects these values to be in radians.
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 70 def initialize(source, columns, = {}) super @type = [:type] @query_source = [:source] @crc = [:crc] @delta_query = [:delta_query] @type ||= :multi unless @query_source.nil? if @type == :string && @crc @type = is_many? ? :multi : :integer end source.attributes << self end |
Instance Attribute Details
#query_source ⇒ Object
Returns the value of attribute query_source.
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 12 def query_source @query_source end |
Instance Method Details
#all_datetimes? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 195 def all_datetimes? all_of_type?(:datetime, :date, :timestamp) end |
#all_ints? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 191 def all_ints? all_of_type?(:integer) end |
#all_strings? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 199 def all_strings? all_of_type?(:string, :text) end |
#config_value(offset = nil, delta = false) ⇒ Object
Returns the configuration value that should be used for the attribute. Special case is the multi-valued attribute that needs some extra configuration.
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 140 def config_value(offset = nil, delta = false) if type == :multi multi_config = include_as_association? ? "field" : source_value(offset, delta).gsub(/\s+/m, " ").strip "uint #{unique_name} from #{multi_config}" else unique_name end end |
#include_as_association? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 131 def include_as_association? ! (type == :multi && (query_source == :query || query_source == :ranged_query || query_source == :query_with_delta)) end |
#live_value(instance) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 180 def live_value(instance) object = instance column = @columns.first column.__stack.each { |method| object = object.send(method) return sphinx_value(nil) if object.nil? } sphinx_value object.send(column.__name) end |
#to_select_sql ⇒ Object
Get the part of the SELECT clause related to this attribute. Don’t forget to set your model and associations first though.
This will concatenate strings and arrays of integers, and convert datetimes to timestamps, as needed.
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 92 def to_select_sql return nil unless include_as_association? separator = all_ints? || all_datetimes? || @crc ? ',' : ' ' clause = columns_with_prefixes.collect { |column| case type when :string adapter.convert_nulls(column) when :datetime adapter.cast_to_datetime(column) when :multi column = adapter.cast_to_datetime(column) if is_many_datetimes? column = adapter.convert_nulls(column, '0') if is_many_ints? column else column end }.join(', ') clause = adapter.crc(clause) if @crc clause = adapter.concatenate(clause, separator) if concat_ws? clause = adapter.group_concatenate(clause, separator) if is_many? "#{clause} AS #{quote_column(unique_name)}" end |
#type ⇒ Object
Returns the type of the column. If that’s not already set, it returns :multi if there’s the possibility of more than one value, :string if there’s more than one association, otherwise it figures out what the actual column’s datatype is and returns that.
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 155 def type @type ||= begin base_type = case when is_many?, is_many_ints? :multi when @associations.values.flatten.length > 1 :string else translated_type_from_database end if base_type == :string && @crc base_type = :integer else @crc = false unless base_type == :multi && is_many_strings? && @crc end base_type end end |
#type_to_config ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 119 def type_to_config { :multi => :sql_attr_multi, :datetime => :sql_attr_timestamp, :string => :sql_attr_str2ordinal, :float => :sql_attr_float, :boolean => :sql_attr_bool, :integer => :sql_attr_uint, :bigint => :sql_attr_bigint }[type] end |
#updatable? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/thinking_sphinx/attribute.rb', line 176 def updatable? [:integer, :datetime, :boolean].include?(type) && !is_string? end |