Feature #7848
closedSupport array / multiple values in $query->contains
Added by Morton Jonuschat over 14 years ago. Updated about 8 years ago.
0%
Description
The contains constraint should accept an Array/ObjectStorage/Traversable as condition so that building a query like this is possible
$query->matching(
$query->contains('relation', array(1,2,3,4,5))
);
Currently the only way is to build an array of $query->contains('relation', $relation) and combine that with a logicalOr condition.
Looking at the resulting SQL this leads to an excessive and unnecessary amount of subqueries.
Updated by Felix Oertel over 14 years ago
- Due date set to 2010-06-04
- Status changed from New to Needs Feedback
- Start date changed from 2010-05-20 to 2010-05-21
Hi,
what exactly do you try to achieve with your statment, or better: what should the sql output of $query->contains('relation', array(1,2,3,4,5))
be? At first glance, the sql generated by this would not differ from those built with logicalOr or did I miss a way to simplify that statement?
regards, foertel
Updated by Christian Müller over 14 years ago
Felix Oertel wrote:
Hi,
what exactly do you try to achieve with your statment, or better: what should the sql output of
$query->contains('relation', array(1,2,3,4,5))
be? At first glance, the sql generated by this would not differ from those built with logicalOr or did I miss a way to simplify that statement?regards, foertel
Maybe check also $query->in() as that could be exactly what you want.
regards,
Christian
Updated by Morton Jonuschat over 14 years ago
Ok, given I have two tables linked by a M:M relation the logicalOr / array of constraints results in something like this:
SELECT tx_extension_domain_model_parent.* FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent WHERE ( tx_extension_domain_model_parent.uid IN ( SELECT uid_local FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent_child_mm WHERE uid_foreign =20 ) OR tx_extension_domain_model_parent.uid IN ( SELECT uid_local FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent_child_mm WHERE uid_foreign =19 ) ) AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.deleted =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.hidden =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.pid IN ( 27 )
So this results in N+1 queries being performed by the database.
I would like something like this to be the result when I pass in an array / collection of objects:
SELECT tx_extension_domain_model_parent.* FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent WHERE tx_extension_domain_model_parent.uid IN ( SELECT uid_local FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent_child_mm WHERE uid_foreign IN (20,19) ) AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.deleted =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.hidden =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.pid IN ( 27 )
$query->in() is a partial solution, but it means that I need to (manually) reduce collection of model objects ( I already have ) into an array of say UIDs and then use $query->in('relation.uid', $array_of_uids). This seems redundant and counter-inituitive. Why would I need to manually perform these steps when even the choice of the constraint name (contains) implies querying a subset. The way it currently works a better name would be "is()", but that's only semantics.
Updated by Christian Müller over 14 years ago
Ok, I agree that should be handled better... Anyone else has some idea how to archive that with current code? Otherwise I would take it to make a patch for having arrays too in contains.
Morton Jonuschat wrote:
Ok, given I have two tables linked by a M:M relation the logicalOr / array of constraints results in something like this:
[...]So this results in N+1 queries being performed by the database.
I would like something like this to be the result when I pass in an array / collection of objects:
[...]
$query->in() is a partial solution, but it means that I need to (manually) reduce collection of model objects ( I already have ) into an array of say UIDs and then use $query->in('relation.uid', $array_of_uids). This seems redundant and counter-inituitive. Why would I need to manually perform these steps when even the choice of the constraint name (contains) implies querying a subset. The way it currently works a better name would be "is()", but that's only semantics.
Updated by Sebastian Kurfuerst over 14 years ago
Hi everybody,
Ok, I agree that should be handled better... Anyone else has some idea how to archive that with current code? Otherwise I would take it to make a patch for having arrays too in contains.
I think just using an array in contains() is not really possible, as one cannot know which case is meant:
Example: $query->contains('relation', array(1,2,3,4,5));
- Find elements where relation is 1, or 2, or 3, ... (this is what you suggested)
- Find elements where there exists a relation to 1, AND to 2, AND to 3. (this is also a valid possibility in an M:N relation case).
... and Extbase can not resolve this ambiguity.
$query->in() is a partial solution, but it means that I need to (manually) reduce collection of model objects ( I already have ) into an array of say UIDs and then use $query->in('relation.uid', $array_of_uids).
Are you sure? I think you can directly use the model objects like $query->in('relation', $array_of_model_objects)
, and Extbase should figure out the UID stuff by itself.
If that is not supported, I'd rather suggest to include support for this, as we don't have such an ambiquity in this case.
Greets,
Sebastian
Updated by Sebastian Kurfuerst over 14 years ago
Ah, one more thing: When we change behavior here, we should open a ticket in the FLOW3 issue tracker, so Karsten can implement the corresponding functionality in the FLOW3 query language. Keeping these two parts in sync is crucial.
Updated by Christian Müller over 14 years ago
Sebastian Kurfuerst wrote:
Ah, one more thing: When we change behavior here, we should open a ticket in the FLOW3 issue tracker, so Karsten can implement the corresponding functionality in the FLOW3 query language. Keeping these two parts in sync is crucial.
Good point about the "AND" case.
Yes, something like that with $query->in() is what I hoped for... If its not there that would be a much cleaner way to go. This would do for the "OR" case, what about the "AND" case of relations?
Updated by Morton Jonuschat over 14 years ago
1)
$query->in('relation', $array_of_model_objects)didn't work for me, it was one the first things I tried. I needed to reduce the array_of_model_objects to uids and query the relation uid.
2) I think there's a logical flaw in your "AND" case. I can't find a case where you will construct something where there is an "AND" condition on the child side of the relation with only a single attribute being queried. Any example I can come up with results in an empty result set. In my opinion the "AND" case happens on the parent side of the relation - which means it's an extra condition on the query and the current logicalAnd is the way to go. I think AND only comes into play if you are searching a parent object where there's a child with attr=value1 AND there's a child with attr=value2.
Updated by Christian Müller over 14 years ago
Morton Jonuschat wrote:
1) [...] didn't work for me, it was one the first things I tried. I needed to reduce the array_of_model_objects to uids and query the relation uid.
2) I think there's a logical flaw in your "AND" case. I can't find a case where you will construct something where there is an "AND" condition on the child side of the relation with only a single attribute being queried. Any example I can come up with results in an empty result set. In my opinion the "AND" case happens on the parent side of the relation - which means it's an extra condition on the query and the current logicalAnd is the way to go. I think AND only comes into play if you are searching a parent object where there's a child with attr=value1 AND there's a child with attr=value2.
What if you search for a parent that has relation to two childs, so something like that (just modified copy&paste, not optimized):
SELECT tx_extension_domain_model_parent.* FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent WHERE ( tx_extension_domain_model_parent.uid IN ( SELECT uid_local FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent_child_mm WHERE uid_foreign =20 ) AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.uid IN ( SELECT uid_local FROM tx_extension_domain_model_parent_child_mm WHERE uid_foreign =19 ) ) AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.deleted =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.hidden =0 AND tx_extension_domain_model_parent.pid IN ( 27 )
Should find you all parents that have childs with uid 20 AND 19. But for me this could be solved with logicalAnd.
Updated by Morton Jonuschat over 14 years ago
Well, even with this example I can't see any advantage to having a "AND" Operator in the contains() constraint:
- The result is no different than using a simple logicalAnd, the programming using logicalAnd is more obvious (and better readable)
- There is no SQL command "optimizes" the N+1 Queries, so the "AND" would be some magic that just reduces a very little amount of typing for the programmer.
Contrasting the OR case
- The result is very different and much more optimized
- Most other ORMs handle it this way (OK, some have "whereIn" or something like that)
- There is an explicit SQL command for this use case.
Updated by Bastian Waidelich about 14 years ago
- Category set to Extbase: Generic Persistence
- Assignee set to Jochen Rau
- Target version set to Extbase 1.3.0beta1
If I get it right, we just need to convert objects to uids in
$query->in('property', array($object1, $object2))
correct?
Updated by Bastian Waidelich over 13 years ago
- Target version changed from Extbase 1.3.0beta1 to Extbase 1.4
Any news here?
Updated by Morton Jonuschat over 13 years ago
I would be all too happy to settle for the solution of converting objects to ids you proposed 6 months ago. Beats doing it by hand any time.
Updated by Alexander Schnitzler about 12 years ago
- Assignee deleted (
Jochen Rau) - Target version changed from Extbase 1.4 to Extbase 6.1
Updated by Robert Weißgraeber over 11 years ago
- Target version changed from Extbase 6.1 to Extbase 6.2
Updated by Anja Leichsenring over 11 years ago
- Target version changed from Extbase 6.2 to Extbase 6.3
Updated by Markus Timtner about 10 years ago
@all review: Has there anything happened here ever since??
Updated by Stefan Froemken about 10 years ago
I don't think so. In current projects I work that way:
// create OR-Query for categories foreach (GeneralUtility::trimExplode(',', $categories) as $category) { $categoryOrQuery[] = 'sys_category_record_mm.uid_local IN (\'' . (int) $category . '\')'; } ... WHERE (' . implode(' OR ', $categoryOrQuery) . ')
Further keep in mind that Extbase does not respect col "tablenames" and "fieldname" in MM-tables (Yes I know that Frans is just working on that). So in that case it's better to use statements instead.
Stefan
Updated by Alexander Opitz about 10 years ago
- Project changed from 534 to TYPO3 Core
- Category changed from Extbase: Generic Persistence to Extbase
- Status changed from Needs Feedback to New
- Target version changed from Extbase 6.3 to 7.0
Updated by Mathias Schreiber almost 10 years ago
- Target version changed from 7.0 to 7.1 (Cleanup)
Updated by Helmut Hummel almost 10 years ago
- Status changed from New to Needs Feedback
- Complexity set to medium
Here are my thoughts on this:
$query->in('singleValueProperty', $arrayOfThings)
"In" comparison is to compare a single value property on the left side with an array of values.
Putting this in a sentence or directive (which the QOM is all about) it would be:
"Find entities which have any of these things in my single value property"
$query->contains('collectionProperty', $oneThing)
"Contains" comparison is to compare a collection property on the left with a single value.
Putting this in a sentence or directive it would be:
"Find entities which have this thing in their collection"
Making contains accept an array as comparator, we would change the directive as follows:
The directive would translate to:
"Find entities which have these things in their collection"
Which could mean:
"Find entities which have all these things in their collection"
or
"Find entities which have any of these things in their collection"
This is exactly the ambiguity Sebastian is talking about.
At this point it does not really matter whether the case with all these things (referred as AND case in previous comments) could be expressed otherwise or is the "rarer" use case, it is a valid one!
When writing:
$query->contains('tags', $arrayOfTags)
I could surely expect to find entities that has all of the given tags attached, not any of them.
Implementing a solution favoring one over the other would be wrong.
Conclusion:
This is a "won't fix"
What could be done though, is to throw a more meaningful exception in case one passes an array as comparator to contains.
Additionally we could provide a utility method, which returns an array of identifiers for a given collection of entities or value objects so one could use:
$query->in('tags.uid', SomeClass::someMeaningfulUtilityMethod($arrayOfTagEntities)
Which would result in the exact same query proposed in https://review.typo3.org/#/c/34514/6/typo3/sysext/extbase/Classes/Persistence/Generic/Storage/Typo3DbQueryParser.php and the overhead would also be the same, just the place where this transformation happens is different.
This would keep the QOM consistent, while aiding developers for common tasks a bit.
Besides that all of this could easily be adopted for Flow Doctrine Persistence (where the exact same issue exists)
Updated by Morton Jonuschat almost 10 years ago
I'm cool with that, making it easier for the simple cases is a good step. For the complex cases I've worked around them for 4.5 years now and fallen back to pure SQL statements whenever needed so for me that's a non-issue nowadays.
Updated by Stefan Neufeind almost 10 years ago
Yes, fine with me. (Sorry for the late reply. Missed one notification-email.)
We'd insert one object inbetween, in the comparison, to make clear if "any of" or "all of this" are meant.
Updated by Stephan Großberndt over 9 years ago
Should a new issue be created for this utility method, which returns an array of identifiers for a given collection of entities or value objects? Has this already been done?
Updated by Benni Mack over 9 years ago
- Target version changed from 7.1 (Cleanup) to 7.4 (Backend)
Updated by Susanne Moog over 9 years ago
- Target version changed from 7.4 (Backend) to 7.5
Updated by Benni Mack about 9 years ago
- Target version changed from 7.5 to 8 LTS
Updated by Moritz Ahl almost 9 years ago
Just a side note: Fixing this issue would also make life easier on the view level - for example, the ability to use the Default Fluid Pagebrowser Widget, which depends on queries to be built with QOM (as the widget currently cannot handle "statement" queries). And since Core Support for sys_categories has been added, it's even more important to provide an efficient way to handle "qualified" mm tables.
Updated by Alexander Opitz over 8 years ago
- Status changed from Needs Feedback to New
Updated by Morton Jonuschat about 8 years ago
- Status changed from New to Closed
- Assignee deleted (
Morton Jonuschat) - Target version deleted (
8 LTS)
The main issue is a "Won't fix", the helper method - if anybody wants to tackle it - should be done in a dedicated issue.
Closing this due to inactivity.