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It should generally be usable at this point. It should generate the queries
correctly (including join order and stuff) and approximately properly do
things. The type of join stuff still hasn't been finished, but if the code were
left as-is it would still be possible to get whatever you wanted out of it, I
think.
Basically: lots of work has been done and we're approaching something more
usable.
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Flip around field/table aliases, do joins a bit differently. They're my main
aims at the moment! I'll also add a preprocessor for the compiler to massage it
into a nicer form there.
I discovered that joins can be done with a pretty sweet syntax in SQL:
(tableA LEFT JOIN tableB) RIGHT JOIN tableC
This is pretty much perfect for my purposes.
Flipping alias maps just makes more sense and removes a whole bunch of
`flip-map` calls that would be unnecessary if the aliases were the other way
around. The user-facing side of the DSL will be left unchanged, though. The
user provides an `{old-name new-name}` map and internally we convert that into
`{new-name old-name}`. Like magic.
I'm also adding a bunch more tests. Hopefully that will make things more likely
to work for long periods of time.
Peace out!
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The recursive calls to `resolve-fields` were not being made due to programmer
error. This has been fixed, so now the field resolution stuff should work
properly again.
This is really highlighting the need for better testing. Get on that!
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The compiler's been simplified a bit by breaking out the `writer` stuff into
its own namespace and by generally making the monadic stuff better. It's all
hidden behind a nice, simple, `clojure-sql.compiler/compile` function now. Call
that and you'll get back what you need. (Internally it's a writer monad which
is really modelled as a state monad with the only operation able to be
performed on the state being `tell`.)
Subqueries are now handled by the DSL in such a way as to not blow up
everything. Subqueries have no support for referencing values in the
superquery, though, so their utility is quite limited at present. Thinking
about how to do subqueries properly may be difficult.
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The query namespace really only exists because I didn't want to put it in dsl,
but I couldn't put it in core without a circular dependency.
Users should only have to :require core to do things, though. It just aliases
other stuff to make that work.
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Now a user can decide what the query's behaviour on deref should be. This means
a user using jdbc can plug in with
(set-query-deref-behaviour! #(... jdbc-query-code-here ...))
if they want, but if a user wants to use the code for something else then they
can do so without needing to import jdbc stuff. (I'll admit I'm not sure what
else they'd do with it, but that's slightly beside the point.) Still left to do
is to provide a helper for the common case (performing an SQL query with jdbc).
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