I want to get the distinct objects based on ID, but I am not able to do this. I am facing following error
Generic parameter 'S' could not be inferred
Take a look at following picture and let me know what is the problem Please help me. I am stuck in it
If you look at the type signature of distinct(by:) (func distinct<S>(by keyPaths: S) -> Results<Person> where S : Sequence, S.Element == String) you can see that it expects an input argument of type Sequence<String>. Moreover, looking at the documentation of the method, it tells you that you need to pass in the keyPaths as Strings that you want to use produce distinct results.
So using the Dog class example from the official documentation, if you wanted to produce distinct results based on the name property, your function call would look like this:
class Dog: Object {
#objc dynamic var name = ""
#objc dynamic var age = 0
}
realm.objects(Dog.self).distinct(by: ["name"])
Related
dartques = {'Color':[], 'Fruits':[], 'Hobbies':[]};
How to access the values using index in map?
I need to access only key or value using index.
Just like we do in list
=>list[1]
you can get it like this
var element = dartques.values.elementAt(0);
also for Dart 2.7+ you can write extension function
extension GetByKeyIndex on Map {
elementAt(int index) => this.values.elementAt(index);
}
var element = dartques.elementAt(1);
For accessing the values by index, there are two approaches:
Get Key by index and value using the key:
final key = dartques.keys.elementAt(index);
final value = dartques[key];
Get value by index:
final value = dartques.values.elementAt(index);
You may choose the approach based on how and what data are stored on the map.
For example if your map consists of data in which there are duplicate values, I would recommend using the first approach as it allows you to get key at the index first and then the value so you can know if the value is the wanted one or not.
But if you do not care about duplication and only want to find a value based on Index then you should use the second approach, as it gives you the value directly.
Note: As per this Answer By Genchi Genbutsu, you can also use Extension methods for your convenience.
Important:
Since the default implementation for Map in dart is LinkedHashmap you are in great luck. Otherwise Generic Map is known for not maintaining order in many programming languages.
If this was asked for any other language for which the default was HashMap, it might have been impossible to answer.
You can convert it to two lists using keys and values methods:
var ques = {'Color':['a'], 'Fruits':['b'], 'Hobbies':['c']};
List keys = ques.keys.toList();
List values = ques.values.toList();
print (keys);
print (values);
The output:
[Color, Fruits, Hobbies]
[[a], [b], [c]]
So you can access it normally by using keys[0], for example.
If I’m looking at a Record pulled from a StatementResult, what is the right way to determine the type of a particular value? I know Neo will try to coerce types for me but what if I want to know, for example, if something is a Node? There is a typeOf() method that you can call but I don’t see where I get the Value to pass to that method. For example in the following snippet how do I determine the type of the value held by key?
StatementResult statementResult = session.run(cypher,paramMap);
Record record = single();
record.get('key').type().isTypeOf()
How about:
boolean isNumber = record.get("key").type().equals(session.typeSystem().NUMBER());
See https://github.com/neo4j/neo4j-java-driver/blob/1.0/driver/src/main/java/org/neo4j/driver/v1/types/TypeSystem.java for details.
I think Stefan's answer is perfectly valid, however it will bound your code to the v1 of the protocol.
I would use the internal namespace in order to keep it working in further versions, for eg :
import static org.neo4j.driver.internal.types.InternalTypeSystem.TYPE_SYSTEM;
if ( record.get( "key" ).hasType( TYPE_SYSTEM.NODE() ) {
// it is a node
}
From what I can see in the driver test, it is the same usage :
https://github.com/neo4j/neo4j-java-driver/blob/1.1/driver/src/test/java/org/neo4j/driver/v1/types/TypeSystemTest.java#L210
Is there an easy way to get a default value from an Erlang record definition? Suppose I have something like this:
-record(specialfield, {
raw = <<"default">> :: string()
}).
I would like to have some way to retrieve the default value of the raw field. Something like this would be very simple:
#specialfield.raw % => <<"default">>
This is not possible. I would need to instantiate a record in order to get the default value:
Afield = #specialfield{}
DefaultValue = Afeild#specialfield.raw
DefaultValue % => <<"default">>
Is there an easier way of doing this? I seems like there should be some way to retrieve the default value without having to create an instance of the record.
How about:
raw_default() -> <<"default">>.
-record(specialfield, { raw = raw_default() }).
And now you have a function with the default in it. This will be extremely fast since it is a function call to a constant value. If this is also too slow, enable inlining.
Constructing an empty record and accessing one field can be done on one line:
(#specialfield{})#specialfield.raw.
Take a look at erlang - records, search section "11.8".
There's not much special about records - they're just a tuple at runtime. So to get the field raw from the tuple of default values that is the internal representation of #specialfield{} you would use:
element(#specialfield.raw, #specialfield{}).
In this case, #specialfield.raw is the index of the value for raw in the #specialfield tuple. When you pass in specialfield that resolves to a tuple in the form {specialfield, <<"default">>}.
I have this code in my controller:
def cols = grailsApplication.getDomainClass('com.archie.Build').persistentProperties.collect {it.name}
The code above will allow me to list all the property names I have in Build class. Now, I would like to include also the properties data type, ie. boolean, String etc...
Somewhat like the output is:
[floorType:String, floorWidth:Float, ......]
Maybe not exactly like that, or maybe similar, but as long as I can return their data type. Can someone help? Thank you.
Each entry in persistentProperties is a GrailsDomainClassProperty, and this provides access to the type of the property as a Class object:
def props = [:]
grailsApplication.getDomainClass('com.archie.Build'
).persistentProperties.each {
props[it.name] = it.type.name
}
Or just pass the persistentProperties array itself through to the GSP, then extract .name and .type there.
You may also wish to consider using constrainedProperties instead of/in addition to the persistentProperties. The constrainedProperties map lists only those properties that are mentioned in the domain class constraints block, but the iterator over this map is guaranteed to return the properties in the order they are listed in the constraints. This is how the default scaffolding operates, as I'm not aware of any way to control the order of the persistentProperties array.
When I use criteria queries, the result contains array list of lazy initialized objects. that is, the list has values with handler org.codehaus.groovy.grails.orm.hibernate.proxy.GroovyAwareJavassistLazyInitializer.
This prevent me from doing any array operation (minus, remove etc) in it. When I use, GORM methods, I get array list of actual object types. How can I get the actual objects in criteria query?
The code is listed below.
availableTypes = Type.withCriteria() {
'in'("roleFrom", from)
'in'("roleTo", to)
}
availableTypes (an array list) has one value , but not actual object but value with a handler of GroovyAwareJavassistLazyInitializer
availableTypes (an array list) has values with type Type
availableTypes = Type.findByRoleFrom(from)
---------- Update ----------
I did further troubleshooting, and this is what I found. Probably the above description might be misleading, but I kept it in case it helps.
When using findAllBy for the first time, I get proxy objects rather than the actual instance. Then, I invoke the method through an ajax call, the actual instance is loaded (anything to do with cache loading??). When I refresh the page, it again loads the proxy
def typeFrom = Type.findAllByParty(partyFrom)
there is another use of findAllBy in the same method, which always returns actual instances.
def relFrom = Relation.findAllByParty(partyFrom)
When compared the two classes, the attribute 'party' of class Roles is part of a 1-m relation. like
class Role {
RoleType roleType
LocalDate validFrom
LocalDate validTo
static belongsTo = [party : Party ]
...
}
I know if I do statement like Party.findAll(), the role instances would be proxy till they access. But, when using gorm directly on the class (Role), why I am getting the proxy objects ???
thanks for the help.
thanks.
Turns out are a couple of possible solutions which I came across but didn't try, such as
Overloading the equals method so that the proxy and the domain
object use a primary key instead of the hashCode for equality
Using a join query so that you get actual instances back and not proxies
GrailsHibernateUtil.unwrapProxy(o)
HibernateProxyHelper.getClassWithoutInitializingProxy(object)
One solution that worked for me was to specify lazy loading to be false in the domain object mapping.
History of this problem seems to be discussed here: GRAILS-4614
See also: eager load