sub populate {
my $self = shift;
- my ($data, $guard);
-
# this is naive and just a quick check
# the types will need to be checked more thoroughly when the
# multi-source populate gets added
- if (ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY') {
- return unless @{$_[0]};
-
- $data = $_[0] if (ref $_[0][0] eq 'HASH' or ref $_[0][0] eq 'ARRAY');
- }
-
- $self->throw_exception('Populate expects an arrayref of hashrefs or arrayref of arrayrefs')
- unless $data;
+ my $data = (
+ ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY'
+ and
+ ( @{$_[0]} or return )
+ and
+ ( ref $_[0][0] eq 'HASH' or ref $_[0][0] eq 'ARRAY' )
+ and
+ $_[0]
+ ) or $self->throw_exception('Populate expects an arrayref of hashrefs or arrayref of arrayrefs');
# FIXME - no cref handling
# At this point assume either hashes or arrays
if(defined wantarray) {
- my @results;
-
- $guard = $self->result_source->schema->storage->txn_scope_guard
- if ( @$data > 2 or ( @$data == 2 and ref $data->[0] eq 'ARRAY' ) );
+ my (@results, $guard);
if (ref $data->[0] eq 'ARRAY') {
+ # column names only, nothing to do
+ return if @$data == 1;
+
+ $guard = $self->result_source->schema->storage->txn_scope_guard
+ if @$data > 2;
+
@results = map
{ my $vals = $_; $self->new_result({ map { $data->[0][$_] => $vals->[$_] } 0..$#{$data->[0]} })->insert }
@{$data}[1 .. $#$data]
;
}
else {
+
+ $guard = $self->result_source->schema->storage->txn_scope_guard
+ if @$data > 1;
+
@results = map { $self->new_result($_)->insert } @$data;
}
# positional(!) explicit column list
if ($i == 0) {
+ # column names only, nothing to do
+ return if @$data == 1;
$colinfo->{$data->[0][$_]} = { pos => $_, name => $data->[0][$_] } and push @$colnames, $data->[0][$_]
for 0 .. $#{$data->[0]};
}
### start work
+ my $guard;
$guard = $rsrc->schema->storage->txn_scope_guard
if $slices_with_rels;
### main source data
# FIXME - need to switch entirely to a coderef-based thing,
# so that large sets aren't copied several times... I think
- $rsrc->storage->insert_bulk(
+ $rsrc->storage->_insert_bulk(
$rsrc,
[ @$colnames, sort keys %$rs_data ],
[ map {
B<NOTE:> You will almost always need a corresponding L</as> attribute when you
use L</select>, to instruct DBIx::Class how to store the result of the column.
-Also note that the L</as> attribute has nothing to do with the SQL-side 'AS'
-identifier aliasing. You can however alias a function, so you can use it in
-e.g. an C<ORDER BY> clause. This is done via the C<-as> B<select function
-attribute> supplied as shown in the example above.
+
+Also note that the L</as> attribute has B<nothing to do> with the SQL-side
+C<AS> identifier aliasing. You B<can> alias a function (so you can use it e.g.
+in an C<ORDER BY> clause), however this is done via the C<-as> B<select
+function attribute> supplied as shown in the example above.
=head2 +select
slot name in which the column value will be stored within the
L<Row|DBIx::Class::Row> object. The value will then be accessible via this
identifier by the C<get_column> method (or via the object accessor B<if one
-with the same name already exists>) as shown below. The L</as> attribute has
-B<nothing to do> with the SQL-side C<AS>. See L</select> for details.
+with the same name already exists>) as shown below.
+
+The L</as> attribute has B<nothing to do> with the SQL-side identifier
+aliasing C<AS>. See L</select> for details.
$rs = $schema->resultset('Employee')->search(undef, {
select => [
This attribute is a shorthand for specifying a L</join> spec, adding all
columns from the joined related sources as L</+columns> and setting
-L</collapse> to a true value. For example, the following two queries are
-equivalent:
+L</collapse> to a true value. It can be thought of as a rough B<superset>
+of the L</join> attribute.
+
+For example, the following two queries are equivalent:
my $rs = $schema->resultset('Artist')->search({}, {
prefetch => { cds => ['genre', 'tracks' ] },
=back
-HAVING is a select statement attribute that is applied between GROUP BY and
-ORDER BY. It is applied to the after the grouping calculations have been
-done.
+The HAVING operator specifies a B<secondary> condition applied to the set
+after the grouping calculations have been done. In other words it is a
+constraint just like L</where> (and accepting the same
+L<SQL::Abstract syntax|SQL::Abstract/WHERE CLAUSES>) applied to the data
+as it exists after GROUP BY has taken place. Specifying L</having> without
+L</group_by> is a logical mistake, and a fatal error on most RDBMS engines.
+
+E.g.
having => { 'count_employee' => { '>=', 100 } }
or with an in-place function in which case literal SQL is required:
- having => \[ 'count(employee) >= ?', [ count => 100 ] ]
+ having => \[ 'count(employee) >= ?', 100 ]
=head2 distinct