gristlabs_grist-core/sandbox/grist/table.py

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import collections
import itertools
import types
import six
from six.moves import xrange
import column
import depend
import docmodel
import logger
import lookup
import records
import relation as relation_module # "relation" is used too much as a variable name below.
import usertypes
log = logger.Logger(__name__, logger.INFO)
def _make_sample_record(table_id, col_objs):
"""
Helper to create a sample record for a table, used for auto-completions.
"""
# This type gets created with a property for each column. We use property-methods rather than
# plain properties because this sample record is created before all tables have initialized, so
# reference values (using .sample_record for other tables) are not yet available.
RecType = type(table_id, (), {
# Note col=col to bind col at lambda-creation time; see
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10452770/python-lambdas-binding-to-local-values
col.col_id: property(lambda self, col=col: col.sample_value())
for col in col_objs
if column.is_user_column(col.col_id) or col.col_id == 'id'
})
return RecType()
def get_default_func_name(col_id):
return "_default_" + col_id
def get_validation_func_name(index):
return "validation___%d" % index
class UserTable(object):
"""
Each data table in the document is represented in the code by an instance of `UserTable` class.
These names are always capitalized. A UserTable provides access to all the records in the table,
as well as methods to look up particular records.
Every table in the document is available to all formulas.
"""
# UserTables are only created in auto-generated code by using UserTable as decorator for a table
# model class. I.e.
#
# @grist.UserTable
# class Students:
# ...
#
# makes the "Students" identifier an actual UserTable instance, so that Students.lookupRecords
# and so on can be used.
def __init__(self, model_class):
docmodel.enhance_model(model_class)
self.Model = model_class
column_ids = {col for col in model_class.__dict__ if not col.startswith("_")}
column_ids.add('id')
self.table = None
def _set_table_impl(self, table_impl):
self.table = table_impl
@property
def Record(self):
return self.table.Record
@property
def RecordSet(self):
return self.table.RecordSet
# Note these methods are named camelCase since they are a public interface exposed to formulas,
# and we decided camelCase was a more user-friendly choice for user-facing functions.
def lookupRecords(self, **field_value_pairs):
"""
Name: lookupRecords
Usage: UserTable.__lookupRecords__(Field_In_Lookup_Table=value, ...)
Returns a [RecordSet](#recordset) matching the given field=value arguments. The value may be any expression,
most commonly a field in the current row (e.g. `$SomeField`) or a constant (e.g. a quoted string
like `"Some Value"`) (examples below).
If `sort_by=field` is given, sort the results by that field.
For example:
```
People.lookupRecords(Email=$Work_Email)
People.lookupRecords(First_Name="George", Last_Name="Washington")
People.lookupRecords(Last_Name="Johnson", sort_by="First_Name")
```
See [RecordSet](#recordset) for useful properties offered by the returned object.
See [CONTAINS](#contains) for an example utilizing `UserTable.lookupRecords` to find records
where a field of a list type (such as `Choice List` or `Reference List`) contains the given
value.
"""
return self.table.lookup_records(**field_value_pairs)
def lookupOne(self, **field_value_pairs):
"""
Name: lookupOne
Usage: UserTable.__lookupOne__(Field_In_Lookup_Table=value, ...)
Returns a [Record](#record) matching the given field=value arguments. The value may be any expression,
most commonly a field in the current row (e.g. `$SomeField`) or a constant (e.g. a quoted string
like `"Some Value"`). If multiple records match, returns one of them. If none match, returns the
special empty record.
For example:
```
People.lookupOne(First_Name="Lewis", Last_Name="Carroll")
People.lookupOne(Email=$Work_Email)
```
"""
return self.table.lookup_one_record(**field_value_pairs)
def lookupOrAddDerived(self, **kwargs):
return self.table.lookupOrAddDerived(**kwargs)
def getSummarySourceGroup(self, rec):
return self.table.getSummarySourceGroup(rec)
@property
def all(self):
"""
Name: all
Usage: UserTable.__all__
The list of all the records in this table.
For example, this evaluates to the number of records in the table `Students`.
```
len(Students.all)
```
This evaluates to the sum of the `Population` field for every record in the table `Countries`.
```
sum(r.Population for r in Countries.all)
```
"""
return self.lookupRecords()
def __dir__(self):
# Suppress member properties when listing dir(TableClass). This affects rlcompleter, with the
# result that auto-complete will only return class properties, not member properties added in
# the constructor.
return []
class Table(object):
"""
Table represents a table with all its columns and data.
"""
class RowIDs(object):
"""
Helper container that represents the set of valid row IDs in this table.
"""
def __init__(self, id_column):
self._id_column = id_column
def __contains__(self, row_id):
return row_id < self._id_column.size() and self._id_column.raw_get(row_id) > 0
def __iter__(self):
for row_id in xrange(self._id_column.size()):
if self._id_column.raw_get(row_id) > 0:
yield row_id
def max(self):
last = self._id_column.size() - 1
while last > 0 and last not in self:
last -= 1
return last
def __init__(self, table_id, engine):
# The id of the table is the name of its class.
self.table_id = table_id
# Each table maintains a reference to the engine that owns it.
self._engine = engine
# The UserTable object for this table, set in _rebuild_model
self.user_table = None
# Store the identity Relation for this table.
self._identity_relation = relation_module.IdentityRelation(table_id)
# Set of ReferenceColumn objects that refer to this table
self._back_references = set()
# Store the constant Node for "new columns". Accessing invalid columns creates a dependency
# on this node, and triggers recomputation when columns are added or renamed.
self._new_columns_node = depend.Node(self.table_id, None)
# Collection of special columns that this table maintains, which include LookupMapColumns
# and formula columns for maintaining summary tables. These persist across table rebuilds, and
# get cleaned up with delete_column().
self._special_cols = {}
# Maintain Column objects both as a mapping from col_id and as an ordered list.
self.all_columns = collections.OrderedDict()
# This column is always present.
self._id_column = column.create_column(self, 'id', column.get_col_info(usertypes.Id()))
# The `row_ids` member offers some useful interfaces:
# * if row_id in table.row_ids
# * for row_id in table.row_ids
self.row_ids = self.RowIDs(self._id_column)
# For a summary table, this is a reference to the Table object for the source table.
self._summary_source_table = None
# For a summary table, the name of the special helper column auto-added to the source table.
self._summary_helper_col_id = None
# For a summary table, True in the common case where every source record belongs
# to just one group in the summary table, False if grouping by list columns
# which are 'flattened' so source records may appear in multiple groups
self._summary_simple = None
# For use in _num_rows. The attribute isn't strictly needed,
# but it makes _num_rows slightly faster, and only creating the lookup map when _num_rows
# is called seems to be too late, at least for unit tests.
self._empty_lookup_column = self._get_lookup_map(())
# Add Record and RecordSet subclasses which fill in this table as the first argument
class Record(records.Record):
def __init__(inner_self, *args, **kwargs): # pylint: disable=no-self-argument
super(Record, inner_self).__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
class RecordSet(records.RecordSet):
def __init__(inner_self, *args, **kwargs): # pylint: disable=no-self-argument
super(RecordSet, inner_self).__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
self.Record = Record
self.RecordSet = RecordSet
def _num_rows(self):
"""
Similar to `len(self.lookup_records())` but faster and doesn't create dependencies.
"""
return len(self._empty_lookup_column._do_fast_empty_lookup())
def _rebuild_model(self, user_table):
"""
Sets class-wide properties from a new Model class for the table (inner class within the table
class), and rebuilds self.all_columns from the new Model, reusing columns with existing names.
"""
self.user_table = user_table
self.Model = user_table.Model
new_cols = collections.OrderedDict()
new_cols['id'] = self._id_column
# List of Columns in the same order as they appear in the generated Model definition.
col_items = [c for c in six.iteritems(self.Model.__dict__) if not c[0].startswith("_")]
col_items.sort(key=lambda c: self._get_sort_order(c[1]))
for col_id, col_model in col_items:
default_func = self.Model.__dict__.get(get_default_func_name(col_id))
new_cols[col_id] = self._create_or_update_col(col_id, col_model, default_func)
# Used for auto-completion as a record with correct properties of correct types.
self.sample_record = _make_sample_record(self.table_id, six.itervalues(new_cols))
# Note that we reuse previous special columns like lookup maps, since those not affected by
# column changes should stay the same. These get removed when unneeded using other means.
new_cols.update(sorted(six.iteritems(self._special_cols)))
# Set the new columns.
self.all_columns = new_cols
# Make sure any new columns get resized to the full table size.
self.grow_to_max()
# If this is a summary table, auto-create a necessary helper formula in the source table.
summary_src = getattr(self.Model, '_summarySourceTable', None)
if summary_src not in self._engine.tables:
self._summary_source_table = None
self._summary_helper_col_id = None
self._summary_simple = None
else:
self._summary_source_table = self._engine.tables[summary_src]
self._summary_helper_col_id = "#summary#%s" % self.table_id
# Figure out the group-by columns: these are all the non-formula columns.
groupby_cols = tuple(sorted(col_id for (col_id, col_model) in col_items
if not isinstance(col_model, types.FunctionType)))
self._summary_simple = not any(
isinstance(
self._summary_source_table.all_columns.get(group_col),
(column.ChoiceListColumn, column.ReferenceListColumn)
)
for group_col in groupby_cols
)
# Add the special helper column to the source table.
self._summary_source_table._add_update_summary_col(self, groupby_cols)
def _add_update_summary_col(self, summary_table, groupby_cols):
# TODO: things need to be removed also from summary_cols when a summary table is deleted.
# Grouping by list columns is significantly more complex and this comes with a
# performance cost, so in the common case we use the simpler older implementation
# In particular _updateSummary returns (possibly creating) just one reference
# instead of a list, which getSummarySourceGroup looks up directly instead
# of using CONTAINS, which in turn allows using SimpleLookupMapColumn
# instead of the similarly slower and more complicated ContainsLookupMapColumn
# All of these branches should be interchangeable and produce equivalent results
# when no list columns or CONTAINS are involved,
# especially since we need to be able to summarise by a combination of list and non-list
# columns or lookupRecords with a combination of CONTAINS and normal values,
# these are just performance optimisations
if summary_table._summary_simple:
@usertypes.formulaType(usertypes.Reference(summary_table.table_id))
def _updateSummary(rec, table): # pylint: disable=unused-argument
try:
# summary table output should be treated as we treat formula columns, for acl purposes
self._engine.user_actions.enter_indirection()
return summary_table.lookupOrAddDerived(**{c: getattr(rec, c) for c in groupby_cols})
finally:
self._engine.user_actions.leave_indirection()
else:
@usertypes.formulaType(usertypes.ReferenceList(summary_table.table_id))
def _updateSummary(rec, table): # pylint: disable=unused-argument
# Create a row in the summary table for every combination of values in
# list type columns
lookup_values = []
for group_col in groupby_cols:
lookup_value = getattr(rec, group_col)
if isinstance(self.all_columns[group_col],
(column.ChoiceListColumn, column.ReferenceListColumn)):
# Check that ChoiceList/ReferenceList cells have appropriate types.
# Don't iterate over characters of a string.
if isinstance(lookup_value, (six.binary_type, six.text_type)):
return []
try:
# We only care about the unique choices
lookup_value = set(lookup_value)
except TypeError:
return []
else:
lookup_value = [lookup_value]
lookup_values.append(lookup_value)
result = []
values_to_add = {}
new_row_ids = []
for values_tuple in sorted(itertools.product(*lookup_values)):
values_dict = dict(zip(groupby_cols, values_tuple))
row_id = summary_table.lookup_one_record(**values_dict)._row_id
if row_id:
result.append(row_id)
else:
for col, value in six.iteritems(values_dict):
values_to_add.setdefault(col, []).append(value)
new_row_ids.append(None)
if new_row_ids and not self._engine.is_triggered_by_table_action(summary_table.table_id):
try:
# summary table output should be treated as we treat formula columns, for acl purposes
self._engine.user_actions.enter_indirection()
result += self._engine.user_actions.BulkAddRecord(
summary_table.table_id, new_row_ids, values_to_add
)
finally:
self._engine.user_actions.leave_indirection()
return result
_updateSummary.is_private = True
col_id = summary_table._summary_helper_col_id
if self.has_column(col_id):
# If type changed between Reference/ReferenceList, replace completely.
# pylint: disable=unidiomatic-typecheck
if type(self.get_column(col_id).type_obj) != type(_updateSummary.grist_type):
self.delete_column(self.get_column(col_id))
col_obj = self._create_or_update_col(col_id, _updateSummary)
self._special_cols[col_id] = col_obj
self.all_columns[col_id] = col_obj
def get_helper_columns(self):
"""
Returns a list of columns from other tables that are only needed for the sake of this table.
"""
if self._summary_source_table and self._summary_helper_col_id:
helper_col = self._summary_source_table.get_column(self._summary_helper_col_id)
return [helper_col]
return []
def _create_or_update_col(self, col_id, col_model, default_func=None):
"""
Helper to update an existing column with a new model, or create a new column object.
"""
col_info = column.get_col_info(col_model, default_func)
col_obj = self.all_columns.get(col_id)
if col_obj:
# This is important for when a column has NOT changed, since although the formula method is
# unchanged, it's important to use the new instance of it from the newly built module.
col_obj.update_method(col_info.method)
else:
col_obj = column.create_column(self, col_id, col_info)
self._engine.invalidate_column(col_obj)
return col_obj
@staticmethod
def _get_sort_order(col_model):
"""
We sort columns according to the order in which they appear in the model definition. To
detect this order, we sort data columns by _creation_order, and formula columns by the
function's source-code line number.
"""
return ((0, col_model._creation_order)
if not isinstance(col_model, types.FunctionType) else
(1, col_model.__code__.co_firstlineno))
def next_row_id(self):
"""
Returns the ID of the next row that can be added to this table.
"""
return self.row_ids.max() + 1
def grow_to_max(self):
"""
Resizes all columns as needed so that all valid row_ids are valid indices into all columns.
"""
size = self.row_ids.max() + 1
for col_obj in six.itervalues(self.all_columns):
col_obj.growto(size)
def get_column(self, col_id):
"""
Returns the column with the given column ID.
"""
return self.all_columns[col_id]
def has_column(self, col_id):
"""
Returns whether col_id represents a valid column in the table.
"""
return col_id in self.all_columns
def lookup_records(self, **kwargs):
"""
Returns a Record matching the given column=value arguments. It creates the necessary
dependencies, so that the formula will get re-evaluated if needed. It also creates and starts
maintaining a lookup index to make such lookups fast.
"""
# The tuple of keys used determines the LookupMap we need.
sort_by = kwargs.pop('sort_by', None)
key = []
col_ids = []
for col_id in sorted(kwargs):
value = kwargs[col_id]
if isinstance(value, lookup._Contains):
value = value.value
# While users should use CONTAINS on lookup values,
# the marker is moved to col_id so that the LookupMapColumn knows how to
# update its index correctly for that column.
col_id = lookup._Contains(col_id)
else:
col = self.get_column(col_id)
# Convert `value` to the correct type of rich value for that column
value = col._convert_raw_value(col.convert(value))
key.append(value)
col_ids.append(col_id)
col_ids = tuple(col_ids)
key = tuple(key)
lookup_map = self._get_lookup_map(col_ids)
row_id_set, rel = lookup_map.do_lookup(key)
if sort_by:
row_ids = sorted(row_id_set,
key=lambda r: column.SafeSortKey(self._get_col_value(sort_by, r, rel)))
else:
row_ids = sorted(row_id_set)
return self.RecordSet(row_ids, rel, group_by=kwargs, sort_by=sort_by)
def lookup_one_record(self, **kwargs):
return self.lookup_records(**kwargs).get_one()
def _get_lookup_map(self, col_ids_tuple):
"""
Helper which returns the LookupMapColumn for the given combination of lookup columns. A
LookupMap behaves a bit like a formula column in that it depends on the passed-in columns and
gets updated whenever any of them change.
"""
# LookupMapColumn is a Node, so identified by (table_id, col_id) pair, so we make up a col_id
# to identify this lookup object uniquely in this Table.
lookup_col_id = "#lookup#" + ":".join(map(str, col_ids_tuple))
lmap = self._special_cols.get(lookup_col_id)
if not lmap:
# Check that the table actually has all the columns we looking up.
for c in col_ids_tuple:
c = lookup.extract_column_id(c)
if not self.has_column(c):
raise KeyError("Table %s has no column %s" % (self.table_id, c))
if any(isinstance(col_id, lookup._Contains) for col_id in col_ids_tuple):
column_class = lookup.ContainsLookupMapColumn
else:
column_class = lookup.SimpleLookupMapColumn
lmap = column_class(self, lookup_col_id, col_ids_tuple)
self._special_cols[lookup_col_id] = lmap
self.all_columns[lookup_col_id] = lmap
return lmap
def delete_column(self, col_obj):
assert col_obj.table_id == self.table_id
self._special_cols.pop(col_obj.col_id, None)
self.all_columns.pop(col_obj.col_id, None)
def lookupOrAddDerived(self, **kwargs):
record = self.lookup_one_record(**kwargs)
if not record._row_id and not self._engine.is_triggered_by_table_action(self.table_id):
record._row_id = self._engine.user_actions.AddRecord(self.table_id, None, kwargs)
return record
def getSummarySourceGroup(self, rec):
if self._summary_source_table:
# See comment in _add_update_summary_col.
# _summary_source_table._summary_simple determines whether
# the column named self._summary_helper_col_id is a single reference
# or a reference list.
lookup_value = rec if self._summary_simple else lookup._Contains(rec)
return self._summary_source_table.lookup_records(**{
self._summary_helper_col_id: lookup_value
})
else:
return None
def get(self, **kwargs):
"""
Returns the first row_id matching the given column=value arguments. This is intended for grist
internal code rather than for user formulas, because it doesn't create the necessary
dependencies.
"""
# TODO: It should use indices, to avoid linear searching
# TODO: It should create dependencies as needed when used from formulas.
# TODO: It should return Record instead, for convenience of user formulas
col_values = [(self.all_columns[col_id], value) for (col_id, value) in six.iteritems(kwargs)]
for row_id in self.row_ids:
if all(col.raw_get(row_id) == value for col, value in col_values):
return row_id
raise KeyError("'get' found no matching record")
def filter(self, **kwargs):
"""
Generates all row_ids matching the given column=value arguments. This is intended for grist
internal code rather than for user formulas, because it doesn't create the necessary
dependencies. Use filter_records() to generate Record objects instead.
"""
# TODO: It should use indices, to avoid linear searching
# TODO: It should create dependencies as needed when used from formulas.
# TODO: It should return Record instead, for convenience of user formulas
col_values = [(self.all_columns[col_id], value) for (col_id, value) in six.iteritems(kwargs)]
for row_id in self.row_ids:
if all(col.raw_get(row_id) == value for col, value in col_values):
yield row_id
def get_record(self, row_id):
"""
Returns a Record object corresponding to the given row_id. This is intended for grist internal
code rather than user formulas.
"""
# We don't set up any dependencies, so it would be incorrect to use this from formulas.
# We no longer assert, however, since such calls may still happen e.g. while applying
2022-02-19 09:46:49 +00:00
# user-actions caused by formula side-effects (e.g. as triggered by lookupOrAddDerived())
if row_id not in self.row_ids:
raise KeyError("'get_record' found no matching record")
return self.Record(row_id, None)
def filter_records(self, **kwargs):
"""
Generator for Record objects for all the rows matching the given column=value arguments.
This is intended for grist internal code rather than user formula. You may call this with no
arguments to generate all Records in the table.
"""
# See note in get_record() about using this call from formulas.
for row_id in self.filter(**kwargs):
yield self.Record(row_id, None)
# TODO: document everything here.
# Called when record.foo is accessed
def _get_col_value(self, col_id, row_id, relation):
[value] = self._get_col_subset(col_id, [row_id], relation)
return value
def _attribute_error(self, col_id, relation):
self._engine._use_node(self._new_columns_node, relation)
raise AttributeError("Table '%s' has no column '%s'" % (self.table_id, col_id))
# Called when record_set.foo is accessed
def _get_col_subset(self, col_id, row_ids, relation):
col = self.all_columns[col_id]
# creates a dependency and brings formula columns up-to-date.
self._engine._use_node(col.node, relation, row_ids)
# TODO: when column is a reference, support property access in return value
return [records.adjust_record(relation, col.get_cell_value(row_id)) for row_id in row_ids]