def PREVIOUS(rec, *, group_by=(), order_by): """ Finds the previous record in the table according to the order specified by `order_by`, and grouping specified by `group_by`. Each of these arguments may be a column ID or a tuple of column IDs, and `order_by` allows column IDs to be prefixed with "-" to reverse sort order. For example, - `PREVIOUS(rec, order_by="Date")` will return the previous record when the list of records is sorted by the Date column. - `PREVIOUS(rec, order_by="-Date")` will return the previous record when the list is sorted by the Date column in descending order. - `PREVIOUS(rec, group_by="Account", order_by="Date")` will return the previous record with the same Account as `rec`, when records are filtered by the Account of `rec` and sorted by Date. When multiple records have the same `order_by` values (e.g. the same Date in the examples above), the order is determined by the relative position of rows in views. This is done internally by falling back to the special column `manualSort` and the row ID column `id`. Use `order_by=None` to find the previous record in an unsorted table (when rows may be rearranged by dragging them manually). For example, - `PREVIOUS(rec, order_by=None)` will return the previous record in the unsorted list of records. You may specify multiple column IDs as a tuple, for both `group_by` and `order_by`. This can be used to match views sorted by multiple columns. For example: - `PREVIOUS(rec, group_by=("Account", "Year"), order_by=("Date", "-Amount"))` """ return _sorted_lookup(rec, group_by=group_by, order_by=order_by)._find.previous(rec) def NEXT(rec, *, group_by=(), order_by): """ Finds the next record in the table according to the order specified by `order_by`, and grouping specified by `group_by`. See [`PREVIOUS`](#previous) for details. """ return _sorted_lookup(rec, group_by=group_by, order_by=order_by)._find.next(rec) def RANK(rec, *, group_by=(), order_by, order="asc"): """ Returns the rank (or position) of this record in the table according to the order specified by `order_by`, and grouping specified by `group_by`. See [`PREVIOUS`](#previous) for details of these parameters. The `order` parameter may be "asc" (which is the default) or "desc". When `order` is "asc" or omitted, the first record in the group in the sorted order would have the rank of 1. When `order` is "desc", the last record in the sorted order would have the rank of 1. If there are multiple groups, there will be multiple records with the same rank. In particular, each group will have a record with rank 1. For example, `RANK(rec, group_by="Year", order_by="Score", order="desc")` will return the rank of the current record (`rec`) among all the records in its table for the same year, ordered by score. """ return _sorted_lookup(rec, group_by=group_by, order_by=order_by)._find.rank(rec, order=order) def _sorted_lookup(rec, *, group_by, order_by): if isinstance(group_by, str): group_by = (group_by,) return rec._table.lookup_records(**{c: getattr(rec, c) for c in group_by}, order_by=order_by)