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Difference between revisions of "Offline Query (UBIK WinX)"


 
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== Technical background ==
 
== Technical background ==
 
As mentioned earlier, all offline query criteria are checked against the result candidates. The [[SYSCLS_OFFLINE_QUERY|"METACLASS_IDS"]] property of the query object determines which objects are the candidates.
 
As mentioned earlier, all offline query criteria are checked against the result candidates. The [[SYSCLS_OFFLINE_QUERY|"METACLASS_IDS"]] property of the query object determines which objects are the candidates.
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{{Clear}}
  
 
== Query with context filter values {{Version/WinXSince|4.9}}{{Version/XamarinSince|4.9}} ==
 
== Query with context filter values {{Version/WinXSince|4.9}}{{Version/XamarinSince|4.9}} ==
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[[Category:Version 3.1|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]
 
[[Category:Version 3.1|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]
 
[[Category:WinX|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]
 
[[Category:WinX|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]
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[[Category:Client|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]
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[[Category:Xamarin|Offline Query (UBIK WinX)]]

Latest revision as of 11:18, 12 November 2024

Compared to online / server side queries, offline queries provide a similar capability to query for objects that match the criteria defined by the query objects. The major differences are:

  • The querying happens entirely offline without the need of networks;
  • Only objects already available on the client can be found as query results.
IC Hint square.pngThe offline query classification is primarily needed on the Scope of the offline query, rather than on the MetaClass itself, because the client evaluates the classification.

Offline query page

Offline Query

An offline query page looks similar to a regular content page which shows the properties on the left side and the content objects on the right. The unique characteristics of a query page are:

  • The properties on the left serve as query criteria;
  • The content objects on the right are the evaluated results of the query;
  • There is an additional Evaluate button in the bottom-left corner;

Users can change the query criteria by editing the property values. A press on the Evaluate button then will re-evaluate the query and show the results on the right side.

Offline query criteria

An offline query criterion is essentially a property on the query object. When evaluating a query, every criterion/property is checked against all result candidates (See technical background). A candidate is a match if

  • it has all the same properties as the offline query;
IC Attention.pngThis is changed in newer versions . A not found property is just ignored.
  • and the values of these properties indicate they are relevant according to the query criteria. (Some types have different ways to interpret what makes a value relevant. See below.)
IC Hint square.pngThe value checking of a criterion is ignored during query evaluations under any of the following circumstances.
  • The criterion does not have any value specified;
  • The criterion type is not supported/unknown. (See below)

Several types of criteria are supported on offline queries.

Boolean String Integer Double DateTime Guid
Single Value
Value Range
IC Attention.pngOnly those criteria/properties for which the MetaProperty.IndexCount is greater than 0 support value ranges.

Single value criterion

For most single value criteria, UBIK® considers a candidate as a match if the value of the target property equals the value specified in the criterion.

IC Hint square.pngIt is possible to use a single DateTime value in a query criterion. However, since even the smallest differences (in seconds or even milliseconds) matter during an equality check, you might want to consider specifying a range instead.

String criterion

For string criteria, instead of checking for the equality, UBIK® does the following.

  • Split the string value defined in a criterion by spaces ( ) if possible;

Since version 3.5

  • All of these sub strings must be a part of the string value of the target property in order for the candidate to be a match.

For example, candidate object with a name PU112 PD112 is considered as a match under a name criterion with the value PU PD, but PU112 is not.

Older versions

  • As long as at least one of the sub strings is a part of the string value of the target property, the candidate is a match.

For example, candidate objects with names PU112 and PD2115 are both considered as matches under a name criterion with the value PU PD.

Ranged criterion for double
Ranged criterion for date time

Value range criterion

For types such as numbers or dates, it is sometimes more comfortable to specify ranges for criteria.

  • Example 1: Candidate objects with pressure readings 20 and 25 are both considered as matches under a pressure reading criterion with the value 20 ⩽ ... ⩽ 25.
  • Example 2: Candidate objects with start dates 09-11-2017 and 08-12-2017 are both considered as matches under a start date criterion with the value > 08-11-2017.


Currently, the following ranges are supported.

  • exclusive between (... < value < ...);
  • exclusive greater than (value > ...);
  • exclusive less than (value < ...);
  • inclusive between (... ⩽ value ⩽ ...);
  • inclusive greater than (value ⩾ ...);
  • inclusive less than (value ⩽ ...);
  • in a collection (value is A, B, ... or X, the UI support for this range definition is limited that you can't yet add or remove values in the collection).

Technical background

As mentioned earlier, all offline query criteria are checked against the result candidates. The "METACLASS_IDS" property of the query object determines which objects are the candidates.

Query with context filter values

In some use cases, UBIK® might automatically extract certain values from the so-called context and use them during offline query filtering. The following cases are two typical examples.

IC Hint square.pngThese features worked in earlier versions already. However, the technical design differed and it had certain limitations that made it problematic when you try to evaluate the same query with different filter values at the same time. So the basement, namely offline query with context filter values, is redesigned in the new version.

The newly designed version has the following characteristics.

  • You can now easily distinguish such automatically extracted context filter values from the user entered filter values in the UI.
  • Once there is user entered values, the UI makes it obvious that the user values overrule the context values.
  • It's also possible to clear/delete/reset all filter values, whether they are from the context or users.
IC Hint square.pngWhile it's possible to clear the context filter values, they will be automatically applied again if you start the corresponding filtering process from scratch.
IC Attention.pngBy design, the context filter values in the dynamic selective list feature are applied as restrictions. So it is not allowed to overrule those values with user inputs.