* Include the namespace-separating solidus in NamespaceableName.
* Use type annotations when deciding how to process ambiguous ground input.
* Include simple patterns in the type extraction phase of pattern application. (#705)
* Review comment.
* Add a test.
* Make properties on NamespacedKeyword/NamespacedSymbol private
* Use only a single String for NamespacedKeyword/NamespacedSymbol
* Review comments.
* Remove unsafe code in namespaced_name.
Benchmarking shows approximately zero change.
* Allow the types of ns and name to differ when constructing a NamespacedName.
* Make symbol namespaces optional.
* Normalize names of keyword/symbol constructors.
This will make the subsequent refactor much less painful.
* Use expect not unwrap.
* Merge Keyword and NamespacedKeyword.
We were forgetting to check for bound variables when resolving types other than ref types during inequality handling. This patch adds in the binding checks and `bails` if the bound variable is of the wrong type. #634
* Pre: use debugcli in VSCode.
* Pre: wrap subqueries in parentheses in output SQL.
* Pre: add ExistingColumn.
This lets us make reference to columns by name, rather than only
pointing to qualified aliases.
* Pre: add Into for &str to TypedValue.
* Pre: add Store.transact.
* Pre: cleanup.
* Parse and algebrize simple aggregates. (#312)
* Follow-up: print aggregate columns more neatly in the CLI.
* Useful ValueTypeSet helpers.
* Allow for entity inequalities.
* Add 'differ', which is a ref-specialized not-equals.
* Add 'unpermute', a function for getting unique, distinct pairs from bindings.
* Review comments.
* Add 'the' pseudo-aggregation operator.
This allows for a corresponding value to be returned when a query
includes one 'min' or 'max' aggregate.
This puts caching in mentat_db, adds a reverse lookup capability for
unique attributes, and populates bidirectional caches with a single
SQL cursor walk.
Differentiate between begin_read and begin_uncached_read.
Note that we still allow toggling within InProgress, because there might be
transient local state that makes starting a new transaction impossible.
Pre: export AttributeBuilder from mentat_db.
Pre: fix module-level comment for tx/src/entities.rs.
Pre: rename some `to_` conversions to `into_`.
Pre: make AttributeBuilder::unique less verbose.
Pre: split out a HasSchema trait to abstract over Schema.
Pre: rename SchemaMap/schema_map to AttributeMap/attribute_map.
Pre: TypedValue/NamespacedKeyword conversions.
Pre: turn Unique and ValueType into TypedValue::Keyword.
Pre: export IntoResult.
Pre: export NamespacedKeyword from mentat_core.
Pre: use intern_set in tx.
Pre: add InternSet::len.
Pre: comment gardening.
Pre: remove inaccurate TODO from TxReport comment.
* Pre: make FindQuery, FindSpec, and Element non-Clone.
* Pre: make query translator return a Result.
* Pre: make projection return a Result.
* Pre: refactor query parser in preparation for parsing aggregates.
* Pre: rename PredicateFn -> QueryFunction.
* Pre: expose more about bound variables from CC.
* Pre: move ValueTypeSet to core.
* Update some dependencies.
* Update rusqlite to 0.12.
* Update error-chain to a forked version that implements Sync.
* Fix some compiler warnings.
* Remove unused imports in tests.
* Parse errors no longer naturally print with the expected symbol.
This version removes nalexander's lovely matrix code. It turned out
that scalar and tuple bindings are sufficiently different from coll
and rel -- they can directly apply as values in the query -- that
there was no point in jumping through hoops to turn those single
values into a matrix.
Furthermore, I've standardized us on a Vec<TypedValue>
representation for rectangular matrices, which should be much
more efficient, but would have required rewriting that code.
Finally, coll and rel are sufficiently different from each other
-- coll doesn't require processing nested collections -- that
my attempts to share code between them fell somewhat flat. I had
lots of nice ideas about zipping together cycles and such, but
ultimately I ended up with relatively straightforward, if a bit
repetitive, code.
The next commit will demonstrate the value of this work -- tests
that exercised scalar and tuple grounding now collapse down to
the simplest possible SQL.