proc nljoin args { set body [lindex $args end] set cmd "" foreach {vars list} [lrange $args 0 end-1] { append cmd "[list foreach $vars $list] \{\n" append body "\}" } uplevel 1 $cmd$body }#------------------------- Testing:
% nljoin x {a b} y {c d} {puts x:$x,y:$y} x:a,y:c x:a,y:d x:b,y:c x:b,y:dNo error-checking yet - the length of args must be odd and >2. Caveat user.Filtering the lists in advance reduces the runtime needed - for instance, after an example in [?], to get the list of all professors who have published since 1990, using the fancy select list comprehension:
nljoin pub [select x from $publications where {$date($x)>=1990}] \ prof [select x from $staff where {$status($x)=="professor"}] { if {$empID($pub)==$empID($prof)} { lappend res $prof } }
Come to think, what this does is just iterate over the Cartesian product of a list of lists...A join is not the same as a cartesian product. Joining a table of 3 records with one of 5 does not necessarily produce a table of 15 records. -jcwRS: Thanks for elucidation. So what's called "join" is the matching of IDs in the body, right?Yes, one or more fields, used as lookup in another table. That's "equi-join", i.e. matching on equality. There's "inner join", which only returns cases where there is a match, and (left/right) "outer join" which keeps all rows on the left of right hand side, even when lookups fail.Here's page with tons of info [1].[EE]: Whoever posted the above link, thank you, I found it informative.
Nested Loop Parser Library:parse_nest_loop parses an input string that contains <> notation to indicate nested loops.Syntax:
- <n-m> means loop from n to m, <<n-m>> means an inner-loop.
- The number of < is the nested level
- Multiple levels of loops, and multiple loops of the same levels can exist together.
- Same level of loops can have different number of iteration times.
- The loop ends when the longest loop in the same level ends. The shorter loop will continue from beginning.