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authorMike Bayer <mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com>2012-07-22 16:36:29 -0400
committerMike Bayer <mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com>2012-07-22 16:36:29 -0400
commitfaa9b2c8da63aa116579fc6c43a30ce479b92ac2 (patch)
tree30a75f94f18a9f51197658e5b0a8d5ae1b09753d /lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py
parent2bee05098e09dcdf09f7c8ff1c7efeba0c2fc9f2 (diff)
downloadsqlalchemy-faa9b2c8da63aa116579fc6c43a30ce479b92ac2.tar.gz
- [feature] Revised the rules used to determine
the operator precedence for the user-defined operator, i.e. that granted using the ``op()`` method. Previously, the smallest precedence was applied in all cases, now the default precedence is zero, lower than all operators except "comma" (such as, used in the argument list of a ``func`` call) and "AS", and is also customizable via the "precedence" argument on the ``op()`` method. [ticket:2537]
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py')
-rw-r--r--lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py230
1 files changed, 129 insertions, 101 deletions
diff --git a/lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py b/lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py
index 866cc8f06..9adab2acf 100644
--- a/lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py
+++ b/lib/sqlalchemy/sql/operators.py
@@ -19,27 +19,28 @@ from operator import (div,)
from ..util import symbol
+
class Operators(object):
"""Base of comparison and logical operators.
-
+
Implements base methods :meth:`operate` and :meth:`reverse_operate`,
as well as :meth:`__and__`, :meth:`__or__`, :meth:`__invert__`.
-
+
Usually is used via its most common subclass
:class:`.ColumnOperators`.
-
+
"""
def __and__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``&`` operator.
-
+
When used with SQL expressions, results in an
AND operation, equivalent to
:func:`~.expression.and_`, that is::
-
+
a & b
-
+
is equivalent to::
-
+
from sqlalchemy import and_
and_(a, b)
@@ -47,7 +48,7 @@ class Operators(object):
operator precedence; the ``&`` operator has the highest precedence.
The operands should be enclosed in parenthesis if they contain
further sub expressions::
-
+
(a == 2) & (b == 4)
"""
@@ -55,15 +56,15 @@ class Operators(object):
def __or__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``|`` operator.
-
+
When used with SQL expressions, results in an
OR operation, equivalent to
:func:`~.expression.or_`, that is::
-
+
a | b
-
+
is equivalent to::
-
+
from sqlalchemy import or_
or_(a, b)
@@ -71,7 +72,7 @@ class Operators(object):
operator precedence; the ``|`` operator has the highest precedence.
The operands should be enclosed in parenthesis if they contain
further sub expressions::
-
+
(a == 2) | (b == 4)
"""
@@ -79,22 +80,22 @@ class Operators(object):
def __invert__(self):
"""Implement the ``~`` operator.
-
- When used with SQL expressions, results in a
- NOT operation, equivalent to
+
+ When used with SQL expressions, results in a
+ NOT operation, equivalent to
:func:`~.expression.not_`, that is::
-
+
~a
-
+
is equivalent to::
-
+
from sqlalchemy import not_
not_(a)
"""
return self.operate(inv)
- def op(self, opstring):
+ def op(self, opstring, precedence=0):
"""produce a generic operator function.
e.g.::
@@ -105,34 +106,46 @@ class Operators(object):
somecolumn * 5
- :param operator: a string which will be output as the infix operator
- between this :class:`.ClauseElement` and the expression passed to the
- generated function.
-
This function can also be used to make bitwise operators explicit. For
example::
somecolumn.op('&')(0xff)
- is a bitwise AND of the value in somecolumn.
+ is a bitwise AND of the value in ``somecolumn``.
+
+ :param operator: a string which will be output as the infix operator
+ between this :class:`.ClauseElement` and the expression passed to the
+ generated function.
+
+ :param precedence: precedence to apply to the operator, when
+ parenthesizing expressions. A lower number will cause the expression
+ to be parenthesized when applied against another operator with
+ higher precedence. The default value of ``0`` is lower than all
+ operators except for the comma (``,``) and ``AS`` operators.
+ A value of 100 will be higher or equal to all operators, and -100
+ will be lower than or equal to all operators.
+
+ .. versionadded:: 0.8 - added the 'precedence' argument.
"""
- def _op(b):
- return self.operate(op, opstring, b)
- return _op
+ operator = custom_op(opstring, precedence)
+
+ def against(other):
+ return operator(self, other)
+ return against
def operate(self, op, *other, **kwargs):
"""Operate on an argument.
-
+
This is the lowest level of operation, raises
:class:`NotImplementedError` by default.
-
- Overriding this on a subclass can allow common
- behavior to be applied to all operations.
+
+ Overriding this on a subclass can allow common
+ behavior to be applied to all operations.
For example, overriding :class:`.ColumnOperators`
- to apply ``func.lower()`` to the left and right
+ to apply ``func.lower()`` to the left and right
side::
-
+
class MyComparator(ColumnOperators):
def operate(self, op, other):
return op(func.lower(self), func.lower(other))
@@ -142,48 +155,60 @@ class Operators(object):
be a single scalar for most operations.
:param \**kwargs: modifiers. These may be passed by special
operators such as :meth:`ColumnOperators.contains`.
-
-
+
+
"""
raise NotImplementedError(str(op))
def reverse_operate(self, op, other, **kwargs):
"""Reverse operate on an argument.
-
+
Usage is the same as :meth:`operate`.
-
+
"""
raise NotImplementedError(str(op))
+
+class custom_op(object):
+ __name__ = 'custom_op'
+
+ def __init__(self, opstring, precedence=0):
+ self.opstring = opstring
+ self.precedence = precedence
+
+ def __call__(self, left, right, **kw):
+ return left.operate(self, right, **kw)
+
+
class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Defines comparison and math operations.
-
+
By default all methods call down to
:meth:`Operators.operate` or :meth:`Operators.reverse_operate`
- passing in the appropriate operator function from the
+ passing in the appropriate operator function from the
Python builtin ``operator`` module or
- a SQLAlchemy-specific operator function from
+ a SQLAlchemy-specific operator function from
:mod:`sqlalchemy.expression.operators`. For example
the ``__eq__`` function::
-
+
def __eq__(self, other):
return self.operate(operators.eq, other)
Where ``operators.eq`` is essentially::
-
+
def eq(a, b):
return a == b
-
+
A SQLAlchemy construct like :class:`.ColumnElement` ultimately
overrides :meth:`.Operators.operate` and others
- to return further :class:`.ClauseElement` constructs,
+ to return further :class:`.ClauseElement` constructs,
so that the ``==`` operation above is replaced by a clause
construct.
-
+
The docstrings here will describe column-oriented
behavior of each operator. For ORM-based operators
on related objects and collections, see :class:`.RelationshipProperty.Comparator`.
-
+
"""
timetuple = None
@@ -191,17 +216,17 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
def __lt__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``<`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a < b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(lt, other)
def __le__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``<=`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a <= b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(le, other)
@@ -209,7 +234,7 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``==`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a = b``.
If the target is ``None``, produces ``a IS NULL``.
@@ -221,66 +246,66 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
In a column context, produces the clause ``a != b``.
If the target is ``None``, produces ``a IS NOT NULL``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(ne, other)
def __gt__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``>`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a > b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(gt, other)
def __ge__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``>=`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a >= b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(ge, other)
def __neg__(self):
"""Implement the ``-`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``-a``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(neg)
def concat(self, other):
"""Implement the 'concat' operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a || b``,
or uses the ``concat()`` operator on MySQL.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(concat_op, other)
def like(self, other, escape=None):
"""Implement the ``like`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a LIKE other``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(like_op, other, escape=escape)
def ilike(self, other, escape=None):
"""Implement the ``ilike`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a ILIKE other``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(ilike_op, other, escape=escape)
def in_(self, other):
"""Implement the ``in`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a IN other``.
"other" may be a tuple/list of column expressions,
or a :func:`~.expression.select` construct.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(in_op, other)
@@ -288,31 +313,31 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Implement the ``startwith`` operator.
In a column context, produces the clause ``LIKE '<other>%'``
-
+
"""
return self.operate(startswith_op, other, **kwargs)
def endswith(self, other, **kwargs):
"""Implement the 'endswith' operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``LIKE '%<other>'``
-
+
"""
return self.operate(endswith_op, other, **kwargs)
def contains(self, other, **kwargs):
"""Implement the 'contains' operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``LIKE '%<other>%'``
-
+
"""
return self.operate(contains_op, other, **kwargs)
def match(self, other, **kwargs):
"""Implements the 'match' operator.
-
- In a column context, this produces a MATCH clause, i.e.
- ``MATCH '<other>'``. The allowed contents of ``other``
+
+ In a column context, this produces a MATCH clause, i.e.
+ ``MATCH '<other>'``. The allowed contents of ``other``
are database backend specific.
"""
@@ -347,7 +372,7 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Implement the ``+`` operator in reverse.
See :meth:`__add__`.
-
+
"""
return self.reverse_operate(add, other)
@@ -355,7 +380,7 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Implement the ``-`` operator in reverse.
See :meth:`__sub__`.
-
+
"""
return self.reverse_operate(sub, other)
@@ -363,7 +388,7 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Implement the ``*`` operator in reverse.
See :meth:`__mul__`.
-
+
"""
return self.reverse_operate(mul, other)
@@ -371,7 +396,7 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
"""Implement the ``/`` operator in reverse.
See :meth:`__div__`.
-
+
"""
return self.reverse_operate(div, other)
@@ -386,61 +411,61 @@ class ColumnOperators(Operators):
def __add__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``+`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a + b``
if the parent object has non-string affinity.
- If the parent object has a string affinity,
+ If the parent object has a string affinity,
produces the concatenation operator, ``a || b`` -
see :meth:`concat`.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(add, other)
def __sub__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``-`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a - b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(sub, other)
def __mul__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``*`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a * b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(mul, other)
def __div__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``/`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a / b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(div, other)
def __mod__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``%`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a % b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(mod, other)
def __truediv__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``//`` operator.
-
+
In a column context, produces the clause ``a / b``.
-
+
"""
return self.operate(truediv, other)
def __rtruediv__(self, other):
"""Implement the ``//`` operator in reverse.
-
+
See :meth:`__truediv__`.
-
+
"""
return self.reverse_operate(truediv, other)
@@ -530,14 +555,14 @@ def is_commutative(op):
return op in _commutative
def is_ordering_modifier(op):
- return op in (asc_op, desc_op,
+ return op in (asc_op, desc_op,
nullsfirst_op, nullslast_op)
_associative = _commutative.union([concat_op, and_, or_])
-_smallest = symbol('_smallest')
-_largest = symbol('_largest')
+_smallest = symbol('_smallest', canonical=-100)
+_largest = symbol('_largest', canonical=100)
_PRECEDENCE = {
from_: 15,
@@ -575,13 +600,16 @@ _PRECEDENCE = {
collate: 7,
as_: -1,
exists: 0,
- _smallest: -1000,
- _largest: 1000
+ _smallest: _smallest,
+ _largest: _largest
}
+
def is_precedent(operator, against):
if operator is against and operator in _associative:
return False
else:
- return (_PRECEDENCE.get(operator, _PRECEDENCE[_smallest]) <=
- _PRECEDENCE.get(against, _PRECEDENCE[_largest]))
+ return (_PRECEDENCE.get(operator,
+ getattr(operator, 'precedence', _smallest)) <=
+ _PRECEDENCE.get(against,
+ getattr(against, 'precedence', _largest)))