On Sat, Feb 2, 2019 at 11:34 PM hashim muqtadir
wrote:
> > As long as you at least know the schema you're working with, you could
> even generate select statements for all possible sets of columns at compile
> time, and then just choose the right statement dynamically with a runtime
> function.
> The issue you're encountering with namespaces is analogous, because each
namespace gets its own instances of modules. This is a feature! Imagine,
for example, that you are trying to run students' programs in a sandbox. If
namespaces shared module instances, a malicious or buggy student
On 2/1/2019 5:12 AM, hashim muqtadir wrote:
> No. Look back at your code ... you defined the struct in your own
> unnamed module just before the definition of "select/f"
But the thing is, the error was that it failed to recognize
sql-statement in the test, which is provided by sql, not me.
On the original question: Racket's struct types are generative (except for
#:prefab structs), meaning that each time you evaluate a `struct` form (or,
at a lower level, each time you call `make-struct-type`), the you create a
fresh type distinct from all other types. That can be a bit confusing to
> Good news, limit and distinct are in scope for v0.2 - I'm working on it
now :)
That's good to hear, thanks! I'll be sure to check it out, and let you know
if I have any ideas/requirements for features or if I can contribute.
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>
> PS There's also a racket package called plisqin which seemed closer to
> what I was looking for. Maybe in a few months or so if it clicks I'll see
> if I can add to that package everything I need (things like limit and
> distinct) and it might work out.
>
Good news, limit and distinct are
Hey, neat. I did not know that there was a sql package; I should have
thought to look.
Ryan, is there a way to use PostgreSQL's "RETURNING" feature or other
DB-specific items? RETURNING is insanely useful and I'd be sad to
give it up.
On Fri, Feb 1, 2019 at 5:12 AM hashim muqtadir
wrote:
>
>
> No. Look back at your code ... you defined the struct in your own
> unnamed module just before the definition of "select/f"
But the thing is, the error was that it failed to recognize sql-statement
in the test, which is provided by sql, not me. The function otherwise
worked correctly. The
On 2/1/2019 12:39 AM, hashim muqtadir wrote:
> If order to use a struct across namespaces, the module that
> defines the struct must be required into each namespace that uses the
> struct.
Yes, I suspect there's some weird interaction between namespaces too,
hence the topic, but that's still
> If order to use a struct across namespaces, the module that
> defines the struct must be required into each namespace that uses the
> struct.
Yes, I suspect there's some weird interaction between namespaces too, hence
the topic, but that's still pretty vague. After all, the thing defining
On 1/31/2019 10:58 AM, hashim muqtadir wrote:
The test in my following code raises an error saying that when I call
select/f, the result doesn't satisfy `sql-statement?`.
I've no idea why, the only vague idea I have is that it may have
something to do with the fact that it was essentially
First off, many thanks for bringing to my attention the fact that Ryan has
started racket-izing SQL! And thanks, Ryan, for racket-izing SQL! Maybe I can
stop stapling together all of those long horrible strings now.
Next, to answer your question, I believe that eval is not necessary here, and
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