Hi Preston,

I don’t seem to be able to see your comments on the Wiki page [1].
Where do I need to look?

Cheers,
Till

On 8 May 2016, at 9:43, Preston Carman wrote:

Nice job guys. I can see you are picking up how to create a data
model. I have limited my comments to the wiki [1] for now. At a high
level, I was impressed with your detail and thoughtful layouts. It
reminds me of the age old trade off: speed vs space. At this time,
lets error on saving space. The data model should the as compact as
possible.

I also found the AsterixDB serialization [2] we can use as a
reference. Even though the AsterixDB data model includes object
length, I would leave that out since all the XQuery data models do not
include this property.

Riyafa, take a look at the method AsterixDB uses for quick look ups (a
hash value for the name). Consider the pros and cons between your
method and AsterixDB's method: a list hash value for name and a sorted
list of names.

Also, take a look at my wiki comments. Its a great start!

Mahalo,
Preston

[1] https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/VXQUERY/JSONiq
[2] https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/ASTERIXDB/AsterixDB+Object+Serialization+Reference

On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 6:47 PM, christina pavlopoulou <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi,

I, also, designed an example for the json array [1] given the description I
wrote in the wiki page.

[1]
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GOAcvhw_F9cJrNmRq2TwZxI0wYRmvLEV3mywJS4H9Lg/edit

Thank you,
Christina


On 5/7/2016 11:22 AM, Riyafa Abdul Hameed wrote:

Hi,

I am attempting to create a doc on the JSONiq data model for objects[1]
(It
might be full of errors because I am doing the calculations manually).

This is what I have come up on the data model for objects:

The first byte would have the value tag, followed by the id (4 bytes) of the object. Then 4 bytes to represent the size of the object. Then another four bytes to represent the number of key-value pairs. Next few bytes represent the offsets of keys which follow (each offset is represented by
4
bytes). Ids would be assigned to the keys. Next few bytes would be a
sorted
list of ids for keys in alphabetical order. The following bytes would represent the keys in the object.Each key is a StringPointable followed by
the id of the key. Each object would have a sequence pointable: the
following bytes would be the number of Items (items are the values for keys) in the sequence. The next bytes would be the offset of each item in the sequence. The last bytes would be the values for each key followed by
the respective id of the key.

Hope it makes sense.

My problem is,

I have not provided for the white spaces in the object. What can I use to represent the white spaces? I cannot use a text node because object is not
a node.


[1]

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1-wT0pE8rTTNIzuY4iTgvhqkdHmKGek4CgNthXN6mlm0

Thank you.

Yours sincerely,
Riyafa


On 26 April 2016 at 10:29, Preston Carman <[email protected]> wrote:

We have two students working with us this summer through GSOC to complete JSONiq specification for arrays and objects. I think the first step is to define the data model used by JSONiq. The definition should be defined in our wiki [1] before coding starts this summer. The wiki will allow the
community to discuss the JSON data model implementation in VXQuery.

I updated the JSONiq wiki to help get the documentation started. Please fill in the JSON data model based on the examples seen on our website
(links on the wiki page).

Post here if you have any questions.

[1] https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/VXQUERY/JSONiq




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