Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
On Thu, Oct 09, 2003 at 08:46:24PM -0700, Jason Corbett wrote: Thanks for your reply. I've actually been thinking in an object oriented form for a while. I've looked at implimenting this project in Java using either prevailance or a object persistence model that mapped to a RDBMS. I like the idea of zope, so maybe I should clarify my question: How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, The only unique identifier that zope provides is the containment path. An object can tell you its containment path by doing foo.absolute_url(1) or foo.getPhysicalPath() depending on what form you want the output in. and how does it reach other objects. By path. Zope provides a number of ways to express paths in python: foo[some][path]# does NOT use acquisition, only containment foo.some.path # uses acquisition getattr(foo.some, path) # uses acquisition foo.unrestrictedTraverse(/some/path/from/zope/root) foo.unrestrictedTraverse(some/path/relative/to/foo) (see also restrictedTraverse) Note that storing a direct reference may be dangerous e.g. you might not have the object you are expecting - in fact it's very likely that you get an acquisition wrapper which may change at any time. On the other hand, storing paths is problematic if you want to be able to move or rename an object and still keep references to it elsewhere. Hence, look at mxmRelations which helps with this. -- Paul Winkler http://www.slinkp.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
RE: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
On Fri, 2003-10-10 at 05:51, Bjorn Stabell wrote: From: Paul Winkler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Thu, Oct 09, 2003 at 08:46:24PM -0700, Jason Corbett wrote: How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, The only unique identifier that zope provides is the containment path. An object can tell you its containment path by doing foo.absolute_url(1) or foo.getPhysicalPath() depending on what form you want the output in. I am often confused by this as well. I think, however, that you can also reach objects by its object id oid. If I just use simple assignment of a variable to an object in Zope, I get that object's oid, right? Yes, but only at the ZODB level, and only if the contained object derives from Persistent. From the application's point of view, OIDs are irrelevant and useless: there is no API for manipulating them sanely. For example: from OFS.SimpleItem import SimpleItem # derives from Persistent class Foo( SimpleItem ): pass owning = Foo() owned = Foo() owning.owned = owned While it is true that the ZODB will pickle only the OID of 'owned' within the dict of 'owning', the application doesn't need or want to manipulate the OID, because it can just refer to 'owning.owned'. This kind of reference is conceptually like a hard link in a traditional Unix filesystem; the same file can be stored in multiple directories, because the directory contains only a mapping of filename to inode (OID). The analog for a symlink would be to store a path to the object, and then use '{,un}restrictedTraverse' to fetch the object when needed. There are a number of products available which try to make such symlinks more transparent to the application; it is, however, harded to make this work cleanly in the general case. Tres. -- === Tres Seaver[EMAIL PROTECTED] Zope Corporation Zope Dealers http://www.zope.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
RE: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
Hi Jason, if you want to deal with references and unique ids and that stuff, feel free to take a look at http://plone.org/development/current/projects/Ticle and perhaps to contribute your ideas or even sourcecode. -sp ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
Jason Corbett wrote at 2003-10-9 20:46 -0700: ... How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, and how does it reach other objects. In fact, the object does not know it. In Zope, you usually do not deal with the object itself but with an acquisition wrapper. This wrapper represents the object and the way you accessed it. The wrapper is able to tell you a direct path from the root to the object (the so called physicalPath of the object). However, the same object can be at different places in the Zope hierarchy. Depending on access path, the object than can have different physicalPaths. That's what I'm really looking for, I can probably code the rest of the parts. You should look at mxmRelations as someone else already told you. Dieter ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
On Thu, Oct 09, 2003 at 05:07:28PM -0700, Jason Corbett wrote: to reference in some intelligent way between objects in zope, and I need a way to query for a list of them. google for mxmRelations. It does many-to-many relationships so yuo might have to modify it a bit if you really need to constrain that. -- Paul Winkler http://www.slinkp.com Look! Up in the sky! It's THE MAN! (random hero from isometric.spaceninja.com) ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
Hi Jason, I am not a zope developer, I am a semi-new user who started with zope coming from the same mindset as yourself. One of the biggest challanges(at least for me) is to wrap your mind around object oriented programming. The zope database is an object oriented database. This means that you will want/need to design your product differently than if you were using mysql/php to present and store your data. Think of the information you want to track as real world objects, and it is. Then think about how these real world objects relate to one another. You will start to see a pattern. Use this pattern to create a hierarchical folder(object) structure. This structure along with python's object inheritance will allow you to develop your relationships. Play with zope. Write your product. Discover that you need to rewrite your product because you did not understand some fundamentals. Complete the rewrite. Rinse and repeat until you get it right. Cheers, Mike Hello Zope developers, I'm a newbie (sorry most people have this curse at one point or another). I have read the zope book (or at least most of it), and the zope developer manual. I can't quite figure out how to have relationships between instances of classes in the database. Let me first ask if I'm using zope for the correct thing. I see that a lot of zope products deal with content management, while mine doesn't really. Basically I want to do what I would normally do with mysql and php, but use zope instead. So I need a way to reference in some intelligent way between objects in zope, and I need a way to query for a list of them. I read about ZCatalogs, etc and how you can use that for querying and indexing. That isn't my first priority, so I'll worry about that a little later. Basically I have an instance of a class 'A'. As part of it I need to reference either a single or in some cases multiple instances of class 'B'. Basically I'll have a mix of one-to-one relations and one-to-many. When I'm coding my python class (I'm going to do a product if you can't tell), how would I get a list of the 'B' instances that relate to this object, and how would I store that? The zope developer manual was pretty good for writing classes, and making views on it, but I need to be able to call methods on those instances and return lists of them. Sorry for the long email, I just don't want to leave details out. If you think I'm barking up the wrong tree, and shouldn't be using zope for this, don't be afraid to let me know. Although I will be pretty disappointed, I think zope is exactly what I've been looking for, I can't find anything like it in any other language. Jason Corbett __ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search http://shopping.yahoo.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope ) ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
Thanks for your reply. I've actually been thinking in an object oriented form for a while. I've looked at implimenting this project in Java using either prevailance or a object persistence model that mapped to a RDBMS. I like the idea of zope, so maybe I should clarify my question: How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, and how does it reach other objects. That's what I'm really looking for, I can probably code the rest of the parts. Jason Corbett --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi Jason, I am not a zope developer, I am a semi-new user who started with zope coming from the same mindset as yourself. One of the biggest challanges(at least for me) is to wrap your mind around object oriented programming. The zope database is an object oriented database. This means that you will want/need to design your product differently than if you were using mysql/php to present and store your data. Think of the information you want to track as real world objects, and it is. Then think about how these real world objects relate to one another. You will start to see a pattern. Use this pattern to create a hierarchical folder(object) structure. This structure along with python's object inheritance will allow you to develop your relationships. Play with zope. Write your product. Discover that you need to rewrite your product because you did not understand some fundamentals. Complete the rewrite. Rinse and repeat until you get it right. Cheers, Mike Hello Zope developers, I'm a newbie (sorry most people have this curse at one point or another). I have read the zope book (or at least most of it), and the zope developer manual. I can't quite figure out how to have relationships between instances of classes in the database. Let me first ask if I'm using zope for the correct thing. I see that a lot of zope products deal with content management, while mine doesn't really. Basically I want to do what I would normally do with mysql and php, but use zope instead. So I need a way to reference in some intelligent way between objects in zope, and I need a way to query for a list of them. I read about ZCatalogs, etc and how you can use that for querying and indexing. That isn't my first priority, so I'll worry about that a little later. Basically I have an instance of a class 'A'. As part of it I need to reference either a single or in some cases multiple instances of class 'B'. Basically I'll have a mix of one-to-one relations and one-to-many. When I'm coding my python class (I'm going to do a product if you can't tell), how would I get a list of the 'B' instances that relate to this object, and how would I store that? The zope developer manual was pretty good for writing classes, and making views on it, but I need to be able to call methods on those instances and return lists of them. Sorry for the long email, I just don't want to leave details out. If you think I'm barking up the wrong tree, and shouldn't be using zope for this, don't be afraid to let me know. Although I will be pretty disappointed, I think zope is exactly what I've been looking for, I can't find anything like it in any other language. Jason Corbett __ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search http://shopping.yahoo.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope ) = . _ ___ / __// / (_)__ __ __ / /_/ __ / /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / /_//_/ //_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\ /_/ === Caldera OpenLinux __ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search http://shopping.yahoo.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
On Fri, 2003-10-10 at 00:46, Jason Corbett wrote: Thanks for your reply. I've actually been thinking in an object oriented form for a while. I've looked at implimenting this project in Java using either prevailance or a object persistence model that mapped to a RDBMS. I like the idea of zope, so maybe I should clarify my question: How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, and how does it reach other objects. That's what I'm really looking for, I can probably code the rest of the parts. In my experience, you should put an object inside another if and only if they have an explicit containment relationship, e.g. a car has 4 tires and a steering wheel. The steering wheel can belong to (at most) one car at any moment in time, so it would make sense to put the steering wheel object inside the car object. The same is not true of, for instance, students and school classes. In this case you either store a reference to the student in the school class (eg a student id in a lines or tokens property) or you create an object to represent the class-student relationship (for example an enrollment) and store it somewhere. Tip: always use methods that return the objects you need, for instance aSchoolClass.students() this way you can more easily change the storage of the relationship information when you change your mind. And you will change your mind a lot of times. Tip2: a lot of times you'll implement the above mentioned methods as catalog queries, like: what objects in the other side of the relationship reference me? Tip3: look mxmRelations Cheers, Leo PS: just because this is a pet peeve of mine, I'll explain that a relation and a relationship are two very different things. Relation is the mathematical term for a table, a set of distinct elements (rows) with the same kinds of attributes (columns). You can think of a relation (table) of cars, or a relation (table) of students. Relational databases get their names because they store relations and allow you to do some relational algebra with (usually) SQL. A relationship, on the other hand, is a link, or association, between elements. RDBs allow you to model relationships relatively easily thru either relational operations: SELECT * from cars, steering_wheels WHERE steering_wheels.carId = car.carId AND steering_wheels.wheelType = sport or by storing relationship information in relations (sometimes known as link relations or link tables): SELECT * from enrollments, classes, students WHERE classes.classId = enrollments.classId AND enrollments.studentId = students.studentId AND students.studentName = Jason Corbett But RDBs themselves have absolutely no concept of relationships. So, next time you read the word relation, think table :-) ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
Re: [Zope-dev] relations in objects
I'm sorry for my ignorant use of the terms relation and relationship. I'll try to use the terms more appropriately in the future. I think I understand where I've become confused. In many of the persistance mechanisms I've looked at references to other objects were handled specially, and had rules associated with them. I think I understand now that it is mearly just a design problem, nothing having to do with zope. When creating objects I will need to pass the reference to the other object, or have a manager for the relationship. I had assumed that objects were somehow self aware in some way of the zope environment, and therefore coule access it. I appologize for any time I might have wasted. The solution is simpler than I had thought. Jason Corbett --- Leonardo Rochael Almeida [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Fri, 2003-10-10 at 00:46, Jason Corbett wrote: Thanks for your reply. I've actually been thinking in an object oriented form for a while. I've looked at implimenting this project in Java using either prevailance or a object persistence model that mapped to a RDBMS. I like the idea of zope, so maybe I should clarify my question: How does an object in zope know where it sits in the hirearchy, and how does it reach other objects. That's what I'm really looking for, I can probably code the rest of the parts. In my experience, you should put an object inside another if and only if they have an explicit containment relationship, e.g. a car has 4 tires and a steering wheel. The steering wheel can belong to (at most) one car at any moment in time, so it would make sense to put the steering wheel object inside the car object. The same is not true of, for instance, students and school classes. In this case you either store a reference to the student in the school class (eg a student id in a lines or tokens property) or you create an object to represent the class-student relationship (for example an enrollment) and store it somewhere. Tip: always use methods that return the objects you need, for instance aSchoolClass.students() this way you can more easily change the storage of the relationship information when you change your mind. And you will change your mind a lot of times. Tip2: a lot of times you'll implement the above mentioned methods as catalog queries, like: what objects in the other side of the relationship reference me? Tip3: look mxmRelations Cheers, Leo PS: just because this is a pet peeve of mine, I'll explain that a relation and a relationship are two very different things. Relation is the mathematical term for a table, a set of distinct elements (rows) with the same kinds of attributes (columns). You can think of a relation (table) of cars, or a relation (table) of students. Relational databases get their names because they store relations and allow you to do some relational algebra with (usually) SQL. A relationship, on the other hand, is a link, or association, between elements. RDBs allow you to model relationships relatively easily thru either relational operations: SELECT * from cars, steering_wheels WHERE steering_wheels.carId = car.carId AND steering_wheels.wheelType = sport or by storing relationship information in relations (sometimes known as link relations or link tables): SELECT * from enrollments, classes, students WHERE classes.classId = enrollments.classId AND enrollments.studentId = students.studentId AND students.studentName = Jason Corbett But RDBs themselves have absolutely no concept of relationships. So, next time you read the word relation, think table :-) __ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search http://shopping.yahoo.com ___ Zope-Dev maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )