Is it true that you can also just get the same results as when you pick a
UTF8 key with this content:
keyA:keyB

Of should you really use the composite keys? If so, what is the big
advantage of composite over combined utf-8 keys?

Robin

2011/12/21 Sylvain Lebresne <sylv...@datastax.com>

> On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 9:33 PM, Maxim Potekhin <potek...@bnl.gov> wrote:
> > Thank you Aaron! As long as I have plain strings, would you say that I
> would
> > do almost as well with catenation?
>
> Not without a concatenation aware comparator. The padding aaron is talking
> of
> is not a mixed type problem only. What I mean here is that if you use a
> simple
> string comparator (UTF8Type, AsciiType or even BytesType), then you will
> have
> the following sorting:
> "foo24:bar"
> "foo:bar"
> "foobar:bar"
> because ':' is between '2' and 'b' in ascii, you could use another
> separator but
> you get the point. In other words, concatenating strings doesn't make the
> comparator aware of that fact.
> CompositeType on the other hand sorts each component separately, so it will
> sort:
> "foo"      : "bar"
> "foo24"  : "bar"
> "foobar" : "bar"
> which is usually what you want.
>
> --
> Sylvain
>
> >
> > Of course I realize that mixed types are a very different case where the
> > composite is very useful.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > Maxim
> >
> >
> >
> > On 12/20/2011 2:44 PM, aaron morton wrote:
> >
> > Component values are compared in a type aware fashion, an Integer is an
> > Integer. Not a 10 character zero padded string.
> >
> > You can also slice on the components. Just like with string concat, but
> > nicer.  . e.g. If you app is storing comments for a thing, and the column
> > names have the form <comment_id, field> or  <Integer, String> you can
> slice
> > for all properties of a comment or all properties for comments between
> two
> > comment_id's
> >
> > Finally, the client library knows what's going on.
> >
> > Hope that helps.
> >
> > -----------------
> > Aaron Morton
> > Freelance Developer
> > @aaronmorton
> > http://www.thelastpickle.com
> >
> > On 21/12/2011, at 7:43 AM, Maxim Potekhin wrote:
> >
> > With regards to static, what are major benefits as it compares with
> > string catenation (with some convenient separator inserted)?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > Maxim
> >
> >
> > On 12/20/2011 1:39 PM, Richard Low wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 5:28 PM, Ertio Lew<ertio...@gmail.com>  wrote:
> >
> > With regard to the composite columns stuff in Cassandra, I have the
> >
> > following doubts :
> >
> >
> > 1. What is the storage overhead of the composite type column
> names/values,
> >
> > The values are the same.  For each dimension, there is 3 bytes overhead.
> >
> >
> > 2. what exactly is the difference between the DynamicComposite and Static
> >
> > Composite ?
> >
> > Static composite type has the types of each dimension specified in the
> >
> > column family definition, so all names within that column family have
> >
> > the same type.  Dynamic composite type lets you specify the type for
> >
> > each column, so they can be different.  There is extra storage
> >
> > overhead for this and care must be taken to ensure all column names
> >
> > remain comparable.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>

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