Hi rochacbruno,

That's what I thought, I just wanted to confirm it.

Thanks to all !,

   Carlos


On Dec 12, 10:50 am, rochacbruno <[email protected]> wrote:
> Carlos, the only solution I see is using a virtual field, or removing repeats 
> in Java Scripts.
>
> Enviado via iPhone
>
> Em 12/12/2010, às 14:17, Carlos <[email protected]> escreveu:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi Denes,
>
> > That's clear to me, my question is not about getting the data (I got
> > it ok), but instead showing the data in an html table (SQLTABLE) with
> > unique (no repeated) "one" data, as per my examples above.
>
> > Maybe I'm not explaining clearly? - sorry :-)
>
> > Thanks!,
>
> >   Carlos
>
> > On Dec 12, 9:41 am, DenesL <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Hi Carlos,
>
> >> inside the select you can specify which fields to bring back, I think
> >> you want:
>
> >> rows = db(db.one.id==db.many.one).select(db.many.id, db.many.xx,
> >> db.many.yy, db.many.zz, db.one.aa, db.one.bb, db.one.cc)
>
> >> On Dec 12, 9:58 am, Carlos <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >>> Hi Massimo,
>
> >>> What do you mean?, that shows the same result (with repeated 'one'
> >>> data) in the SQLTABLE, doesn't it?.
>
> >>> Thanks,
>
> >>>    Carlos
>
> >>> On Dec 12, 1:23 am, mdipierro <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >>>> You can do, for example:
>
> >>>> rows =
> >>>> db(db.one.id==db.many.one).select(db.many.id,db.many.one,db.many.xx,db.many
> >>>>  .yy,db.many.zz,db.one.aa,db.one.bb,db.one.cc)
>
> >>>> On Dec 11, 12:27 pm, Carlos <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >>>>> Hi,
>
> >>>>> I need to show a SQLTABLE with joined data but without repeated
> >>>>> information (like grouping but showing all rows).
>
> >>>>> Let's say I have the following model:
>
> >>>>>         db.define_table('one', Field('aa'), Field('bb'), Field('cc'),
> >>>>> format='%(aa)s')
> >>>>>         db.define_table('many', Field('one', 'reference one'), 
> >>>>> Field('xx'),
> >>>>> Field('yy'), Field('zz'))
>
> >>>>> And the following function:
>
> >>>>>         def join():
> >>>>>             rows = db(db.one.id==db.many.one).select()
> >>>>>             return dict(rows=rows)
>
> >>>>> This shows all rows correctly but with repeated data for 'one':
>
> >>>>> many.id many.one        many.xx many.yy many.zz one.id  one.aa  one.bb  
> >>>>> one.cc
> >>>>> 1       a1      a1_x1   a1_y1   a1_z1   2       a1      b1      c1
> >>>>> 2       a1      a1_x2   a1_y2   a1_z2   2       a1      b1      c1
> >>>>> 3       a2      a2_x1   a2_y1   a2_z1   3       a2      b2      c2
> >>>>> 4       a2      a2_x2   a2_y2   a2_z2   3       a2      b2      c2
> >>>>> 5       a3      a3_x1   a3_y1   a3_z1   4       a3      b3      c3
>
> >>>>> How can I show this same view (with the same number of rows) but only
> >>>>> showing the 'one' data once (for the first occurrence) as follows?.
>
> >>>>> many.id many.one        many.xx many.yy many.zz one.id  one.aa  one.bb  
> >>>>> one.cc
> >>>>> 1       a1      a1_x1   a1_y1   a1_z1   2       a1      b1      c1
> >>>>> 2       a1      a1_x2   a1_y2   a1_z2   2
> >>>>> 3       a2      a2_x1   a2_y1   a2_z1   3       a2      b2      c2
> >>>>> 4       a2      a2_x2   a2_y2   a2_z2   3
> >>>>> 5       a3      a3_x1   a3_y1   a3_z1   4       a3      b3      c3
>
> >>>>> Note the empty spaces in order to show the 'one' data once only (on
> >>>>> first occurrence).
>
> >>>>> Thanks,
>
> >>>>>    Carlos

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