Please try trunk again.

On Thursday, 10 May 2012 01:03:22 UTC-5, kokoyo wrote:
>
> Hi Massimo, i did it and get output (test on user_auth table):
>
> mongoqry_dict ={'email': 'myem...@gmail.com'}
> mongofields_dict = SON([('id':1), ('first_name':1),  ('last_name':
> 1),  ('email':1), ('password':1), ('registration_key':
> 1), ('reset_password_key':1), ('registration_id':1) ])
> mongo_list_dicts = <pymongo.cursor.Cursor object at 9a809aa>
>
>
>
> On Thursday, May 10, 2012 1:52:02 PM UTC+9, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>
>> Should be an easy fix but I need your help. Before line 4711 of dal.py
>>
>> return processor(rows,fields,colnames,False)
>>
>> can you add
>>
>> print rows
>> print fields
>> print colnames
>>
>> what is the output when it fails?
>>
>>
>> On Wednesday, 9 May 2012 05:42:56 UTC-5, Francisco Costa wrote:
>>>
>>> I've enumerated fields and colnames and they are like this:
>>>
>>> fields:
>>> id
>>> text
>>> integer
>>> string
>>>
>>>
>>> colnames:
>>> city
>>> age
>>> _id
>>> name
>>>
>>>
>>>  I believe they don't match and thats why there's this error:
>>>
>>> File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 8134, in select
>>> return adapter.select(self.query,fields,attributes)
>>> File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 4711, in select
>>> return processor(rows,fields,colnames,False)
>>> File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1681, in parse
>>> self.parse_value(value, fields[j].type,blob_decode)
>>> File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1575, in parse_value
>>> return self.parsemap[key](value,field
>>>
>>> _type)
>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1641, in parse_id
>>>
>>>     return int(value)
>>> ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: 'Toronto'
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Monday, May 7, 2012 11:40:36 PM UTC+1, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Please try again.
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, 7 May 2012 15:48:04 UTC-5, Francisco Costa wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> missing a colon at the end of the line 4677
>>>>>
>>>>> if key == 'id'
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> and now I get this error
>>>>>
>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 8134, in select
>>>>>     return adapter.select(self.query,fields,attributes)
>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 4711, in select
>>>>>     return processor(rows,columns,False)
>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1675, in parse
>>>>>     for j,colname in enumerate(colnames):
>>>>> TypeError: 'bool' object is not iterable
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> maybe because of the False on line 4711
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Monday, May 7, 2012 9:27:35 PM UTC+1, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks for your help and check on this. I just committed a fix in 
>>>>>> trunk that should address it. Please let me know.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Monday, 7 May 2012 15:19:40 UTC-5, Francisco Costa wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I think that the mongofields_dict.keys() don't match to the data in 
>>>>>>> the rows
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> mongofields_dict:
>>>>>>> id
>>>>>>> name
>>>>>>> age
>>>>>>> city
>>>>>>> rows:
>>>>>>> Toronto
>>>>>>> 66L
>>>>>>> 24652490551171733682233802752L
>>>>>>> John
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Monday, May 7, 2012 8:42:33 PM UTC+1, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Your linennumbers do not much the code in trunk. Please try the 
>>>>>>>> code in trunk. Anyway, something goes wrong in the parse(self, rows, 
>>>>>>>> fields, colnames, blob_decode=True) function. I suspect mongo does not 
>>>>>>>> return the columns in the order web2py think it does. Can you print 
>>>>>>>> the 
>>>>>>>> input of the parse function?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Monday, 7 May 2012 13:20:39 UTC-5, Francisco Costa wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> So I have this:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> import sys
>>>>>>>>> import time
>>>>>>>>> from gluon.dal import DAL, Field
>>>>>>>>> mongo = DAL('mongodb://localhost:27017/tymr')
>>>>>>>>> mongo.define_table('user',
>>>>>>>>>              Field('name', 'text'),
>>>>>>>>>              Field('age',  'integer'),
>>>>>>>>>              Field('city', 'string')
>>>>>>>>>              )
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> def insert_users():
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='John', age=66, city='Toronto')
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='Mark', age=43, city='Boston')
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='Tom',  age=43, city='Detroit')
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='Jim',  age=18, city='Detroit')
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='Jack', age=18)
>>>>>>>>>     mongo.user.insert(name='Eric', city='Boston')
>>>>>>>>>     return 'users in database'
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> def find_users():
>>>>>>>>>     users = mongo(mongo.user.age==66).select()
>>>>>>>>>     return dict(users=users)
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> after I run *insert_users* I check in MongoDb via terminal and 
>>>>>>>>> everything is correct:
>>>>>>>>> > db.user.find()
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000000"), "city" : 
>>>>>>>>> "Toronto", "age" : NumberLong(66), "name" : "John" }
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000001"), "city" : "Boston", 
>>>>>>>>> "age" : NumberLong(43), "name" : "Mark" }
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000002"), "city" : 
>>>>>>>>> "Detroit", "age" : NumberLong(43), "name" : "Tom" }
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000003"), "city" : 
>>>>>>>>> "Detroit", "age" : NumberLong(18), "name" : "Jim" }
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000004"), "age" : 
>>>>>>>>> NumberLong(18), "name" : "Jack" }
>>>>>>>>> { "_id" : ObjectId("4fa80feea34feb34f8000005"), "city" : "Boston", 
>>>>>>>>> "name" : "Eric" }
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> but when I run *find_users* I get this error:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 7578, in select
>>>>>>>>>     return adapter.select(self.query,fields,attributes)
>>>>>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 4290, in select
>>>>>>>>>     return self.parse(rows,fields,mongofields_dict.keys(),False)
>>>>>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1600, in parse
>>>>>>>>>     self.parse_value(value, fields[j].type,blob_decode)
>>>>>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1496, in parse_value
>>>>>>>>>     return self.parsemap[key](value,field_type)
>>>>>>>>>   File "/opt/web2py/gluon/dal.py", line 1562, in parse_id
>>>>>>>>>     return int(value)
>>>>>>>>> ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: 'Toronto'
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>  
>

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