I'm having some issue getting what seems like a fairly straight-forward problem solved in CouchDB 1.01. My data is basically a log of drugs despensed from 30 odd clinics with some basic data about the drug and a timestamp. I'm passing a fairly ordinary group of objects as a map result into reduce in the pseudo-form:
Key:ClinicName, Value:{"vaccine":DrugType, "stamp":TimeStamp}
The aim of my reduce function is to allow a quick reference of the amounts of each type of drug dispensed.
Map
function(doc) {
if(doc.type=="dose"){
emit(doc.clinicName, {"vaccine":doc.vaccine,"stamp":doc.timestamp});
}
}
Reduce
function(keys, values){
var indexes = Object.keys(values);
var vCount = new Object;
for (var c in indexes){
var val = values[c]
var vname = val.vaccine
if(vCount.hasOwnProperty(vname)){
vCount[vname] = vCount[vname] + 1;
}
else{
vCount[vname] = 1;
}
}
return vCount;
}
This works perfectly when I have with ?key= a specific ClinicName as long as descending=false and group=true. As soon as set descending to true, my results are cut off about halfway through.
Two questions:
- Why should the result order matter for the reduce function? With reduce off, the results are the same forwards and backwards.
- I'd read somewhere that if your reduction doesn't provide a single scalar, you're probably doing it wrong. If strange behavior aside this is a poor approach, what's the right way to present this sort of data from a log-style data source?
if(vname in vCount) {