0

I want a solution for udnerstanding how to hold a real loop counter as Java in xQuery, not a workaround for my particular simplified demo. I know in xQuery 3.0 there is a count reserved word for FLOWR structures but its useless pre-Saxon 9.something. Here my example.

     for $elem at $x in /Data/* return element Elem {       
            attribute Name   {concat('_',$x,'.',name($elem))},      
            (: ...10 lines of code... :)        
            for $subelem at $y in $elem/*       
            (: ...5 lets... :)      
            return element SubElemen {
               attribute Name {concat('_',$x,'.',$y,'_',name($subelement))},
               (...20 lines of other attrs and elements ...)
           for $subsubelem at $z in $subElem/SubSubElement
               let $absIterIndex := 'THIS IS WHAT IM LOOKING'
               let $subSubElemName := concat('_',$absIterIndex,'_',name($subElem))
            return
                                 element SubSubElem {
                 attribute Name {$subsubelem}, 
                   (..100 lines more playing with $x, $y, $absIterIndex, all lets for that iteration, attributes depending on them...)

The output is something like this (real data hidden and simplified)

 <Elem Name="_1.Name">
      <SubElem Name="_1.1_Name">
           <SubSubElem Name="_1.First"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_2.Second"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_3.Third"/>
      </SubElem Name="_1.1_Name">
      <SubElem Name="_1.2_Name">
           <SubSubElem Name="_4.Fourth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_5.Fifth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_6.Sixth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_7.Seventh"/>
      </SubElem Name="_1.1_Name">
  <Elem Name="_2.Name">
      <SubElem Name="_2.1_Name">
           <SubSubElem Name="_8.Eighth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_9.Ninth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_10.Tenth"/>
           <SubSubElem Name="_11.Eleventh"/>
      </SubElem Name="_2.1_Name">
      <SubElem Name="_2.2_Name"/>
  </Elem Name="_2.Name">
  <Elem Name="_3.Name">
      <SubElem Name="_3.1_Name">
           <SubSubElem Name="_12.Twelven"/>
      </SubElem Name="_3.1_Name">
      <SubElem Name="_3.2_Name"/>
  </Elem Name="_3.Name">     

This is a extension of a previous question Autoincremental auxiliar index var for XQuery nested loops, which I accepted the solution for the xQuery 3.0 counter, and then propose an alternative for manually doing it. But know i think the perspective is different and more concrete, and with a new example. If you think it should be deleted just tell it to me.

34
  • 1
    This question is quite vague -- please edit the question and provide a complete (but as small as possible) example: XML document, exact wanted result, requirements that the query must implement. Jul 4, 2012 at 4:51
  • 1
    user1352530: I could help you if the problem were concrete -- as it is it is generall and one has to do a lot of guessing (and have little confidence of the correctness of this guessing) in building a demo example to show the technique. Jul 4, 2012 at 14:36
  • 1
    user1352530: I find this problem not at all illustrative of the actual problem you want to express -- this specific problem has a very simple solution -- just output the numbers 1 to N, where N is the count of all non-whitespace characters. Jul 4, 2012 at 15:57
  • 1
    As you see, this "demo" is oversimplified and doesn't provide us any definition of the problem. I still am not sure what you actually want. The fact that you don't have a representative example may mean that you don't have a clear understanding what the problem is. To put it in another way: A "problem" non-existing specific example is not a problem. Jul 4, 2012 at 16:21
  • 2
    This last edit clearly shows what you want and the fact that you want something doesn't mean at all that any problem exists for solving which the wanted feature is necessary. I am now more convinced that the question isn't based on any real problem. My prediction is that any problem you show to us in support of the wanted feature, will have a solution without this feature. But it is up to you to prove me wrong :) Jul 4, 2012 at 17:22

2 Answers 2

1

What you could do is add an extra pass over the result sequence of your nested iterations, i.e.

declare variable $script := 'abc defg h ijklm nop 
                                 qrs tu vw
                                 xy z';
for $letter at $lettersTotal in
(
  for $line at $numLine in tokenize($script, '(\r\n?|\n\r?)')
  for $word at $numWord in tokenize(normalize-space($line),' ')
  for $codepoint at $numLetter in string-to-codepoints($word)
  return codepoints-to-string($codepoint)
)
return ($lettersTotal, $letter)

This returns

1 a 2 b 3 c 4 d 5 e 6 f 7 g 8 h 9 i 10 j 11 k 12 l 13 m 14 n 15 o 16 p 17 q 18 r 19 s 20 t 21 u 22 v 23 w 24 x 25 y 26 z

If you are lucky, your XQuery processor can stream the result without materializing the sequence.

4
  • This is a very nice idea! But It has an important drawback. You cannot use the counter inside the current iteration, that is the 90% of uses. This one will be like passing it to a count(). Thank you!
    – Whimusical
    Jul 4, 2012 at 9:11
  • 1
    OK, so replace the outer return clause by return concat($lettersTotal, "º is ", $letter, ","). For a single result string, wrap the complete expression in string-join( and , " "). This will get you what you want.
    – Gunther
    Jul 4, 2012 at 18:19
  • Thank you im sorry for my bad explanations, but is there some way to do it from inside the loop. Like if i wanted to print it every time from the last loop: 1a, 1a 2b, 1a 2b 3c... as example
    – Whimusical
    Jul 4, 2012 at 18:57
  • 1
    No, there is no such feature.
    – Gunther
    Jul 4, 2012 at 19:46
0

New question - new answer.

But the principle remains the same: produce an unnumbered result first, then apply the numbering. This may require rewriting the result.

Insert your code instead of the XML comment below.

declare function local:renumber($number, $string)
{
  replace($string, 'THIS IS WHAT IM LOOKING', string($number))
};

declare function local:renumber($subSubElems, $number, $nodes)
{
  for $node in $nodes
  return
    typeswitch ($node)
    case attribute()              return attribute {node-name($node)} {local:renumber($number, $node)}
    case processing-instruction() return processing-instruction {name($node)} {local:renumber($number, $node)}
    case comment()                return comment {local:renumber($number, $node)}
    case text()                   return text {local:renumber($number, $node)}
    default (: element() :) return
      element {node-name($node)}
      {
        local:renumber
        (
          $subSubElems, 
          if ($subSubElems[. is $node]) then count($subSubElems[. << $node]) + 1 else $number, 
          ($node/@*, $node/node())
        )
      }
};

let $result := <result>{<!-- your code here -->}</result>
return local:renumber($result//SubSubElem, 0, $result/node())
1
  • wow, as a alternative solution it can work well. Thanks!! I will use this as longs as there is no better easier counter option!
    – Whimusical
    Jul 5, 2012 at 12:17

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.