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silverbullet/website/Live Queries.md
2023-11-27 17:12:47 +01:00

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Live Queries enable a (quasi) live view on various data sources, usually Objects, and renders their results inline via Live Preview either as a template or using Templates.

Syntax

The syntax of live queries is inspired by SQL. Below is a query that demonstrates some of the supported clauses. Hover over the result and click the edit icon to show the code that generates the view:

page
order by lastModified desc
where size > 100
select name
limit 10
render [[template/page]]

Its most convenient to use /query Slash Commands to insert a query in a page.

For those comfortable reading such things, here you can find the full query grammar.

The general syntax is to specify a querySource followed by a number of clauses that modify or restrict. If you havent already, check out how Objects work in SilverBullet.

Clauses

where @expression

A where clause filters out all objects that do not match a certain condition. You can have multiple where clauses if you like, which will have the same effect as combining them with the and keyword.

Here is a simple example based on a custom tag #person (see Objects on how this works):

name: John
age: 7
---
name: Pete
age: 25

To query all persons that are above age 21, we can use the following where clause:

person where page = "{{@page.name}}" and age > 21

order by @expression

To sort results, an order by clause can be used, optionally with desc to order in descending order (ascending is the default):

person where page = "{{@page.name}}" order by age desc

limit @expression

To limit the number of results, you can use a limit clause:

person where page = "{{@page.name}}" limit 1

select

You can use the select clause to select only specific attributes from the result set. You can use it either simply as select attribute1, attribute2 but also select the value of certain expressions and give them a name via the select age + 1 as nextYear syntax:

person
where page = "{{@page.name}}"
select name, age, age + 1 as nextYear

render each [[template]] and render all [[template]]

$render By default, results are rendered as a table. To instead render results using Templates, use the render clause, which comes in two shapes render each where the template is instantiated for each result (the each keyword is optional):

person
where page = "{{@page.name}}"
render each [[template/person]]

And render all where the entire result set is passed to the template as a list so the template can do its own iteration using #each, which you could then use to e.g. build a table (using this template/people template, for instance):

person
where page = "{{@page.name}}"
render all [[template/people]]

Expressions

$expression

Primitives:

  • strings: "a string"
  • numbers: 10
  • booleans: true or false
  • regular expressions: /[a-z]+/
  • null: null
  • lists: ["value 1", 10, false]

Attributes can be accessed via the attribute syntax, and nested attributes via attribute.subattribute.subsubattribute.

Logical expressions:

  • and: name = "this" and age > 10
  • or: name = "this" or age > 10

Binary expressions:

  • = equals.
    • For scalar values this performs an equivalence test (e.g. 10 = 10)
    • If the left operand is an array and the right operand is not, this will check if the right operand is included in the left operands value, e.g. [1, 2, 3] = 2 will be true.
    • If both operands are arrays, they will be compared for equivalence ignoring order, so this will be true: [1, 2, 3] = [3, 2, 1]
  • != the exact inverse of the meaning of =, e.g. name != "Pete"
  • < less than, e.g. age < 10
  • <= less than or equals, e.g. age <= 10
  • > greater than, e.g. age > 10
  • >= greater than or equals, e.g. age >= 10
  • =~ to match against a regular expression, e.g. name =~ /^template\//
  • !=~ to not match a regular expression, e.g. name !=~ /^template\//
  • in member of a list (e.g. prop in ["foo", "bar"])
  • + addition (can also concatenate strings), e.g. 10 + 12 or name + "!!!"
  • - subtraction, e.g. 10 - 12
  • / addition, e.g. 10 / 12
  • * multiplication, e.g. 10 * 12
  • % modulo, e.g. 10 % 12

Operator precedence follows standard rules, use parentheses when in doubt, e.g. (age > 10) or (name = "Pete")