dbf.py API question concerning Index.index_search()
MRAB
python at mrabarnett.plus.com
Thu Aug 16 12:43:13 EDT 2012
On 16/08/2012 17:13, Ethan Furman wrote:
> MRAB wrote:
>> On 16/08/2012 02:22, Ethan Furman wrote:
>>> Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>>>> On Wed, 15 Aug 2012 16:26:09 -0700, Ethan Furman wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Indexes have a new method (rebirth of an old one, really):
>>>>>
>>>>> .index_search(
>>>>> match,
>>>>> start=None,
>>>>> stop=None,
>>>>> nearest=False,
>>>>> partial=False )
>>>> [...]
>>>>
>>>> Why "index_search" rather than just "search"?
>>>
>>> Because "search" already exists and returns a dbf.List of all matching
>>> records.
>>>
>> Perhaps that should've been called "find_all"!
>
> In interesting thought.
>
> Currently there are:
>
> .index(data) --> returns index of data in Index, or raises error
> .query(string) --> brute force search, returns all matching records
> .search(match) --> binary search through table, returns all matching
> records
>
> 'index' and 'query' are supported by Tables, Lists, and Indexes; search
> (and now index_search) are only supported on Indexes.
>
What exactly is the difference between .index and .index_search with
the default arguments?
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