Trouble with TYPE
Trouble with TYPE
I have some trouble with the use of TYPE in the version 2.03 of Rel-DBrowser.
When I try to define a type like this:
TYPE Telephone POSSREP {tel CHAR CONSTRAINT SUBSTR(tel,1,1)='+' AND CHAR_LENGTH(tel)>2 AND CHAR_LENGTH(tel)<17};
Rel says that it's OK but then if I try to use this type or if i just want to delete it, Rel says that the type has not been defined.
I'm not sure if it's a bug or not, maybe I am doing something wrong.
When I try to define a type like this:
TYPE Telephone POSSREP {tel CHAR CONSTRAINT SUBSTR(tel,1,1)='+' AND CHAR_LENGTH(tel)>2 AND CHAR_LENGTH(tel)<17};
Rel says that it's OK but then if I try to use this type or if i just want to delete it, Rel says that the type has not been defined.
I'm not sure if it's a bug or not, maybe I am doing something wrong.
Re: Trouble with TYPE
Sounds like you're using an old version of Rel, probably one before TYPE support was complete. The current version of Rel is 0.3.17 and DBrowser is 2.07.
Re: Trouble with TYPE
I have some trouble with the use of TYPE in the rel version 0.3.20
I try to execute a command:
TYPE POINT
POSSREP CARTESIAN {X RATIONAL, Y RATIONAL}
POSSREP POLAR {R RATIONAL, THETA RATIONAL};
The system replies:
ERROR: POSSREP 'CARTESIAN' has no INITialisation.
It was possible to execute the statement in an earlier Rel version.
Then I try the use of initialization.
TYPE Point
POSSREP cartesian {X RATIONAL, Y RATIONAL}
POSSREP polar {R RATIONAL, THETA RATIONAL}
INIT cartesian(X := 0.0, Y := 0.0);
The system replies:
ERROR: Component 'Y' cannot be assigned because it is set via the selector.
Is it possible to define types with multiple possible representation in Rel? If yes, then what is the correct syntax?
I try to execute a command:
TYPE POINT
POSSREP CARTESIAN {X RATIONAL, Y RATIONAL}
POSSREP POLAR {R RATIONAL, THETA RATIONAL};
The system replies:
ERROR: POSSREP 'CARTESIAN' has no INITialisation.
It was possible to execute the statement in an earlier Rel version.
Then I try the use of initialization.
TYPE Point
POSSREP cartesian {X RATIONAL, Y RATIONAL}
POSSREP polar {R RATIONAL, THETA RATIONAL}
INIT cartesian(X := 0.0, Y := 0.0);
The system replies:
ERROR: Component 'Y' cannot be assigned because it is set via the selector.
Is it possible to define types with multiple possible representation in Rel? If yes, then what is the correct syntax?
Re: Trouble with TYPE
Try this:
The INIT section defines each POSSREP in terms of the value being selected. If you select a cartesian Point, it initialises the polar POSSREP from the cartesian Point. If you select a polar Point, it initialises the cartesian POSSREP from the polar Point.
NOTE: The above example depends on the OperatorsMath.d script having been loaded and executed from the Scripts directory. It defines SQRT, ATAN, COS, SIN, and many other math operators.
Code: Select all
TYPE Point
POSSREP cartesian {X RATIONAL, Y RATIONAL}
POSSREP polar {R RATIONAL, THETA RATIONAL}
INIT
cartesian (R := SQRT(X * X + Y * Y), THETA := ATAN(Y / X))
polar (X := R * COS(THETA), Y := R * SIN(THETA));
NOTE: The above example depends on the OperatorsMath.d script having been loaded and executed from the Scripts directory. It defines SQRT, ATAN, COS, SIN, and many other math operators.
Re: Trouble with TYPE
The Third Manifesto (Third Edition) book does not seem to require INIT clause in case of scalar types.
Therefore I have a question - is it a bug or a feature?
If it is a feature, hen how should I define a type with for instance three different possible representations?
Therefore I have a question - is it a bug or a feature?
If it is a feature, hen how should I define a type with for instance three different possible representations?
Re: Trouble with TYPE
The book describes the type model, but leaves out some of the low-level details. Essentially, it treats type definitions as interfaces without specifying how the interfaces are implemented. Page 382 of TTM 3rd ed. refers to "highly protected operators [that are] not part of D" that might be needed to implement a TYPE definition. For simplicity's sake, Rel uses INIT in place of these. In effect, this means a type's actual and possible representation are the same, but it simplifies implementing typical type definitions. Eventually, more sophisticated type definition facilities -- i.e., a mechanism to write "highly protected operators [that are] not part of D" -- will be provided.
So, in short, INIT is neither a bug nor a feature. It's a workaround.
Here's an example of a type with three POSSREPs:
So, in short, INIT is neither a bug nor a feature. It's a workaround.
Here's an example of a type with three POSSREPs:
Code: Select all
TYPE Temperature
POSSREP Celsius {celsius RATIONAL}
POSSREP Kelvin {kelvin RATIONAL}
POSSREP Fahrenheit {fahrenheit RATIONAL}
INIT
Celsius (kelvin := celsius + 273.15, fahrenheit := (9.0 / 5.0) * celsius + 32.0)
Kelvin (celsius := kelvin - 273.15, fahrenheit := ((kelvin - 273.15) * (9.0 / 5.0)) + 32.0)
Fahrenheit (kelvin := (5.0 / 9.0 * (fahrenheit - 32.0) + 273.15), celsius := (5.0 / 9.0) * (fahrenheit - 32.0));
Re: Trouble with TYPE
I'm trying to use the syntax with INIT that you propose but the problem is I have to init a Point that is another user-define type.
I'm working with DBrowser 2.08
Here is the definition of Point:
TYPE Point POSSREP Point{Abscisse RATIONAL,Ordonne RATIONAL};
Here is the definition of a line:
TYPE Line
POSSREP Line2p{p1 Point,p2 Point}
POSSREP LineInfinite{SETOF Point}
INIT Line2p( p1:=Point(0,0), p2:=Point(0,0));
This syntax returns the following error :
ERROR: Component 'p2' cannot be assigned because it is set via the selector.
Is there a way to do what I want ?
I'm working with DBrowser 2.08
Here is the definition of Point:
TYPE Point POSSREP Point{Abscisse RATIONAL,Ordonne RATIONAL};
Here is the definition of a line:
TYPE Line
POSSREP Line2p{p1 Point,p2 Point}
POSSREP LineInfinite{SETOF Point}
INIT Line2p( p1:=Point(0,0), p2:=Point(0,0));
This syntax returns the following error :
ERROR: Component 'p2' cannot be assigned because it is set via the selector.
Is there a way to do what I want ?
Re: Trouble with TYPE
Yes. Your approach using two POSSREPs in one type won't work because Line2p and LineInfinite are not equivalent. What I think you want is this:aurelie wrote:Is there a way to do what I want ?
TYPE Line UNION;
TYPE Line2p IS {Line POSSREP {p1 Point, p2 Point}};
TYPE LineInfinite IS {Line POSSREP {SETOF Point}};
Of course, the above presumes the existence of SETOF, which is not available in Rel.
However, this would work:
Code: Select all
TYPE Line UNION;
TYPE Line2p IS {Line POSSREP {p1 Point, p2 Point}};
TYPE LineInfinite IS {Line POSSREP {points RELATION {p Point}}};
Re: Trouble with TYPE
I have some trouble with the use of TYPE POINT.
I define the TYPE POINT:
TYPE Point POSSREP Point {Abscisse RATIONAL,Ordonne RATIONAL};
I have a relation Person with a type POINT:
VAR Personnes REAL RELATION {Id integer, Nom char, Point Point} KEY {Id};
I have a problem on the insertion Person:
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE{Id 1, Nom 'Personne1', Point (10,70)}
};
How can I make tuple's insertion?
Thanks.
I define the TYPE POINT:
TYPE Point POSSREP Point {Abscisse RATIONAL,Ordonne RATIONAL};
I have a relation Person with a type POINT:
VAR Personnes REAL RELATION {Id integer, Nom char, Point Point} KEY {Id};
I have a problem on the insertion Person:
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE{Id 1, Nom 'Personne1', Point (10,70)}
};
How can I make tuple's insertion?
Thanks.
Re: Trouble with TYPE
Dave wrote:Yes. Your approach using two POSSREPs in one type won't work because Line2p and LineInfinite are not equivalent. What I think you want is this:aurelie wrote:Is there a way to do what I want ?
TYPE Line UNION;
TYPE Line2p IS {Line POSSREP {p1 Point, p2 Point}};
TYPE LineInfinite IS {Line POSSREP {SETOF Point}};
Of course, the above presumes the existence of SETOF, which is not available in Rel.
However, this would work:Code: Select all
TYPE Line UNION; TYPE Line2p IS {Line POSSREP {p1 Point, p2 Point}}; TYPE LineInfinite IS {Line POSSREP {points RELATION {p Point}}};
How we can make insertion of tuples with type Line2p and LineInfinite?
Re: Trouble with TYPE
You're missing the 'Point' attribute name in the TUPLE. It should be:katoussa wrote: I have a problem on the insertion Person:
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE{Id 1, Nom 'Personne1', Point (10,70)}
};
How can I make tuple's insertion?
Code: Select all
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE {Id 1, Nom 'Personne1', Point Point(10.0, 70.0)}
};
Re: Trouble with TYPE
Assuming the following relvar exists:katoussa wrote: How we can make insertion of tuples with type Line2p and LineInfinite?
Code: Select all
VAR Personnes REAL RELATION {Id integer, Nom char, Line Line} KEY {Id};
Code: Select all
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE {Id 1, Nom 'Personne1', Line Line2p(Point(10.0, 70.0), Point(2.0, 5.0))}
};
INSERT Personnes RELATION {
TUPLE {
Id 2,
Nom 'Personne2',
Line LineInfinite(
RELATION {
TUPLE {p Point(10.0, 70.0)},
TUPLE {p Point(2.0, 5.0)}
}
)
}
};