KeyRange class
KeyRange represents a range of rows in a table or index.
A range has a start key and an end key. These keys can be open or closed,
indicating if the range includes rows with that key. Keys are represented by
lists, where the ith value in the list corresponds to the ith component of
the table or index primary key. Individual values are encoded as described
here. For example, consider the following table definition: CREATE TABLE
UserEvents ( UserName STRING(MAX), EventDate STRING(10) ) PRIMARY
KEY(UserName, EventDate); The following keys name rows in this table: "Bob",
"2014-09-23" Since the UserEvents
table's PRIMARY KEY
clause names two
columns, each UserEvents
key has two elements; the first is the
UserName
, and the second is the EventDate
. Key ranges with multiple
components are interpreted lexicographically by component using the table or
index key's declared sort order. For example, the following range returns
all events for user "Bob"
that occurred in the year 2015: "start_closed":
["Bob", "2015-01-01"] "end_closed": ["Bob", "2015-12-31"] Start and end
keys can omit trailing key components. This affects the inclusion and
exclusion of rows that exactly match the provided key components: if the key
is closed, then rows that exactly match the provided components are
included; if the key is open, then rows that exactly match are not included.
For example, the following range includes all events for "Bob"
that
occurred during and after the year 2000: "start_closed": ["Bob",
"2000-01-01"] "end_closed": ["Bob"] The next example retrieves all events
for "Bob"
: "start_closed": ["Bob"] "end_closed": ["Bob"] To retrieve
events before the year 2000: "start_closed": ["Bob"] "end_open": ["Bob",
"2000-01-01"] The following range includes all rows in the table:
"start_closed": [] "end_closed": [] This range returns all users whose
UserName
begins with any character from A to C: "start_closed": ["A"]
"end_open": ["D"] This range returns all users whose UserName
begins
with B: "start_closed": ["B"] "end_open": ["C"] Key ranges honor column
sort order. For example, suppose a table is defined as follows: CREATE TABLE
DescendingSortedTable { Key INT64, ... ) PRIMARY KEY(Key DESC); The
following range retrieves all rows with key values between 1 and 100
inclusive: "start_closed": ["100"] "end_closed": ["1"] Note that 100 is
passed as the start, and 1 is passed as the end, because Key
is a
descending column in the schema.
Constructors
Properties
-
endClosed
↔ List<
Object?> ? -
If the end is closed, then the range includes all rows whose first
len(end_closed)
key columns exactly matchend_closed
.getter/setter pair -
endOpen
↔ List<
Object?> ? -
If the end is open, then the range excludes rows whose first
len(end_open)
key columns exactly matchend_open
.getter/setter pair - hashCode → int
-
The hash code for this object.
no setterinherited
- runtimeType → Type
-
A representation of the runtime type of the object.
no setterinherited
-
startClosed
↔ List<
Object?> ? -
If the start is closed, then the range includes all rows whose first
len(start_closed)
key columns exactly matchstart_closed
.getter/setter pair -
startOpen
↔ List<
Object?> ? -
If the start is open, then the range excludes rows whose first
len(start_open)
key columns exactly matchstart_open
.getter/setter pair
Methods
-
noSuchMethod(
Invocation invocation) → dynamic -
Invoked when a nonexistent method or property is accessed.
inherited
-
toJson(
) → Map< String, dynamic> -
toString(
) → String -
A string representation of this object.
inherited
Operators
-
operator ==(
Object other) → bool -
The equality operator.
inherited