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Update documentation on queries in annotations
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---
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title: "(Legacy) Custom queries"
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title: "Custom queries"
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weight: 10
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description: Let moor generate Dart from your SQL statements
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aliases:
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- /queries/custom
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---
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{{% alert title="Outdated feature" color="warning" %}}
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{{% alert title="Moor files!" color="warning" %}}
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With moor 2.0, we moved the new `.moor` files out of preview and added some powerful features to them.
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They are easier to use than the approaches described here. While these features will continue to
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be supported, moor files will get better tooling support in the future and we recommend to
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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ migrate. See [their api]({{%relref "moor_files.md"%}}) for details.
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{{% /alert %}}
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Although moor includes a fluent api that can be used to model most statements, advanced
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features like `GROUP BY` statements or window functions are not yet supported. You can
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features like `WITH` clauses or subqueries aren't supported yet. You can
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use these features with custom statements. You don't have to miss out on other benefits
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moor brings, though: Moor helps you parse the result rows and custom queries also
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support auto-updating streams.
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@ -79,10 +79,10 @@ class CategoryWithCount {
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Stream<List<CategoryWithCount>> categoriesWithCount() {
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// select all categories and load how many associated entries there are for
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// each category
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return customSelectStream(
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return customSelect(
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'SELECT *, (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM todos WHERE category = c.id) AS "amount" FROM categories c;',
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readsFrom: {todos, categories}, // used for the stream: the stream will update when either table changes
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).map((rows) {
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).watch().map((rows) {
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// we get list of rows here. We just have to turn the raw data from the row into a
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// CategoryWithCount. As we defined the Category table earlier, moor knows how to parse
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// a category. The only thing left to do manually is extracting the amount
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