On Mon, Apr 27, 2020 at 8:19 PM Eric Naujock wrote:
> Thanks Peter.
> That could be considered but the part I asked about was only part of the
> query, In reality it had more parts to the query. Where essayWordCount is
> an long integer.
>
> $records:= ds.Parent.query (“essayWordCount >100 and
>
Thanks Peter.
That could be considered but the part I asked about was only part of
the query, In reality it had more parts to the query. Where essayWordCount is
an long integer.
$records:= ds.Parent.query (“essayWordCount >100 and parentReference_return
#null)
I have one monster query
On Mon, Apr 27, 2020 at 6:54 PM Eric Naujock via 4D_Tech <
4d_tech@lists.4d.com> wrote:
> I am trying to preform an unusual query. I em effectively thing to find
> all the records in a parent where the parent has children. Any suggestions
> other than build a collection of records primary keys and
riginal Message-
> From: 4D_Tech <4d_tech-boun...@lists.4d.com> On Behalf Of Eric Naujock via
> 4D_Tech
> Sent: Monday, April 27, 2020 10:54 AM
> To: Technical iNug 4D <4d_tech@lists.4D.com>
> Cc: Eric Naujock
> Subject: Using the length parameter in a ORDA
t: Using the length parameter in a ORDA query.
I am trying to preform an unusual query. I em effectively thing to find all the
records in a parent where the parent has children. Any suggestions other than
build a collection of records primary keys and use an “in” conditional. Which
feels dirty.
Th
I am trying to preform an unusual query. I em effectively thing to find all the
records in a parent where the parent has children. Any suggestions other than
build a collection of records primary keys and use an “in” conditional. Which
feels dirty.
This this case I have a table “cases” with re
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