I wonder what's the difference between an "IN" filter over a property named
"ID"
or a feature id.
eg,
"ID in ('value1', 'value2', 'value3')"
what happens if the featuretype has a property named "ID", is it gonna be a
feature id filter or one based on the "ID" property?
Gabriel
On Tuesday 03
>> I have finished the ECQL documentation and I have changed to "public" the
>> ECQL
>> facade in trunk.
Nice docs Mauricio - I like the format of a range of simple examples
and then the grammar if you want more detail.
Thanks !
Michael
Nice work - that is worth a news post.-
http://docs.codehaus.org/display/GEOTOOLS/2009/02/03/Extended+Common+Query+Lanaguage+Finished
Jody
On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 6:04 AM, Mauricio Pazos wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> I have finished the ECQL documentation and I have changed to "public" the
> ECQL
> fac
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 14:43:06 Adrian Custer wrote:
> congratulations on all the hard work to get this to land!
Thanks
--
Mauricio Pazos
www.axios.es
--
Create and Deploy Rich Internet Apps outside the browser with
On Tue, 2009-01-27 at 20:04 +0100, Mauricio Pazos wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> I have finished the ECQL documentation and I have changed to "public" the
> ECQL
> facade in trunk.
>
> User Doc
> http://docs.codehaus.org/display/GEOTDOC/03+ECQL+Examples
>
> Design
> http://docs.codehaus.org/display/G
Hi list,
I have finished the ECQL documentation and I have changed to "public" the ECQL
facade in trunk.
User Doc
http://docs.codehaus.org/display/GEOTDOC/03+ECQL+Examples
Design
http://docs.codehaus.org/display/GEOTOOLS/ECQL+Parser+Design
cheers
--
Mauricio Pazos
www.axios.es