1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580
|
# 2010 September 24
#
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
#
# May you do good and not evil.
# May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
# May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
#
#***********************************************************************
#
# This file implements tests to verify that the "testable statements" in
# the lang_select.html document are correct.
#
set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
# te_* commands:
#
#
# te_read_sql DB SELECT-STATEMENT
# te_read_tbl DB TABLENAME
#
# These two commands are used to read a dataset from the database. A dataset
# consists of N rows of M named columns of values each, where each value has a
# type (null, integer, real, text or blob) and a value within the types domain.
# The tcl format for a "dataset" is a list of two elements:
#
# * A list of the column names.
# * A list of data rows. Each row is itself a list, where each element is
# the contents of a column of the row. Each of these is a list of two
# elements, the type name and the actual value.
#
# For example, the contents of table [t1] as a dataset is:
#
# CREATE TABLE t1(a, b);
# INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('abc', NULL);
# INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(43.1, 22);
#
# {a b} {{{TEXT abc} {NULL {}}} {{REAL 43.1} {INTEGER 22}}}
#
# The [te_read_tbl] command returns a dataset read from a table. The
# [te_read_sql] returns the dataset that results from executing a SELECT
# command.
#
#
# te_tbljoin ?SWITCHES? LHS-TABLE RHS-TABLE
# te_join ?SWITCHES? LHS-DATASET RHS-DATASET
#
# This command joins the two datasets and returns the resulting dataset. If
# there are no switches specified, then the results is the cartesian product
# of the two inputs. The [te_tbljoin] command reads the left and right-hand
# datasets from the specified tables. The [te_join] command is passed the
# datasets directly.
#
# Optional switches are as follows:
#
# -on SCRIPT
# -using COLUMN-LIST
# -left
#
# The -on option specifies a tcl script that is executed for each row in the
# cartesian product of the two datasets. The script has 4 arguments appended
# to it, in the following order:
#
# * The list of column-names from the left-hand dataset.
# * A single row from the left-hand dataset (one "data row" list as
# described above.
# * The list of column-names from the right-hand dataset.
# * A single row from the right-hand dataset.
#
# The script must return a boolean value - true if the combination of rows
# should be included in the output dataset, or false otherwise.
#
# The -using option specifies a list of the columns from the right-hand
# dataset that should be omitted from the output dataset.
#
# If the -left option is present, the join is done LEFT JOIN style.
# Specifically, an extra row is inserted if after the -on script is run there
# exist rows in the left-hand dataset that have no corresponding rows in
# the output. See the implementation for more specific comments.
#
#
# te_equals ?SWITCHES? COLNAME1 COLNAME2 <-on script args>
#
# The only supported switch is "-nocase". If it is present, then text values
# are compared in a case-independent fashion. Otherwise, they are compared
# as if using the SQLite BINARY collation sequence.
#
#
# te_and ONSCRIPT1 ONSCRIPT2...
#
#
#
# te_read_tbl DB TABLENAME
# te_read_sql DB SELECT-STATEMENT
#
# These two procs are used to extract datasets from the database, either
# by reading the contents of a named table (te_read_tbl), or by executing
# a SELECT statement (t3_read_sql).
#
# See the comment above, describing "te_* commands", for details of the
# return values.
#
proc te_read_tbl {db tbl} {
te_read_sql $db "SELECT * FROM '$tbl'"
}
proc te_read_sql {db sql} {
set S [sqlite3_prepare_v2 $db $sql -1 DUMMY]
set cols [list]
for {set i 0} {$i < [sqlite3_column_count $S]} {incr i} {
lappend cols [sqlite3_column_name $S $i]
}
set rows [list]
while {[sqlite3_step $S] == "SQLITE_ROW"} {
set r [list]
for {set i 0} {$i < [sqlite3_column_count $S]} {incr i} {
lappend r [list [sqlite3_column_type $S $i] [sqlite3_column_text $S $i]]
}
lappend rows $r
}
sqlite3_finalize $S
return [list $cols $rows]
}
#-------
# Usage: te_join <table-data1> <table-data2> <join spec>...
#
# Where a join-spec is an optional list of arguments as follows:
#
# ?-left?
# ?-using colname-list?
# ?-on on-expr-proc?
#
proc te_join {data1 data2 args} {
set testproc ""
set usinglist [list]
set isleft 0
for {set i 0} {$i < [llength $args]} {incr i} {
set a [lindex $args $i]
switch -- $a {
-on { set testproc [lindex $args [incr i]] }
-using { set usinglist [lindex $args [incr i]] }
-left { set isleft 1 }
default {
error "Unknown argument: $a"
}
}
}
set c1 [lindex $data1 0]
set c2 [lindex $data2 0]
set omitlist [list]
set nullrowlist [list]
set cret $c1
set cidx 0
foreach col $c2 {
set idx [lsearch $usinglist $col]
if {$idx>=0} {lappend omitlist $cidx}
if {$idx<0} {
lappend nullrowlist {NULL {}}
lappend cret $col
}
incr cidx
}
set omitlist [lsort -integer -decreasing $omitlist]
set rret [list]
foreach r1 [lindex $data1 1] {
set one 0
foreach r2 [lindex $data2 1] {
set ok 1
if {$testproc != ""} {
set ok [eval $testproc [list $c1 $r1 $c2 $r2]]
}
if {$ok} {
set one 1
foreach idx $omitlist {set r2 [lreplace $r2 $idx $idx]}
lappend rret [concat $r1 $r2]
}
}
if {$isleft && $one==0} {
lappend rret [concat $r1 $nullrowlist]
}
}
list $cret $rret
}
proc te_tbljoin {db t1 t2 args} {
te_join [te_read_tbl $db $t1] [te_read_tbl $db $t2] {*}$args
}
proc te_apply_affinity {affinity typevar valvar} {
upvar $typevar type
upvar $valvar val
switch -- $affinity {
integer {
if {[string is double $val]} { set type REAL }
if {[string is wideinteger $val]} { set type INTEGER }
if {$type == "REAL" && int($val)==$val} {
set type INTEGER
set val [expr {int($val)}]
}
}
text {
set type TEXT
}
none { }
default { error "invalid affinity: $affinity" }
}
}
#----------
# te_equals ?SWITCHES? c1 c2 cols1 row1 cols2 row2
#
proc te_equals {args} {
if {[llength $args]<6} {error "invalid arguments to te_equals"}
foreach {c1 c2 cols1 row1 cols2 row2} [lrange $args end-5 end] break
set nocase 0
set affinity none
for {set i 0} {$i < ([llength $args]-6)} {incr i} {
set a [lindex $args $i]
switch -- $a {
-nocase {
set nocase 1
}
-affinity {
set affinity [string tolower [lindex $args [incr i]]]
}
default {
error "invalid arguments to te_equals"
}
}
}
set idx2 [if {[string is integer $c2]} { set c2 } else { lsearch $cols2 $c2 }]
set idx1 [if {[string is integer $c1]} { set c1 } else { lsearch $cols1 $c1 }]
set t1 [lindex $row1 $idx1 0]
set t2 [lindex $row2 $idx2 0]
set v1 [lindex $row1 $idx1 1]
set v2 [lindex $row2 $idx2 1]
te_apply_affinity $affinity t1 v1
te_apply_affinity $affinity t2 v2
if {$t1 == "NULL" || $t2 == "NULL"} { return 0 }
if {$nocase && $t1 == "TEXT"} { set v1 [string tolower $v1] }
if {$nocase && $t2 == "TEXT"} { set v2 [string tolower $v2] }
set res [expr {$t1 == $t2 && [string equal $v1 $v2]}]
return $res
}
proc te_false {args} { return 0 }
proc te_true {args} { return 1 }
proc te_and {args} {
foreach a [lrange $args 0 end-4] {
set res [eval $a [lrange $args end-3 end]]
if {$res == 0} {return 0}
}
return 1
}
proc te_dataset_eq {testname got expected} {
uplevel #0 [list do_test $testname [list set {} $got] $expected]
}
proc te_dataset_eq_unordered {testname got expected} {
lset got 1 [lsort [lindex $got 1]]
lset expected 1 [lsort [lindex $expected 1]]
te_dataset_eq $testname $got $expected
}
proc te_dataset_ne {testname got unexpected} {
uplevel #0 [list do_test $testname [list string equal $got $unexpected] 0]
}
proc te_dataset_ne_unordered {testname got unexpected} {
lset got 1 [lsort [lindex $got 1]]
lset unexpected 1 [lsort [lindex $unexpected 1]]
te_dataset_ne $testname $got $unexpected
}
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
proc test_join {tn sqljoin tbljoinargs} {
set sql [te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM $sqljoin"]
set te [te_tbljoin db {*}$tbljoinargs]
te_dataset_eq_unordered $tn $sql $te
}
drop_all_tables
do_execsql_test e_select-2.0 {
CREATE TABLE t1(a, b);
CREATE TABLE t2(a, b);
CREATE TABLE t3(b COLLATE nocase);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(2, 'B');
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 'A');
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4, 'D');
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(3, NULL);
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 'A');
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(2, NULL);
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(5, 'E');
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, NULL);
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(3, 'C');
INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('a');
INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('c');
INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('b');
} {}
foreach {tn indexes} {
e_select-2.1.1 { }
e_select-2.1.2 { CREATE INDEX i1 ON t1(a) }
e_select-2.1.3 { CREATE INDEX i1 ON t2(a) }
e_select-2.1.4 { CREATE INDEX i1 ON t3(b) }
} {
catchsql { DROP INDEX i1 }
catchsql { DROP INDEX i2 }
catchsql { DROP INDEX i3 }
execsql $indexes
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-49872-03192 If the join-operator is "CROSS JOIN",
# "INNER JOIN", "JOIN" or a comma (",") and there is no ON or USING
# clause, then the result of the join is simply the cartesian product of
# the left and right-hand datasets.
#
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-46256-57243 There is no difference between the "INNER
# JOIN", "JOIN" and "," join operators.
#
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-25071-21202 The "CROSS JOIN" join operator produces the
# same result as the "INNER JOIN", "JOIN" and "," operators
#
test_join $tn.1.1 "t1, t2" {t1 t2}
test_join $tn.1.2 "t1 INNER JOIN t2" {t1 t2}
test_join $tn.1.3 "t1 CROSS JOIN t2" {t1 t2}
test_join $tn.1.4 "t1 JOIN t2" {t1 t2}
test_join $tn.1.5 "t2, t3" {t2 t3}
test_join $tn.1.6 "t2 INNER JOIN t3" {t2 t3}
test_join $tn.1.7 "t2 CROSS JOIN t3" {t2 t3}
test_join $tn.1.8 "t2 JOIN t3" {t2 t3}
test_join $tn.1.9 "t2, t2 AS x" {t2 t2}
test_join $tn.1.10 "t2 INNER JOIN t2 AS x" {t2 t2}
test_join $tn.1.11 "t2 CROSS JOIN t2 AS x" {t2 t2}
test_join $tn.1.12 "t2 JOIN t2 AS x" {t2 t2}
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-38465-03616 If there is an ON clause then the ON
# expression is evaluated for each row of the cartesian product as a
# boolean expression. Only rows for which the expression evaluates to
# true are included from the dataset.
#
test_join $tn.2.1 "t1, t2 ON (t1.a=t2.a)" {t1 t2 -on {te_equals a a}}
test_join $tn.2.2 "t2, t1 ON (t1.a=t2.a)" {t2 t1 -on {te_equals a a}}
test_join $tn.2.3 "t2, t1 ON (1)" {t2 t1 -on te_true}
test_join $tn.2.4 "t2, t1 ON (NULL)" {t2 t1 -on te_false}
test_join $tn.2.5 "t2, t1 ON (1.1-1.1)" {t2 t1 -on te_false}
test_join $tn.2.6 "t1, t2 ON (1.1-1.0)" {t1 t2 -on te_true}
test_join $tn.3 "t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON (t1.a=t2.a)" {t1 t2 -left -on {te_equals a a}}
test_join $tn.4 "t1 LEFT JOIN t2 USING (a)" {
t1 t2 -left -using a -on {te_equals a a}
}
test_join $tn.5 "t1 CROSS JOIN t2 USING(b, a)" {
t1 t2 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.6 "t1 NATURAL JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.7 "t1 NATURAL INNER JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.8 "t1 NATURAL CROSS JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.9 "t1 NATURAL INNER JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.10 "t1 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -left -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.11 "t1 NATURAL LEFT OUTER JOIN t2" {
t1 t2 -left -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.12 "t2 NATURAL JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.13 "t2 NATURAL INNER JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.14 "t2 NATURAL CROSS JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.15 "t2 NATURAL INNER JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.16 "t2 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -left -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.17 "t2 NATURAL LEFT OUTER JOIN t1" {
t2 t1 -left -using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals b b}}
}
test_join $tn.18 "t1 LEFT JOIN t2 USING (b)" {
t1 t2 -left -using b -on {te_equals b b}
}
test_join $tn.19 "t1 JOIN t3 USING(b)" {t1 t3 -using b -on {te_equals b b}}
test_join $tn.20 "t3 JOIN t1 USING(b)" {
t3 t1 -using b -on {te_equals -nocase b b}
}
test_join $tn.21 "t1 NATURAL JOIN t3" {
t1 t3 -using b -on {te_equals b b}
}
test_join $tn.22 "t3 NATURAL JOIN t1" {
t3 t1 -using b -on {te_equals -nocase b b}
}
test_join $tn.23 "t1 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t3" {
t1 t3 -left -using b -on {te_equals b b}
}
test_join $tn.24 "t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t1" {
t3 t1 -left -using b -on {te_equals -nocase b b}
}
test_join $tn.25 "t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON (t3.b=t1.b)" {
t1 t3 -left -on {te_equals -nocase b b}
}
test_join $tn.26 "t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON (t1.b=t3.b)" {
t1 t3 -left -on {te_equals b b}
}
test_join $tn.27 "t1 JOIN t3 ON (t1.b=t3.b)" { t1 t3 -on {te_equals b b} }
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-28760-53843 When more than two tables are joined
# together as part of a FROM clause, the join operations are processed
# in order from left to right. In other words, the FROM clause (A
# join-op-1 B join-op-2 C) is computed as ((A join-op-1 B) join-op-2 C).
#
# Tests 28a and 28b show that the statement above is true for this case.
# Test 28c shows that if the parenthesis force a different order of
# evaluation the result is different. Test 28d verifies that the result
# of the query with the parenthesis forcing a different order of evaluation
# is as calculated by the [te_*] procs.
#
set t3_natural_left_join_t2 [
te_tbljoin db t3 t2 -left -using {b} -on {te_equals -nocase b b}
]
set t1 [te_read_tbl db t1]
te_dataset_eq_unordered $tn.28a [
te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2 NATURAL JOIN t1"
] [te_join $t3_natural_left_join_t2 $t1 \
-using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals -nocase b b}} \
]
te_dataset_eq_unordered $tn.28b [
te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM (t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2) NATURAL JOIN t1"
] [te_join $t3_natural_left_join_t2 $t1 \
-using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals -nocase b b}} \
]
te_dataset_ne_unordered $tn.28c [
te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM (t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2) NATURAL JOIN t1"
] [
te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN (t2 NATURAL JOIN t1)"
]
set t2_natural_join_t1 [te_tbljoin db t2 t1 -using {a b} \
-using {a b} -on {te_and {te_equals a a} {te_equals -nocase b b}} \
]
set t3 [te_read_tbl db t3]
te_dataset_eq_unordered $tn.28d [
te_read_sql db "SELECT * FROM t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN (t2 NATURAL JOIN t1)"
] [te_join $t3 $t2_natural_join_t1 \
-left -using {b} -on {te_equals -nocase b b} \
]
}
do_execsql_test e_select-2.2.0 {
CREATE TABLE t4(x TEXT COLLATE nocase);
CREATE TABLE t5(y INTEGER, z TEXT COLLATE binary);
INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('2.0');
INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('TWO');
INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(2, 'two');
} {}
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-59237-46742 A subquery specified in the
# table-or-subquery following the FROM clause in a simple SELECT
# statement is handled as if it was a table containing the data returned
# by executing the subquery statement.
#
# EVIDENCE-OF: R-27438-53558 Each column of the subquery has the
# collation sequence and affinity of the corresponding expression in the
# subquery statement.
#
foreach {tn subselect select spec} {
1 "SELECT * FROM t2" "SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN %ss%"
{t1 %ss%}
2 "SELECT * FROM t2" "SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN %ss% AS x ON (t1.a=x.a)"
{t1 %ss% -on {te_equals 0 0}}
3 "SELECT * FROM t2" "SELECT * FROM %ss% AS x JOIN t1 ON (t1.a=x.a)"
{%ss% t1 -on {te_equals 0 0}}
4 "SELECT * FROM t1, t2" "SELECT * FROM %ss% AS x JOIN t3"
{%ss% t3}
5 "SELECT * FROM t1, t2" "SELECT * FROM %ss% NATURAL JOIN t3"
{%ss% t3 -using b -on {te_equals 1 0}}
6 "SELECT * FROM t1, t2" "SELECT * FROM t3 NATURAL JOIN %ss%"
{t3 %ss% -using b -on {te_equals -nocase 0 1}}
7 "SELECT * FROM t1, t2" "SELECT * FROM t3 NATURAL LEFT JOIN %ss%"
{t3 %ss% -left -using b -on {te_equals -nocase 0 1}}
8 "SELECT count(*) AS y FROM t4" "SELECT * FROM t5, %ss% USING (y)"
{t5 %ss% -using y -on {te_equals -affinity text 0 0}}
9 "SELECT count(*) AS y FROM t4" "SELECT * FROM %ss%, t5 USING (y)"
{%ss% t5 -using y -on {te_equals -affinity text 0 0}}
10 "SELECT x AS y FROM t4" "SELECT * FROM %ss% JOIN t5 USING (y)"
{%ss% t5 -using y -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity integer 0 0}}
11 "SELECT x AS y FROM t4" "SELECT * FROM t5 JOIN %ss% USING (y)"
{t5 %ss% -using y -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity integer 0 0}}
12 "SELECT y AS x FROM t5" "SELECT * FROM %ss% JOIN t4 USING (x)"
{%ss% t4 -using x -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity integer 0 0}}
13 "SELECT y AS x FROM t5" "SELECT * FROM t4 JOIN %ss% USING (x)"
{t4 %ss% -using x -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity integer 0 0}}
14 "SELECT +y AS x FROM t5" "SELECT * FROM %ss% JOIN t4 USING (x)"
{%ss% t4 -using x -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity text 0 0}}
15 "SELECT +y AS x FROM t5" "SELECT * FROM t4 JOIN %ss% USING (x)"
{t4 %ss% -using x -on {te_equals -nocase -affinity text 0 0}}
} {
# Create a temporary table named %ss% containing the data returned by
# the sub-select. Then have the [te_tbljoin] proc use this table to
# compute the expected results of the $select query. Drop the temporary
# table before continuing.
#
execsql "CREATE TEMP TABLE '%ss%' AS $subselect"
set te [eval te_tbljoin db $spec]
execsql "DROP TABLE '%ss%'"
# Check that the actual data returned by the $select query is the same
# as the expected data calculated using [te_tbljoin] above.
#
te_dataset_eq_unordered e_select-2.2.1.$tn [
te_read_sql db [string map [list %ss% "($subselect)"] $select]
] $te
}
finish_test
|