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-<com:TContent ID="body">
-<h1>Complex Properties</h1>
-<p>In a relational database, one table will often refer to another. Likewise,
-some of your business objects may include another object or list of objects.
-Types that nest other types are called "complex types". You may not want a
-statement to return a simple type, but a fully-formed complex type.</p>
-
-<p>In the database, a related column is usually represented via a 1:1
-relationship, or a 1:M relationship where the class that holds the complex
-property is from the "many side" of the relationship and the property itself
-is from the "one side" of the relationship. The column returned from the
-database will not be the property we want; it is a key to be used in another
-query.</p>
-
-<p>From the framework's perspective, the problem is not so much loading a complex
-type, but loading each "complex property". To solve this problem, you can
-specify in the Result Map a statement to run to load a given property. In
-the following example, the "category" property of the
-"select-product-result" element is a complex property.</p>
-
-<com:TTextHighlighter Language="xml" CssClass="source">
-<resultMap id="select-product-result" class="product">
- <result property="id" column="PRD_ID"/>
- <result property="description" column="PRD_DESCRIPTION"/>
- <result property="category" column="PRD_CAT_ID" select="selectCategory"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<resultMap id="select-category-result" class="category">
- <result property="id" column="CAT_ID"/>
- <result property="description" column="CAT_DESCRIPTION"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<select id="selectProduct" parameterClass="int" resultMap="select-product-result">
- select * from PRODUCT where PRD_ID = #value#
-</select>
-
-<select id="selectCategory" parameterClass="int" resultMap="select-category-result">
- select * from CATEGORY where CAT_ID = #value#
-</select>
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-
-<p>In the above example, the framework will use the "selectCategory"
-statement to populate the "category" property. The value of each category is
-passed to the "selectCategory" statement, and the object returned is set to
-the category property. When the process completes, each Product instance will
-have the the appropriate category object instance set.</p>
-
-<h1>Avoiding N+1 Selects (1:1)</h1>
-<p>A problem with the above example may be that whenever you load a
-Product, two statements execute: one for the Product and one for the Category.
-For a single Product, this issue may seem trivial. But if you load 10
-products, then 11 statements execute. For 100 Products, instead of one
-statement product statement executing, a total of 101 statements execute. The
-number of statements executing for the above example will always be
-N+1: 100+1=101.</p>
-
-<p>One way to mitigate the problem is to cache the "selectCategory" statement.
-We might have a hundred products, but there might only be five categories.
-Instead of running a SQL query or stored procedure, the framework will return
-the category object from it cache. A 101 statements would still run, but they
-would not be hitting the database. See <a href="?page=Manual.CacheModels">Cache Models</a>
-more details about caches.</p>
-
-<p>Another solution is to use a standard SQL join to return the columns you need
-from the another table. A join can bring all the columns we need over from the
-database in a single query. When you have a nested object, you can reference
-nested properties using a dotted notation, like "category.description".</p>
-
-<p>The following example solves the same problem as the previous
-example, but uses a join instead of nested properties.</p>
-
-<com:TTextHighlighter Language="xml" CssClass="source">
-<resultMap id="select-product-result" class="product">
- <result property="id" column="PRD_ID"/>
- <result property="description" column="PRD_DESCRIPTION"/>
- <result property="category" resultMapping="Category.CategoryResult" />
-</resultMap>
-
-<statement id="selectProduct" parameterClass="int" resultMap="select-product-result">
- select *
- from PRODUCT, CATEGORY
- where PRD_CAT_ID=CAT_ID
- and PRD_ID = #value#
-</statement>
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-
-<div class="info"><b class="tip">Lazy Loading vs. Joins (1:1):</b>
-<p>It's important to note that using a join is not always better. If you are in a
-situation where it is rare to access the related object (e.g. the category
-property of the Product class) then it might actually be faster to avoid the
-join and the unnecessary loading of all category properties. This is
-especially true for database designs that involve outer joins or nullable
-and/or non-indexed columns. In these situations it might be better to use the
-sub-select solution with lazy loading enabled. The general rule of thumb is:
-use the join if you're more likely going to access the associated properties
-than not. Otherwise, only use it if lazy loading is not an option.</p>
-
-<p>If you're having trouble deciding which way to go, don't worry. No matter
-which way you go, you can always change it without impacting your application
-source code. The two examples above result in
-exactly the same object graph and are loaded using the exact same method call
-from the application. The only consideration is that if you were to enable
-caching, then the using the separate select (not the join) solution could
-result in a cached instance being returned. But more often than not, that
-won't cause a problem (your application shouldn't be dependent on instance
-level equality i.e. "<tt>===</tt>").</p>
-</div>
-
-<h1>Complex Collection Properties</h1>
-<p>It is also possible to load properties that represent lists of complex
-objects. In the database the data would be represented by a M:M relationship,
-or a 1:M relationship where the class containing the list is on the "one
-side" of the relationship and the objects in the list are on the "many
-side"". To load a <tt>TList</tt> of objects, there is no change to the statement
-(see example above). The only difference required to cause the SQLMap
-DataMapper framework to load the property as a <tt>TList</tt> is that the property
-on the business object must be of type <tt>TList</tt>. For example, if a Category
-has a <tt>TList</tt> of Product instances, the mapping would look like this
-(assuming Category has a property called "ProductList" of <tt>TList</tt>.):</p>
-
-<com:TTextHighlighter Language="xml" CssClass="source">
-<resultMap id="select-category-result" class="Category">
- <result property="Id" column="CAT_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="CAT_DESCRIPTION"/>
- <result property="ProductList" column="CAT_ID" select="selectProductsByCatId"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<resultMap id="select-product-result" class="Product">
- <result property="Id" column="PRD_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="PRD_DESCRIPTION"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<statement id="selectCategory" parameterClass="int"
- resultMap="select-category-result">
- select * from CATEGORY where CAT_ID = #value#
-</statement>
-
-<statement id="selectProductsByCatId" parameterClass="int"
- resultMap="select-product-result">
- select * from PRODUCT where PRD_CAT_ID = #value#
-</statement>
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-
-<h1>Avoiding N+1 Select Lists (1:M and M:N)</h1>
-<p>This is similar to the 1:1 situation above, but is of even greater concern due
-to the potentially large amount of data involved. The problem with the
-solution above is that whenever you load a Category, two SQL statements are
-actually being run (one for the Category and one for the list of associated
-Products). This problem seems trivial when loading a single Category, but if
-you were to run a query that loaded ten (10) Categories, a separate query
-would be run for each Category to load its associated list of Products. This
-results in eleven (11) queries total: one for the list of Categories and one
-for each Category returned to load each related list of Products (N+1 or in
-this case 10+1=11). To make this situation worse, we're dealing with
-potentially large lists of data.</p>
-
-<com:TTextHighlighter Language="xml" CssClass="source">
-<resultMap id="select-category-result" class="Category">
- <result property="Id" column="CAT_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="CAT_DESCRIPTION"/>
- <result property="ProductList" column="CAT_ID" select="selectProductsByCatId"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<resultMap id="select-product-result" class="Product">
- <result property="Id" column="PRD_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="PRD_DESCRIPTION"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<!-- This statement executes 1 time -->
-<statement id="selectCategory" parameterClass="int"
- resultMap="select-category-result">
- select * from CATEGORY where CAT_ID = #value#
-</statement>
-
-<!-- This statement executes N times (once for each category returned above)
- and returns a list of Products (1:M) -->
-<statement id="selectProductsByCatId" parameterClass="int"
- resultMap="select-product-result">
- select * from PRODUCT where PRD_CAT_ID = #value#
-</statement>
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-
-<h2>1:N and M:N Solution?</h2>
-<p>
-One way to avoid multiple SQL queries is to use Joins in the query
-together with the <tt>groupBy</tt> attribute in <tt>&lt;resultMap&gt;</tt> and
-the <tt>resultMapping</tt> attribute of <tt>&lt;result&gt;</tt>.
-The following example selects all the categories and the corresponding
-products using 1 query.
-</p>
-
-<com:TTextHighlighter Language="xml" CssClass="source">
-<resultMap id="select-category-result" class="Category" groupBy="CAT_ID">
- <result property="Id" column="CAT_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="CAT_DESCRIPTION"/>
- <result property="ProductList" resultMapping="select-product-result"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<resultMap id="select-product-result" class="Product">
- <result property="Id" column="PRD_ID"/>
- <result property="Description" column="PRD_DESCRIPTION"/>
-</resultMap>
-
-<!-- This statement executes 1 time -->
-<statement id="selectCategory" parameterClass="int"
- resultMap="select-category-result">
- select
- CATEGORY.CAT_ID as CAT_ID,
- CATEGORY.CAT_DESCRIPTION as CAT_DESCRIPTION,
- PRODUCT.PRD_ID as PRD_ID,
- PRODUCT.PRD_DESCRIPTION as PRD_DESCRIPTION
- from CATEGORY
- left join PRODUCT on
- PRODUCT.PRD_CAT_ID = CATEGORY.CAT_ID
-</statement>
-</com:TTextHighlighter>
-
-<p>In the above example, the <tt>groupBy</tt> attribute is set
-to the column of that specifies the Category ID. All the rows
-with the same <tt>CAT_ID</tt> will be considered as a collection
-for the <tt>ProductList</tt> property.</p>
-
-<div class="info"><b>Lazy Loading vs. Joins (1:M and M:N):</b>
-<p>As with the 1:1 situation described previously, it's important to note that
-using a join is not always better. This is even more true for collection
-properties than it was for individual value properties due to the greater
-amount of data. If you are in a situation where it is rare to access the
-related object (e.g. the ProductList property of the Category class) then it
-might actually be faster to avoid the join and the unnecessary loading of the
-list of products. This is especially true for database designs that involve
-outer joins or nullable and/or non-indexed columns. In these situations it
-might be better to use the sub-select solution with the lazy loading. The
-general rule of thumb is: use the join if you're more likely going to access
-the associated properties than not. Otherwise, only use it if lazy loading is
-not an option.</p>
-
-<p>As mentioned earlier, if you're having trouble deciding which way to go, don't
-worry. No matter which way you go, you can always change it without impacting
-your PHP code. The two examples above would result in exactly the same object
-graph and are loaded using the exact same method call. The only consideration
-is that if you were to enable caching, then the using the separate select (not
-the join) solution could result in a cached instance being returned. But more
-often than not, that won't cause a problem (your application should not be
-dependent on instance level equality i.e. "<tt>===</tt>").</p>
-</div>
-
-</com:TContent> \ No newline at end of file