2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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from .fixtures import app_client # noqa
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EXPECTED_TABLE_CSV = '''id,content
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1,hello
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2,world
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3,
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'''.replace('\n', '\r\n')
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EXPECTED_CUSTOM_CSV = '''content
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hello
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world
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'''.replace('\n', '\r\n')
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?_labels= and ?_label=COL to expand foreign keys in JSON/CSV
These new querystring arguments can be used to request expanded foreign keys
in both JSON and CSV formats.
?_labels=on turns on expansions for ALL foreign key columns
?_label=COLUMN1&_label=COLUMN2 can be used to pick specific columns to expand
e.g. `Street_Tree_List.json?_label=qSpecies&_label=qLegalStatus`
{
"rowid": 233,
"TreeID": 121240,
"qLegalStatus": {
"value" 2,
"label": "Private"
}
"qSpecies": {
"value": 16,
"label": "Sycamore"
}
"qAddress": "91 Commonwealth Ave",
...
}
The labels option also works for the HTML and CSV views.
HTML defaults to `?_labels=on`, so if you pass `?_labels=off` you can disable
foreign key expansion entirely - or you can use `?_label=COLUMN` to request
just specific columns.
If you expand labels on CSV you get additional columns in the output:
`/Street_Tree_List.csv?_label=qLegalStatus`
rowid,TreeID,qLegalStatus,qLegalStatus_label...
1,141565,1,Permitted Site...
2,232565,2,Undocumented...
I also refactored the existing foreign key expansion code.
Closes #233. Refs #266.
2018-06-16 22:18:57 +00:00
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EXPECTED_TABLE_WITH_LABELS_CSV = '''
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pk,planet_int,state,city_id,city_id_label,neighborhood
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1,1,CA,1,San Francisco,Mission
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2,1,CA,1,San Francisco,Dogpatch
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3,1,CA,1,San Francisco,SOMA
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4,1,CA,1,San Francisco,Tenderloin
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5,1,CA,1,San Francisco,Bernal Heights
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6,1,CA,1,San Francisco,Hayes Valley
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7,1,CA,2,Los Angeles,Hollywood
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8,1,CA,2,Los Angeles,Downtown
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9,1,CA,2,Los Angeles,Los Feliz
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10,1,CA,2,Los Angeles,Koreatown
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11,1,MI,3,Detroit,Downtown
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12,1,MI,3,Detroit,Greektown
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13,1,MI,3,Detroit,Corktown
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14,1,MI,3,Detroit,Mexicantown
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15,2,MC,4,Memnonia,Arcadia Planitia
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'''.lstrip().replace('\n', '\r\n')
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2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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def test_table_csv(app_client):
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2018-06-17 18:34:16 +00:00
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response = app_client.get('/fixtures/simple_primary_key.csv')
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2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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assert response.status == 200
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assert 'text/plain; charset=utf-8' == response.headers['Content-Type']
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assert EXPECTED_TABLE_CSV == response.text
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?_labels= and ?_label=COL to expand foreign keys in JSON/CSV
These new querystring arguments can be used to request expanded foreign keys
in both JSON and CSV formats.
?_labels=on turns on expansions for ALL foreign key columns
?_label=COLUMN1&_label=COLUMN2 can be used to pick specific columns to expand
e.g. `Street_Tree_List.json?_label=qSpecies&_label=qLegalStatus`
{
"rowid": 233,
"TreeID": 121240,
"qLegalStatus": {
"value" 2,
"label": "Private"
}
"qSpecies": {
"value": 16,
"label": "Sycamore"
}
"qAddress": "91 Commonwealth Ave",
...
}
The labels option also works for the HTML and CSV views.
HTML defaults to `?_labels=on`, so if you pass `?_labels=off` you can disable
foreign key expansion entirely - or you can use `?_label=COLUMN` to request
just specific columns.
If you expand labels on CSV you get additional columns in the output:
`/Street_Tree_List.csv?_label=qLegalStatus`
rowid,TreeID,qLegalStatus,qLegalStatus_label...
1,141565,1,Permitted Site...
2,232565,2,Undocumented...
I also refactored the existing foreign key expansion code.
Closes #233. Refs #266.
2018-06-16 22:18:57 +00:00
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def test_table_csv_with_labels(app_client):
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2018-06-17 18:34:16 +00:00
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response = app_client.get('/fixtures/facetable.csv?_labels=1')
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?_labels= and ?_label=COL to expand foreign keys in JSON/CSV
These new querystring arguments can be used to request expanded foreign keys
in both JSON and CSV formats.
?_labels=on turns on expansions for ALL foreign key columns
?_label=COLUMN1&_label=COLUMN2 can be used to pick specific columns to expand
e.g. `Street_Tree_List.json?_label=qSpecies&_label=qLegalStatus`
{
"rowid": 233,
"TreeID": 121240,
"qLegalStatus": {
"value" 2,
"label": "Private"
}
"qSpecies": {
"value": 16,
"label": "Sycamore"
}
"qAddress": "91 Commonwealth Ave",
...
}
The labels option also works for the HTML and CSV views.
HTML defaults to `?_labels=on`, so if you pass `?_labels=off` you can disable
foreign key expansion entirely - or you can use `?_label=COLUMN` to request
just specific columns.
If you expand labels on CSV you get additional columns in the output:
`/Street_Tree_List.csv?_label=qLegalStatus`
rowid,TreeID,qLegalStatus,qLegalStatus_label...
1,141565,1,Permitted Site...
2,232565,2,Undocumented...
I also refactored the existing foreign key expansion code.
Closes #233. Refs #266.
2018-06-16 22:18:57 +00:00
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assert response.status == 200
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assert 'text/plain; charset=utf-8' == response.headers['Content-Type']
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assert EXPECTED_TABLE_WITH_LABELS_CSV == response.text
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2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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def test_custom_sql_csv(app_client):
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response = app_client.get(
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2018-06-17 18:34:16 +00:00
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'/fixtures.csv?sql=select+content+from+simple_primary_key+limit+2'
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2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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)
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assert response.status == 200
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assert 'text/plain; charset=utf-8' == response.headers['Content-Type']
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assert EXPECTED_CUSTOM_CSV == response.text
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def test_table_csv_download(app_client):
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2018-06-17 18:34:16 +00:00
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response = app_client.get('/fixtures/simple_primary_key.csv?_dl=1')
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2018-06-15 06:51:23 +00:00
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assert response.status == 200
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assert 'text/csv; charset=utf-8' == response.headers['Content-Type']
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expected_disposition = 'attachment; filename="simple_primary_key.csv"'
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assert expected_disposition == response.headers['Content-Disposition']
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