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37 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
37 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
created: 20211128212902292
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modified: 20211128233320674
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tags: [[Filter Syntax]] [[Filter Run Prefix Examples]] [[Intersection Filter Run Prefix]]
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title: Intersection Filter Run Prefix (Examples)
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type: text/vnd.tiddlywiki
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<<.operator-example 1 "A B C D :intersection[enlist[C D E F]]">>
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<<.operator-example 2 "A B C D :intersection[enlist[A B C D]]">>
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<<.operator-example 3 "A B C D :intersection[enlist[E F G H]]">>
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<<.operator-example 4 ":intersection[enlist[A B C D]]" "Using intersection in the first filter run is of little use. The result will always be empty.">>
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!! Difference between `+` and `:intersection`
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The `+` prefix should be thought of as an "AND" in formal logic, e.g. "give me all titles that satisfy condition A ''and'' condition B". But it's not suitable for all cases; if condition B uses a filter operator that replaces its input, then it will be difficult to use the `+` prefix. For example, if you wanted to find out what tags two tiddlers have in common, you might try to write a filter expression like:
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* <$link to="tags Operator">`[[field Operator]tags[]] +[[compare Operator]tags[]]`</$link>
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But that won't work, because the second filter run will end up throwing away its input and replacing it with an input consisting of the single title `[[compare Operator]]`. So the result you'd get from that filter expression would be just the tags of the `compare Operator` tiddler.
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For cases like this, the `:intersection` prefix is what you need. It takes the filter output so far, //sets it aside//, and starts the next filter run with all tiddler titles as input. Then once the latest filter run has completed, it takes the latest output, compares it to the set-aside output, and produces a new output that contains only titles that appeared in both the set-aside output and the latest output. So to get only the tags that the `field Operator` and `compare Operator` tiddlers have in common, you would write a filter expression like this:
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* <$link to="tags Operator">`[[field Operator]tags[]] :intersection[[compare Operator]tags[]]`</$link>
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The following examples use the [[field Operator]] and [[compare Operator]] tiddlers and their respective tags.
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<<.operator-example 5 "[[field Operator]tags[]]">>
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<<.operator-example 6 "[[compare Operator]tags[]]">>
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<<.operator-example 7 "[[field Operator]tags[]] +[[compare Operator]tags[]]" """The "field Operator" tiddler's tags are lost, so only the "compare Operator" tiddler's tags are returned""">>
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<<.operator-example 8 "[[field Operator]tags[]] :intersection[[compare Operator]tags[]]" """Returns the tags that both tiddlers have in common""">>
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