Thanks, Lee. I will give it a try

-Raju

On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 8:39:57 AM UTC-7, Lee Painton wrote:
>
> I have not tried this yet, but if you set up a 
> https://godoc.org/github.com/gocql/gocql#QueryObserver on your session I 
> believe you can get exhaustive metrics including the executed statement.
>
> On Wednesday, April 11, 2018 at 12:42:28 AM UTC-4, Raju wrote:
>>
>> By the way, I am using gocql package - https://github.com/gocql/gocql
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, April 10, 2018 at 9:39:23 PM UTC-7, Raju wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Assuming my query using an iterator looks like this. Is there any way to 
>>> print the exact cql query that is finally executed on Cassandra side when 
>>> iter.Scan() is called?
>>>
>>> My iter query is returning empty results, but when I manually search 
>>> using the cql query in my database table in Cassandra, I am getting records 
>>> returned. I have a feeling the query I am creating is somehow incorrect. I 
>>> would like to debug
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> Raju
>>>
>>>
>>>     // list all tweets
>>>     iter := session.Query(`SELECT id, text FROM tweet WHERE timeline = ?`, 
>>> "me").Iter()
>>>     for iter.Scan(&id, &text) {
>>>             fmt.Println("Tweet:", id, text)
>>>     }
>>>     if err := iter.Close(); err != nil {
>>>             log.Fatal(err)
>>>     }
>>>
>>>

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