> (I presume there is some way of representing ":", like "\:"?)
Well no, not yet, but we'll try to figure something I guess (we'll have the
problem with CASSANDRA-2474 I think so we'll probably use the same
solution).
But let's keep in mind this is unreleased code at this point. And let me
also a
Excellent!
(I presume there is some way of representing ":", like "\:"?)
On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 11:44 AM, Sylvain Lebresne wrote:
> Provided you're working on a branch that has CASSANDRA-2231 applied (that's
> either the cassandra-0.8.1 branch or trunk), this work 'out of the box':
>
> The set
Provided you're working on a branch that has CASSANDRA-2231 applied (that's
either the cassandra-0.8.1 branch or trunk), this work 'out of the box':
The setup will look like:
[default@unknown] create keyspace test;
[default@unknown] use test;
[default@test] create column family testCF with
compara
This is what I'm talking about
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-2231
The on-disk format is
<(short)length><(short)length>...
I would like to be able to input these kinds of keys into the CLI, something
like
set cf[key]['constituent1':'constituent2':'constituent3'] = val
On Tue
Cassandra wouldn't know that the column name is composite of two different
things. So you could just request the column names and values for a specific
key like this and then just look at the column names that get returned:
[default@MyKeyspace] get DemoCF[ascii('key_42')];
=> (column=CA_SanJose, v
What do you mean by composite column names?
Do the data type functions supported by get and set help? Or the assume
statement?
Aaron
On 17/05/2011, at 3:21 AM, David Boxenhorn wrote:
> Is there a way to view composite column names in the CLI?
>
> Is there a way to input them (i.e. in the set
Is there a way to view composite column names in the CLI?
Is there a way to input them (i.e. in the set command)?