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Re: [O] Org-mode as a metalanguage: calling SQL "functions"


From: Eric Abrahamsen
Subject: Re: [O] Org-mode as a metalanguage: calling SQL "functions"
Date: Tue, 02 Apr 2013 10:46:29 +0800
User-agent: Gnus/5.130006 (Ma Gnus v0.6) Emacs/24.3 (gnu/linux)

Eric Schulte <address@hidden> writes:

> Eric Abrahamsen <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> Gary Oberbrunner <address@hidden> writes:
>>
>>> It seems like you can define "procedures" in org-mode and call them
>>> from elsewhere, with args.
>>> But I'm not sure how well-defined that process is; the documentation
>>> is not completely perfect yet I think. Here's one thing I'm trying
>>> that seems not to work.
>>>
>>> I define a "procedure" as a named ref called recorddate with two args,
>>> ver and order. The idea is I could later call that with different
>>> values of those args.
>>>
>>> #+NAME: recorddate(order="desc")
>>> #+BEGIN_SRC sql :exports none :colnames no :results scalar
>>> select Event.CreatedAt from Event join MachineInfo as MI on
>>> Event.MachineInfoId=MI.Id
>>> where Event.CreatedAt is not NULL order by CreatedAt $order limit 1;
>>> #+END_SRC sql
>>>
>>> (BTW, I really like how $ vars are substituted into SQL. Nice.) But
>>> when I try to call it like this:
>>>
>>> * earliest record is call_recorddate(ver="'.'", order="asc")
>>> or like this:
>>> #+CALL: recorddate(ver="'.'", order="asc")
>>>
>>> and I try to export as LaTeX (or anything), I get 
>>> org-babel-ref-resolve: Reference 'recorddate' not found in this buffer
>>>
>>> Is this supposed to work?
>>
>
> Yes, your example should work.  From the "Evaluating code blocks"
> section of the Org-mode manual.
>
> ,----
> |    It is also possible to evaluate named code blocks from anywhere in an
> | Org mode buffer or an Org mode table.  Live code blocks located in the
> | current Org mode buffer or in the "Library of Babel" (see *note Library
> | of Babel::) can be executed.  Named code blocks can be executed with a
> | separate '#+CALL:' line or inline within a block of text.
> `----
>
> There is no need to load code blocks in the same buffer into the library
> of babel.

I think what he (and I, when I tried his version) ran into is that
without a ":var" attribute on the named code block, you get
the "not found" error.

Ie, simply declaring #+name: recorddate(order="desc") isn't enough to
let the block know to expect the var.

Presumably that *should* be an error, as the variable should be declared
before being used, but the actual error message is a little misleading.

Eric

> This example works for me evaluating code blocks in the same buffer
> using call lines.
>
> #+Title: Call Example
>
> #+name: example-block
> #+begin_src sh :var input=""
>   echo "input is $input"
> #+end_src
>
> Here's a simple call using a named argument.
> #+call: example-block(input="foo")
>
> #+RESULTS: example-block(input="foo")
> : input is foo
>
> It also works with a positional argument.
> #+call: example-block("bar")
>
> #+RESULTS: example-block("bar")
> : input is bar
>
> When I export this to e.g., html I get the following.
>
> Call Example
>
> Call Example
>
> echo "input is $input"
>
> Here's a simple call using a named argument. 
>
>
> input is foo
>
> It also works with a positional argument. 
>
>
> input is bar
>
> Date: 2013-04-01T19:39-0600
>
> Author: 
>
> Org version 7.9.3f with Emacs version 24
>
> Validate XHTML 1.0 
>
>
> The call lines are replaced with their results as part of the export
> process.
>
> If the above doesn't work for you, then I imagine something is wrong
> with your install.




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