Reference documentation and code samples for the Cloud Firestore V1 API class Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::PartitionQueryResponse.
The response for Firestore.PartitionQuery.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#next_page_token
def next_page_token() -> ::String
-
(::String) — A page token that may be used to request an additional set of results, up
to the number specified by
partition_count
in the PartitionQuery request. If blank, there are no more results.
#next_page_token=
def next_page_token=(value) -> ::String
-
value (::String) — A page token that may be used to request an additional set of results, up
to the number specified by
partition_count
in the PartitionQuery request. If blank, there are no more results.
-
(::String) — A page token that may be used to request an additional set of results, up
to the number specified by
partition_count
in the PartitionQuery request. If blank, there are no more results.
#partitions
def partitions() -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::Cursor>
-
(::Array<::Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::Cursor>) — Partition results.
Each partition is a split point that can be used by RunQuery as a starting
or end point for the query results. The RunQuery requests must be made with
the same query supplied to this PartitionQuery request. The partition
cursors will be ordered according to same ordering as the results of the
query supplied to PartitionQuery.
For example, if a PartitionQuery request returns partition cursors A and B, running the following three queries will return the entire result set of the original query:
- query, end_at A
- query, start_at A, end_at B
- query, start_at B
An empty result may indicate that the query has too few results to be partitioned, or that the query is not yet supported for partitioning.
#partitions=
def partitions=(value) -> ::Array<::Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::Cursor>
-
value (::Array<::Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::Cursor>) — Partition results.
Each partition is a split point that can be used by RunQuery as a starting
or end point for the query results. The RunQuery requests must be made with
the same query supplied to this PartitionQuery request. The partition
cursors will be ordered according to same ordering as the results of the
query supplied to PartitionQuery.
For example, if a PartitionQuery request returns partition cursors A and B, running the following three queries will return the entire result set of the original query:
- query, end_at A
- query, start_at A, end_at B
- query, start_at B
An empty result may indicate that the query has too few results to be partitioned, or that the query is not yet supported for partitioning.
-
(::Array<::Google::Cloud::Firestore::V1::Cursor>) — Partition results.
Each partition is a split point that can be used by RunQuery as a starting
or end point for the query results. The RunQuery requests must be made with
the same query supplied to this PartitionQuery request. The partition
cursors will be ordered according to same ordering as the results of the
query supplied to PartitionQuery.
For example, if a PartitionQuery request returns partition cursors A and B, running the following three queries will return the entire result set of the original query:
- query, end_at A
- query, start_at A, end_at B
- query, start_at B
An empty result may indicate that the query has too few results to be partitioned, or that the query is not yet supported for partitioning.