Object Query Language

Object Query Language (OQL) is a query language standard for object-oriented databases modeled after SQL. OQL was developed by the Object Data Management Group (ODMG). Because of its overall complexity nobody has ever fully implemented the complete OQL. OQL has influenced the design of some of the newer query languages like JDOQL and EJB QL, but they can't be considered as different flavors of OQL.

General rules

The following rules apply to OQL statements:

  • All complete statements must be terminated by a semi-colon.
  • A list of entries in OQL is usually separated by commas but not terminated by a comma(,).
  • Strings of text are enclosed by matching quotation marks.

Examples

Simple query

The following example illustrates how one might retrieve the CPU-speed of all PCs with more than 64MB of RAM from a fictional PC database:

SELECT pc.cpuspeed
FROM PCs pc
WHERE pc.ram > 64;

Query with grouping and aggregation

The following example illustrates how one might retrieve the average amount of RAM on a PC, grouped by manufacturer:

SELECT manufacturer, AVG(SELECT part.pc.ram FROM partition part)
FROM PCs pc
GROUP BY manufacturer: pc.manufacturer;

Note the use of the keyword partition, as opposed to aggregation in traditional SQL.

gollark: That's just rather dodecahedral gatekeeping.
gollark: If you want to displace it, actually come up with alternatives.
gollark: Machine learning is somewhat bees in some ways, but it can do really cool stuff which is not currently doable with foolish mortal humans explicitly designing algorithms directly.
gollark: Alternatively, go implement GPT-2-grade text generation or something.
gollark: Okay, go implement a working algorithm to, say, identify if something is "dog" or "cat".

See also


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