Pagination
When dealing with large datasets, situations frequently arise in which
you need to display a large query result set one chunk, or "page", at a
time. This process is called pagination. The Paginate
function is
Fauna’s mechanism for iterating through large result sets in pages of
a specified size.
For purposes of illustration, the examples on this page use a collection
named Letters
which contains a document for each of the 26 letters.
See the indexing tutorials for the
query that creates these documents.
We can use the Paginate
function to retrieve documents from the
Letters
collection in batches of a specified size.
The following example uses the size
parameter to retrieve the first 5
documents in the Letters
collection:
The C# version of this example is not currently available.
The Go version of this example is not currently available.
The Java version of this example is not currently available.
{
after: [ Ref(Collection("Letters"), "106") ],
data: [
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "101"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'A', extra: 'First' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "102"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'B', extra: 'second' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "103"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'C', extra: 'third' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "104"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'D', extra: '4th' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "105"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'E', extra: 'fifth' }
}
]
}
The Python version of this example is not currently available.
The Shell version of this example is not currently available.
The size parameter is optional, and defaults to 64 if it is not
specified. The maximum page size is 100,000.
|
Using cursors
In addition to the first 5 documents of the collection, there’s one more
piece of information in the results: a cursor which you can use to get
the next page of results, displayed above the data results. A cursor
consists of an array containing the index’s values
field (if any) and
the Reference of a document in a particular position within
the index.
The following example uses the provided cursor with the after
parameter to get the next page of 5 documents:
The C# version of this example is not currently available.
The Go version of this example is not currently available.
The Java version of this example is not currently available.
{
before: [ Ref(Collection("Letters"), "6") ],
after: [ Ref(Collection("Letters"), "106") ],
data: [
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "101"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'A', extra: 'First' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "102"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'B', extra: 'second' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "103"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'C', extra: 'third' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "104"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'D', extra: '4th' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "105"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'E', extra: 'fifth' }
}
]
}
The Python version of this example is not currently available.
The Shell version of this example is not currently available.
Note that the results for the above example includes both a before
and
an after
cursor, indicating that we’re in the middle of our result set
and we can get either an earlier or a later page by using one of the
provided cursors.
When you reach the end of a result set, the last page includes a
before
cursor but not an after
cursor, indicating that there are no
pages left to fetch.
The before cursor is exclusive, meaning that it returns
documents up to but not including the one specified with before .
after is inclusive, meaning that it returns documents including
and after the one specified.
|
Fetching the last page
You can fetch the last page of a result set even if you don’t know how
many results are in the set by setting before
to null
. In Fauna’s
order of sorting precedence null
comes last, so null
is guaranteed
to be at the end of any set it is in. Fetching the last page of a result
set is demonstrated in the following example:
The C# version of this example is not currently available.
The Go version of this example is not currently available.
The Java version of this example is not currently available.
{
before: [ Ref(Collection("Letters"), "122") ],
after: [ null ],
data: [
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "122"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'V', extra: '22nd' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "123"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'W', extra: 'twenty-third' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "124"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'X', extra: 24 }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "125"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'Y', extra: '24 + 1' }
},
{
ref: Ref(Collection("Letters"), "126"),
ts: 1645055612940000,
data: { letter: 'Z' }
}
]
}
The Python version of this example is not currently available.
The Shell version of this example is not currently available.
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