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Note that the feature described in this lesson is currently work in progress. Details regarding the future release of this feature will be made public by means of the official Helium Release Notes

 

As a System Admin I would like to resolve all current service tickets or mark all current service tickets as spam.

 

Table of Contents

 

Lesson Outcomes

By the end of this lesson you should know how to make use of the sql->execute:execute built-in function to execute to execute PostgreSQL queries that are not select queries.

 

 

App Use Case Scenario

The support ticket menu item for the "System Admin" user role presents a data wall of service tickets. Each ticket can be individually resolved or marked as spam. The feature described in this lesson allows the user to resolve all current service tickets or mark all current service tickets as spam. A typical way to achieve this in a DSL presenter is to query the database for service tickets using a selector and then looping through the resulting service ticket collection one by one to resolve or mark as spam. A much simpler implementation is to make use of a single update query. This is demonstrated in the remainder of this lesson.

 

 

New & Modified App Files

./web-app/views/user_management/Support.vxml

./web-app/presenters/user_management/Support.mez

./web-app/lang/en.lang

 

 

View & Presenter Additions

The only additions needed for this lesson are two new buttons on the Support view and two new action functions for these buttons on the Support unit in the Support.mez presenter file. The view additions and skeleton code for our newly added presenter functions are shown below:

Code Block
languagexml
linenumberstrue
<button label="button.resolve_all_tickets" action="resolveAllTickets"/>
<button label="button.mark_all_tickets_as_spam" action="markAllTicketsAsSpam"/>
Code Block
languagejava
linenumberstrue
DSL_VIEWS resolveAllTickets() {
	.
	.
	.
    return DSL_VIEWS.Support;
}

DSL_VIEWS markAllTicketsAsSpam() {
    .
	.
	.
    return DSL_VIEWS.Support;
}

 

 

 

Query Execution

To update the service tickets we execute the update queries using the sql->execute:execute built-in function. Note that the sql->query:query function is specifically for select queries while the sql->execute:execute built-in function is specifically for insert, update and delete queries. Only update is demonstrated in this lesson but the others work similarly.

Once again the function requires the query as first argument followed by query parameters values where applicable. As mentioned in Lesson 22, these parameters are denoted by ? in the query itself and replaced at runtime with the specified values.

The sql->execute:execute built-in function returns an integer representing the number of records that were modified. The syntax requires the result of the function to be assigned to a variable and does not allow execution of the sql->execute:execute function without this assignment.

Below are the action function responsible for query execution in their entirety:

Code Block
languagejava
// Resolve tickets that have not been resolved and not been marked as spam
DSL_VIEWS resolveAllTickets() {
    string query = "update supportticket set resolved=true where resolved=false and spam=false";
    int updates = sql->execute:execute(query);
    Mez:alert("alert.tickets_resolved");
    return DSL_VIEWS.Support;
}

// Mark tickets as spam that have not been marked as such and have not been resolved
DSL_VIEWS markAllTicketsAsSpam() {
    string query = "update supportticket set spam=true where spam=false and resolved=false";
    int updates = sql->execute:execute(query);
    Mez:alert("alert.tickets_marked_as_spam");
    return DSL_VIEWS.Support;
}

 

 

 

Lesson Source Code

Lesson 23.zip