cube
cube (extension)
This module implements a data type cube for
representing multidimensional cubes.
This module is considered trusted
, that is, it can be
installed by non-superusers who have CREATE privilege
on the current database.
Syntax
shows the valid external
representations for the cube
type. x, y, etc. denote
floating-point numbers.
Cube External Representations
External Syntax
Meaning
x
A one-dimensional point
(or, zero-length one-dimensional interval)
(x)
Same as above
x1,x2,...,xn
A point in n-dimensional space, represented internally as a
zero-volume cube
(x1,x2,...,xn)
Same as above
(x),(y)
A one-dimensional interval starting at x and ending at y or vice versa; the
order does not matter
[(x),(y)]
Same as above
(x1,...,xn),(y1,...,yn)
An n-dimensional cube represented by a pair of its diagonally
opposite corners
[(x1,...,xn),(y1,...,yn)]
Same as above
It does not matter which order the opposite corners of a cube are
entered in. The cube functions
automatically swap values if needed to create a uniform
lower left — upper right
internal representation.
When the corners coincide, cube stores only one corner
along with an is point
flag to avoid wasting space.
White space is ignored on input, so
[(x),(y)] is the same as
[ ( x ), ( y ) ].
Precision
Values are stored internally as 64-bit floating point numbers. This means
that numbers with more than about 16 significant digits will be truncated.
Usage
shows the specialized operators
provided for type cube.
Cube Operators
Operator
Description
cube && cube
boolean
Do the cubes overlap?
cube @> cube
boolean
Does the first cube contain the second?
cube <@ cube
boolean
Is the first cube contained in the second?
cube -> integer
float8
Extracts the n-th coordinate of the cube
(counting from 1).
cube ~> integer
float8
Extracts the n-th coordinate of the cube,
counting in the following way: n = 2
* k - 1 means lower bound
of k-th dimension, n = 2
* k means upper bound of
k-th dimension. Negative
n denotes the inverse value of the corresponding
positive coordinate. This operator is designed for KNN-GiST support.
cube <-> cube
float8
Computes the Euclidean distance between the two cubes.
cube <#> cube
float8
Computes the taxicab (L-1 metric) distance between the two cubes.
cube <=> cube
float8
Computes the Chebyshev (L-inf metric) distance between the two cubes.
(Before PostgreSQL 8.2, the containment operators @> and <@ were
respectively called @ and ~. These names are still available, but are
deprecated and will eventually be retired. Notice that the old names
are reversed from the convention formerly followed by the core geometric
data types!)
In addition to the above operators, the usual comparison
operators shown in are
available for type cube. These
operators first compare the first coordinates, and if those are equal,
compare the second coordinates, etc. They exist mainly to support the
b-tree index operator class for cube, which can be useful for
example if you would like a UNIQUE constraint on a cube column.
Otherwise, this ordering is not of much practical use.
The cube module also provides a GiST index operator class for
cube values.
A cube GiST index can be used to search for values using the
=, &&, @>, and
<@ operators in WHERE clauses.
In addition, a cube GiST index can be used to find nearest
neighbors using the metric operators
<->, <#>, and
<=> in ORDER BY clauses.
For example, the nearest neighbor of the 3-D point (0.5, 0.5, 0.5)
could be found efficiently with:
SELECT c FROM test ORDER BY c <-> cube(array[0.5,0.5,0.5]) LIMIT 1;
The ~> operator can also be used in this way to
efficiently retrieve the first few values sorted by a selected coordinate.
For example, to get the first few cubes ordered by the first coordinate
(lower left corner) ascending one could use the following query:
SELECT c FROM test ORDER BY c ~> 1 LIMIT 5;
And to get 2-D cubes ordered by the first coordinate of the upper right
corner descending:
SELECT c FROM test ORDER BY c ~> 3 DESC LIMIT 5;
shows the available functions.
Cube Functions
Function
Description
Example(s)
cube ( float8 )
cube
Makes a one dimensional cube with both coordinates the same.
cube(1)
(1)
cube ( float8, float8 )
cube
Makes a one dimensional cube.
cube(1,2)
(1),(2)
cube ( float8[] )
cube
Makes a zero-volume cube using the coordinates defined by the array.
cube(ARRAY[1,2,3])
(1, 2, 3)
cube ( float8[], float8[] )
cube
Makes a cube with upper right and lower left coordinates as defined by
the two arrays, which must be of the same length.
cube(ARRAY[1,2], ARRAY[3,4])
(1, 2),(3, 4)
cube ( cube, float8 )
cube
Makes a new cube by adding a dimension on to an existing cube,
with the same values for both endpoints of the new coordinate. This
is useful for building cubes piece by piece from calculated values.
cube('(1,2),(3,4)'::cube, 5)
(1, 2, 5),(3, 4, 5)
cube ( cube, float8, float8 )
cube
Makes a new cube by adding a dimension on to an existing cube. This is
useful for building cubes piece by piece from calculated values.
cube('(1,2),(3,4)'::cube, 5, 6)
(1, 2, 5),(3, 4, 6)
cube_dim ( cube )
integer
Returns the number of dimensions of the cube.
cube_dim('(1,2),(3,4)')
2
cube_ll_coord ( cube, integer )
float8
Returns the n-th coordinate value for the lower
left corner of the cube.
cube_ll_coord('(1,2),(3,4)', 2)
2
cube_ur_coord ( cube, integer )
float8
Returns the n-th coordinate value for the
upper right corner of the cube.
cube_ur_coord('(1,2),(3,4)', 2)
4
cube_is_point ( cube )
boolean
Returns true if the cube is a point, that is,
the two defining corners are the same.
cube_is_point(cube(1,1))
t
cube_distance ( cube, cube )
float8
Returns the distance between two cubes. If both
cubes are points, this is the normal distance function.
cube_distance('(1,2)', '(3,4)')
2.8284271247461903
cube_subset ( cube, integer[] )
cube
Makes a new cube from an existing cube, using a list of
dimension indexes from an array. Can be used to extract the endpoints
of a single dimension, or to drop dimensions, or to reorder them as
desired.
cube_subset(cube('(1,3,5),(6,7,8)'), ARRAY[2])
(3),(7)
cube_subset(cube('(1,3,5),(6,7,8)'), ARRAY[3,2,1,1])
(5, 3, 1, 1),(8, 7, 6, 6)
cube_union ( cube, cube )
cube
Produces the union of two cubes.
cube_union('(1,2)', '(3,4)')
(1, 2),(3, 4)
cube_inter ( cube, cube )
cube
Produces the intersection of two cubes.
cube_inter('(1,2)', '(3,4)')
(3, 4),(1, 2)
cube_enlarge ( c cube, r double, n integer )
cube
Increases the size of the cube by the specified
radius r in at least n
dimensions. If the radius is negative the cube is shrunk instead.
All defined dimensions are changed by the
radius r. Lower-left coordinates are decreased
by r and upper-right coordinates are increased
by r. If a lower-left coordinate is increased
to more than the corresponding upper-right coordinate (this can only
happen when r < 0) than both coordinates are
set to their average. If n is greater than the
number of defined dimensions and the cube is being enlarged
(r > 0), then extra dimensions are added to
make n altogether; 0 is used as the initial
value for the extra coordinates. This function is useful for creating
bounding boxes around a point for searching for nearby points.
cube_enlarge('(1,2),(3,4)', 0.5, 3)
(0.5, 1.5, -0.5),(3.5, 4.5, 0.5)
Defaults
I believe this union:
select cube_union('(0,5,2),(2,3,1)', '0');
cube_union
-------------------
(0, 0, 0),(2, 5, 2)
(1 row)
does not contradict common sense, neither does the intersection
select cube_inter('(0,-1),(1,1)', '(-2),(2)');
cube_inter
-------------
(0, 0),(1, 0)
(1 row)
In all binary operations on differently-dimensioned cubes, I assume the
lower-dimensional one to be a Cartesian projection, i. e., having zeroes
in place of coordinates omitted in the string representation. The above
examples are equivalent to:
cube_union('(0,5,2),(2,3,1)','(0,0,0),(0,0,0)');
cube_inter('(0,-1),(1,1)','(-2,0),(2,0)');
The following containment predicate uses the point syntax,
while in fact the second argument is internally represented by a box.
This syntax makes it unnecessary to define a separate point type
and functions for (box,point) predicates.
select cube_contains('(0,0),(1,1)', '0.5,0.5');
cube_contains
--------------
t
(1 row)
Notes
For examples of usage, see the regression test sql/cube.sql.
To make it harder for people to break things, there
is a limit of 100 on the number of dimensions of cubes. This is set
in cubedata.h if you need something bigger.
Credits
Original author: Gene Selkov, Jr. selkovjr@mcs.anl.gov,
Mathematics and Computer Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory.
My thanks are primarily to Prof. Joe Hellerstein
() for elucidating the
gist of the GiST (), and
to his former student Andy Dong for his example written for Illustra.
I am also grateful to all Postgres developers, present and past, for
enabling myself to create my own world and live undisturbed in it. And I
would like to acknowledge my gratitude to Argonne Lab and to the
U.S. Department of Energy for the years of faithful support of my database
research.
Minor updates to this package were made by Bruno Wolff III
bruno@wolff.to in August/September of 2002. These include
changing the precision from single precision to double precision and adding
some new functions.
Additional updates were made by Joshua Reich josh@root.net in
July 2006. These include cube(float8[], float8[]) and
cleaning up the code to use the V1 call protocol instead of the deprecated
V0 protocol.