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The query language used with data stewardship components and the REST API

You can use Talend Query Language (TQL) with the tDataStewardshipTaskDelete and tDataStewardshipTaskInput components to query and filter the data you want to delete or read from Talend Data Stewardship.

Syntax in TQL queries

The query statement used to filter tasks on the server is composed of one or several conditions.

A task condition is composed of the following elements:
  • a field name, which must be prefixed by record. when referencing records data,
  • an operator, and
  • a value, which can be any literal value. Use simple quotes around strings, and precede quotes within the string with a backslash.

The fields you can query with TQL

Field names can be chosen among all custom and metadata fields.

The following table lists the supported metadata fields on tasks:

Metadata field Description
id (string) Task internal identifier
externalID (string) Task external identifier which helps to access a given task from an external system
currentState (string) Current state of the task in the campaign workflow
assignee (string) userId of the data steward currently assigned to this task
targetTransition (string) Name of the transition chosen by user to move the task to the next step in the campaign workflow
completed (boolean) true if the task is completed (it is in a final state of the workflow)
priority (integer) Priority level of the task, ranging from 0 (Very Low) to 4 (Very High), default is 2 (Medium)
dueDate Timestamp in milliseconds of the task due date
matchScore (only for Merging and Grouping campaigns) Decimal value which shows the highest match score of each group in the source data
version (integer) Integer value of the task version which is incremented whenever the task is updated
consumed (boolean) true if the task has already been processed (so it cannot be processed anymore - unless it is reopened)
createdBy (string) userId of the task creator
creationDate (long) Timestamp in milliseconds of this task creation date
lastUpdatedBy (string) userId of the data steward who did the last update on the task
lastUpdateDate (long) Timestamp in milliseconds of the last update done on the task
tags (string) List of tags entered by the user for this task
arbitration (only for Arbitration and Grouping campaigns) Arbitration choice selected by the data steward

Operators supported in TQL

Operator Description
= Returns a result which matches the value entered.
!= Returns a result of any value other than the value entered.
> Returns a result which is greater than the value entered.
>= Returns a result which is greater than or equal to the value entered.
< Returns a result which is less than the value entered.
<= Returns a result which is less than or equal to the value entered.
contains Returns a result which contains the reference value.
containsIgnoreCase Returns a result which contains the reference value (case insensitive).
~ Returns a result which complies with the reference value based on a regular expression.

Example: name ~ '^[A-Z|a-z]*$'

complies Returns a result which complies with a character-based pattern. For more information, check the documentation about Character-based patterns Character-based patterns.

Example: record.field1 complies 'aaaa99_aaaaa9'

wordComplies Returns a result which complies with a word-based pattern. For more information, check the documentation about Word-based patterns Word-based patterns.

Example: record.field1 wordComplies '[word][number]_[word][digit]

between Returns a result which is within the range of values provided.
in Returns a result in the list of values which matches the expression.

Example: record.field1 in ['value1', 'value2']

For dates comparisons, use the timestamp format for reference values.

For example, you can filter tasks created after 2016-01-01 using the following query:

creationDate > 1451659712733

Boolean operators supported in TQL

You can combine or negate conditions using the boolean operators and and or, or the not operator respectively. Parentheses are supported to override default boolean precedence.

For example, you can filter tasks by assignee and have a record field firstname equal to John using the following query:
assignee='user1@talend.com' and record.firstName='John'
You can also filter tasks by assignee and have a record field firstname equal to De'wayne using the following query:
assignee='user2@talend.com' and record.firstName='De\'wayne'

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