objectfilter allows filtering and matching python objects against user-supplied filter strings. The filter system is extensible so you can provide your own operators or change how objects are evaluated. Creating filters programmatically is also supported.
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_downrecords` [ RunTime:0.001246s ]
SELECT `a`.`aid`,`a`.`title`,`a`.`create_time`,`m`.`username` FROM `jrk_downrecords` `a` INNER JOIN `jrk_member` `m` ON `a`.`uid`=`m`.`id` WHERE `a`.`status` = 1 GROUP BY `a`.`aid` ORDER BY `a`.`create_time` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.094216s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_tagrecords` [ RunTime:0.001144s ]
SELECT * FROM `jrk_tagrecords` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `num` DESC LIMIT 20 [ RunTime:0.001944s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_member` [ RunTime:0.001159s ]
SELECT `id`,`username`,`userhead`,`usertime` FROM `jrk_member` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `usertime` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.003701s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_searchrecords` [ RunTime:0.001020s ]
SELECT * FROM `jrk_searchrecords` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `num` DESC LIMIT 5 [ RunTime:0.003252s ]
SELECT aid,title,count(aid) as c FROM `jrk_downrecords` GROUP BY `aid` ORDER BY `c` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.016559s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_articles` [ RunTime:0.001427s ]
UPDATE `jrk_articles` SET `hits` = 1 WHERE `id` = 38742 [ RunTime:0.001565s ]