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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? FYI: Stack Overflow... seems there's quite a revolt of sorts going on over there and everywhere. Post 303044477 by Neo on Monday 24th of February 2020 02:02:48 AM
Old 02-24-2020
Quote:
Originally Posted by nezabudka
Thanks so much for your clarification.
Welcome.

It is certainly subject matter everyone should be familiar with.

How people act on this information and the knowledge of the rise and dominance of surveillance capitalism is, well.. it is "up to each individual and organization".

The current issue is that surveillance capitalism has become so profitable, that most information-based tech companies depend of surveillance capitalism to survive in a very competitive market place.

That's the problem.... all the "huge, great, free services" people (and businesses) are dependent on (the ones which are very profitable, at least) have built their business model on surveillance capitalism.

It's not so complex really. It is simply the new, dominate form of capitalism in the age of social-media. However, the question becomes "what are we, the people, going to do about it?"
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MONGOCOLLECTION.AGGREGATECURSOR(3)					 1					MONGOCOLLECTION.AGGREGATECURSOR(3)

MongoCollection::aggregateCursor - Execute an aggregation pipeline command and retrieve results through a cursor

SYNOPSIS
public MongoCommandCursor MongoCollection::aggregateCursor (array $command, [array $options]) DESCRIPTION
With this method you can execute Aggregation Framework pipelines and retrieve the results through a cursor, instead of getting just one document back as you would with MongoCollection::aggregate. This method returns a MongoCommandCursor object. This cursor object implements the Iterator interface just like the MongoCursor objects that are returned by the MongoCollection::find method. Note The resulting MongoCommandCursor will inherit this collection's read preference. MongoCommandCursor::setReadPreference may be used to change the read preference before iterating on the cursor. PARAMETERS
o $pipeline - The Aggregation Framework pipeline to execute. o $options -Options for the aggregation command. Valid options include: o "allowDiskUse"Allow aggregation stages to write to temporary files o "cursor" It is possible to configure how many initial documents the server should return with the first result set. The default initial batch size is 101. You can change it by adding the batchSize option: <?php $collection->aggregateCursor( $pipeline, [ "cursor" => [ "batchSize" => 4 ] ] ); MongoCommandCursor::batchSize method on the returned MongoCommandCursor object. o "explain" Return information on the processing of the pipeline. This option may cause the command to return a result docu- ment that is unsuitable for constructing a MongoCommandCursor. If you need to use this option, you should consider using MongoCollection::aggregate. o "maxTimeMS"Specifies a cumulative time limit in milliseconds for processing the operation (does not include idle time). If the operation is not completed within the timeout period, a MongoExecutionTimeoutException will be thrown. RETURN VALUES
Returns a MongoCommandCursor object. Because this implements the Iterator interface you can iterate over each of the results as returned by the command query. The MongoCommandCursor also implements the MongoCursorInterface interface which adds the MongoCommandCursor::batch- Size, MongoCommandCursor::dead, MongoCommandCursor::info methods. EXAMPLES
Example #1 MongoCollection.aggregateCursor(3) example Finding all of the distinct values for a key. <?php $m = new MongoClient; $db = $m->test; $people = $db->people; $people->drop(); $people->insert(array("name" => "Joe", "points" => 4)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Molly", "points" => 43)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Sally", "points" => 22)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Joe", "points" => 22)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Molly", "points" => 87)); $ages = $people->aggregateCursor( [ [ '$group' => [ '_id' => '$name', 'points' => [ '$sum' => '$points' ] ] ], [ '$sort' => [ 'points' => -1 ] ], ] ); foreach ($ages as $person) { echo "{$person['_id']}: {$person['points']} "; } ?> The above example will output something similar to: Joe: 26 Sally: 22 Example #2 MongoCollection.aggregateCursor(3) example with different initial batch size Finding all of the distinct values for a key. <?php $m = new MongoClient; $db = $m->test; $people = $db->people; $people->drop(); /* Insert some sample data */ $people->insert(array("name" => "Joe", "points" => 4)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Molly", "points" => 43)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Sally", "points" => 22)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Joe", "points" => 22)); $people->insert(array("name" => "Molly", "points" => 87)); /* Run the command cursor */ $ages = $people->aggregateCursor( [ [ '$group' => [ '_id' => '$name', 'points' => [ '$sum' => '$points' ] ] ], [ '$sort' => [ 'points' => -1 ] ], ], [ "cursor" => [ "batchSize" => 4 ] ] ); foreach ($ages as $person) { echo "{$person['_id']}: {$person['points']} "; } ?> The above example will output something similar to: Joe: 26 Sally: 22 SEE ALSO
MongoDB::command, MongoCommandCursor, MongoCommandCursor::batchSize, MongoCollection::aggregate, The MongoDB aggregation framework. PHP Documentation Group MONGOCOLLECTION.AGGREGATECURSOR(3)
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