OpenSearch/docs/reference/modules/scripting/painless-syntax.asciidoc

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[[modules-scripting-painless-syntax]]
=== Painless Syntax
experimental[The Painless scripting language is new and is still marked as experimental. The syntax or API may be changed in the future in non-backwards compatible ways if required.]
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[[painless-types]]
=== Variable types
Painless supports all of https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/variables.html[Java's types],
including array types, but adds some additional built-in types.
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[[painless-def]]
==== Def
The dynamic type `def` serves as a placeholder for any other type. It adopts the behavior
of whatever runtime type it represents.
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[[painless-strings]]
==== String
String constants can be declared with single quotes, to avoid escaping horrors with JSON:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
def mystring = 'foo';
---------------------------------------------------------
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[[painless-arrays]]
==== Arrays
Arrays can be subscripted starting from `0` for traditional array access or with
negative numbers to starting from the back of the array. So the following
returns `2`.
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
int[] x = new int[5];
x[0]++;
x[-5]++;
return x[0];
---------------------------------------------------------
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[[painless-lists]]
==== List
Lists can be created explicitly (e.g. `new ArrayList()`) or initialized similar to Groovy:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
def list = [1,2,3];
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Lists can also be accessed similar to arrays. They support `.length` and
subscripts, including negative subscripts to read from the back of the list:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
def list = [1,2,3];
list[-1] = 5
return list[0]
---------------------------------------------------------
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[[painless-maps]]
==== Map
Maps can be created explicitly (e.g. `new HashMap()`) or initialized similar to Groovy:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
def person = ['name': 'Joe', 'age': 63];
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Map keys can also be accessed as properties.
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
def person = ['name': 'Joe', 'age': 63];
person.retired = true;
return person.name
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Map keys can also be accessed via subscript (for keys containing special characters):
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
return map['something-absurd!']
---------------------------------------------------------
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[[painless-pattern]]
==== Pattern
Regular expression constants are directly supported:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
Pattern p = /[aeiou]/
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Patterns can only be created via this mechanism. This ensures fast performance, regular expressions
are always constants and compiled efficiently a single time.
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[[modules-scripting-painless-regex-flags]]
==== Pattern flags
You can define flags on patterns in Painless by adding characters after the
trailing `/` like `/foo/i` or `/foo \w #comment/iUx`. Painless exposes all the
flags from
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html[Java's Pattern class]
using these characters:
[cols="<,<,<",options="header",]
|=======================================================================
| Character | Java Constant | Example
|`c` | CANON_EQ | `'å' ==~ /å/c` (open in hex editor to see)
|`i` | CASE_INSENSITIVE | `'A' ==~ /a/i`
|`l` | LITERAL | `'[a]' ==~ /[a]/l`
|`m` | MULTILINE | `'a\nb\nc' =~ /^b$/m`
|`s` | DOTALL (aka single line) | `'a\nb\nc' =~ /.b./s`
|`U` | UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS | `'Ɛ' ==~ /\\w/U`
|`u` | UNICODE_CASE | `'Ɛ' ==~ /ɛ/iu`
|`x` | COMMENTS (aka extended) | `'a' ==~ /a #comment/x`
|=======================================================================
[float]
[[painless-deref]]
=== Dereferences
Like lots of languages, Painless uses `.` to reference fields and call methods:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
String foo = 'foo';
TypeWithGetterOrPublicField bar = new TypeWithGetterOrPublicField()
return foo.length() + bar.x
---------------------------------------------------------
Like Groovy, Painless uses `?.` to perform null-safe references, with the
result being `null` if the left hand side is null:
[source,painless]
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String foo = null;
return foo?.length() // Returns null
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Unlike Groovy, Painless doesn't support writing to null values with this
operator:
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TypeWithSetterOrPublicField foo = null;
foo?.x = 'bar' // Compile error
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[float]
[[painless-operators]]
=== Operators
All of Java's https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/operators.html[operators] are
supported with the same precedence, promotion, and semantics.
There are only a few minor differences and add-ons:
* `==` behaves as Java's for numeric types, but for non-numeric types acts as https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/lang/Object.html#equals-java.lang.Object-[`Object.equals()`]
* `===` and `!==` support exact reference comparison (e.g. `x === y`)
* `=~` true if a portion of the text matches a pattern (e.g. `x =~ /b/`)
* `==~` true if the entire text matches a pattern (e.g. `x ==~ /[Bb]ob/`)
The `?:` (aka Elvis) operator coalesces null values. So `x ?: 0` is `0` if `x`
is `null` and whatever value `x` has otherwise. It is a convenient way to write
default values like `doc['x'].value ?: 0` which is 0 if `x` is not in the
document being processed. It can also work with null safe dereferences to
efficiently handle null in chains. For example,
`doc['foo.keyword'].value?.length() ?: 0` is 0 if the document being processed
doesn't have a `foo.keyword` field but is the length of that field if it does.
Lastly, `?:` is lazy so the right hand side is not evaluated at all if the left
hand side isn't null.
NOTE: Unlike Groovy, Painless' `?:` operator only coalesces `null`, not `false`
or http://groovy-lang.org/semantics.html#Groovy-Truth[falsy] values. Strictly
speaking Painless' `?:` is more like Kotlin's `?:` than Groovy's `?:`.
NOTE: The result of `?.` and `?:` can't be assigned to primitives. So
`int[] someArray = null; int l = someArray?.length` and
`int s = params.size ?: 100` don't work. Do
`def someArray = null; def l = someArray?.length` and
`def s = params.size ?: 100` instead.
[float]
[[painless-control-flow]]
=== Control flow
Java's https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/flow.html[control flow statements] are supported, with the exception
of the `switch` statement.
In addition to Java's `enhanced for` loop, the `for in` syntax from groovy can also be used:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
for (item : list) {
...
}
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[float]
[[painless-functions]]
=== Functions
Functions can be declared at the beginning of the script, for example:
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
boolean isNegative(def x) { x < 0 }
...
if (isNegative(someVar)) {
...
}
---------------------------------------------------------
[float]
[[painless-lambda-expressions]]
=== Lambda expressions
Lambda expressions and method references work the same as https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/lambdaexpressions.html[Java's].
[source,painless]
---------------------------------------------------------
list.removeIf(item -> item == 2);
list.removeIf((int item) -> item == 2);
list.removeIf((int item) -> { item == 2 });
list.sort((x, y) -> x - y);
list.sort(Integer::compare);
---------------------------------------------------------
Method references to functions within the script can be accomplished using `this`, e.g. `list.sort(this::mycompare)`.