amazonka-dynamodb-1.4.5: Amazon DynamoDB SDK.

Copyright(c) 2013-2016 Brendan Hay
LicenseMozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
MaintainerBrendan Hay <brendan.g.hay@gmail.com>
Stabilityauto-generated
Portabilitynon-portable (GHC extensions)
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Network.AWS.DynamoDB.DeleteItem

Contents

Description

Deletes a single item in a table by primary key. You can perform a conditional delete operation that deletes the item if it exists, or if it has an expected attribute value.

In addition to deleting an item, you can also return the item's attribute values in the same operation, using the ReturnValues parameter.

Unless you specify conditions, the DeleteItem is an idempotent operation; running it multiple times on the same item or attribute does not result in an error response.

Conditional deletes are useful for deleting items only if specific conditions are met. If those conditions are met, DynamoDB performs the delete. Otherwise, the item is not deleted.

Synopsis

Creating a Request

deleteItem Source #

Arguments

:: Text

diTableName

-> DeleteItem 

Creates a value of DeleteItem with the minimum fields required to make a request.

Use one of the following lenses to modify other fields as desired:

  • diExpressionAttributeNames - One or more substitution tokens for attribute names in an expression. The following are some use cases for using ExpressionAttributeNames : * To access an attribute whose name conflicts with a DynamoDB reserved word. * To create a placeholder for repeating occurrences of an attribute name in an expression. * To prevent special characters in an attribute name from being misinterpreted in an expression. Use the # character in an expression to dereference an attribute name. For example, consider the following attribute name: * Percentile The name of this attribute conflicts with a reserved word, so it cannot be used directly in an expression. (For the complete list of reserved words, see Reserved Words in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide ). To work around this, you could specify the following for ExpressionAttributeNames : * {"#P":Percentile} You could then use this substitution in an expression, as in this example: * #P = :val For more information on expression attribute names, see Accessing Item Attributes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .
  • diReturnValues - Use ReturnValues if you want to get the item attributes as they appeared before they were deleted. For DeleteItem , the valid values are: * NONE - If ReturnValues is not specified, or if its value is NONE , then nothing is returned. (This setting is the default for ReturnValues .) * ALL_OLD - The content of the old item is returned.
  • diExpressionAttributeValues - One or more values that can be substituted in an expression. Use the : (colon) character in an expression to dereference an attribute value. For example, suppose that you wanted to check whether the value of the ProductStatus attribute was one of the following: Available | Backordered | Discontinued You would first need to specify ExpressionAttributeValues as follows: { ":avail":{S:Available}, ":back":{S:Backordered}, ":disc":{S:Discontinued} } You could then use these values in an expression, such as this: ProductStatus IN (:avail, :back, :disc) For more information on expression attribute values, see Specifying Conditions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .
  • diReturnConsumedCapacity - Undocumented member.
  • diReturnItemCollectionMetrics - Determines whether item collection metrics are returned. If set to SIZE , the response includes statistics about item collections, if any, that were modified during the operation are returned in the response. If set to NONE (the default), no statistics are returned.
  • diConditionExpression - A condition that must be satisfied in order for a conditional DeleteItem to succeed. An expression can contain any of the following: * Functions: attribute_exists | attribute_not_exists | attribute_type | contains | begins_with | size These function names are case-sensitive. * Comparison operators: = | <> | < | > | <= | >= | BETWEEN | IN * Logical operators: AND | OR | NOT For more information on condition expressions, see Specifying Conditions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .
  • diConditionalOperator - Important: This is a legacy parameter, for backward compatibility. New applications should use ConditionExpression instead. Do not combine legacy parameters and expression parameters in a single API call; otherwise, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException exception. A logical operator to apply to the conditions in the Expected map: * AND - If all of the conditions evaluate to true, then the entire map evaluates to true. * OR - If at least one of the conditions evaluate to true, then the entire map evaluates to true. If you omit ConditionalOperator , then AND is the default. The operation will succeed only if the entire map evaluates to true.
  • diExpected - Important: This is a legacy parameter, for backward compatibility. New applications should use ConditionExpression instead. Do not combine legacy parameters and expression parameters in a single API call; otherwise, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException exception. A map of attributecondition pairs. Expected provides a conditional block for the DeleteItem operation. Each element of Expected consists of an attribute name, a comparison operator, and one or more values. DynamoDB compares the attribute with the value(s) you supplied, using the comparison operator. For each Expected element, the result of the evaluation is either true or false. If you specify more than one element in the Expected map, then by default all of the conditions must evaluate to true. In other words, the conditions are ANDed together. (You can use the ConditionalOperator parameter to OR the conditions instead. If you do this, then at least one of the conditions must evaluate to true, rather than all of them.) If the Expected map evaluates to true, then the conditional operation succeeds; otherwise, it fails. Expected contains the following: * AttributeValueList - One or more values to evaluate against the supplied attribute. The number of values in the list depends on the ComparisonOperator being used. For type Number, value comparisons are numeric. String value comparisons for greater than, equals, or less than are based on ASCII character code values. For example, a is greater than A , and a is greater than B . For a list of code values, see <http:en.wikipedia.orgwikiASCII#ASCII_printable_characters http:en.wikipedia.orgwikiASCII#ASCII_printable_characters> . For type Binary, DynamoDB treats each byte of the binary data as unsigned when it compares binary values. * ComparisonOperator - A comparator for evaluating attributes in the AttributeValueList . When performing the comparison, DynamoDB uses strongly consistent reads. The following comparison operators are available: EQ | NE | LE | LT | GE | GT | NOT_NULL | NULL | CONTAINS | NOT_CONTAINS | BEGINS_WITH | IN | BETWEEN The following are descriptions of each comparison operator. * EQ : Equal. EQ is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, Binary, String Set, Number Set, or Binary Set. If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not equal {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * NE : Not equal. NE is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String, Number, Binary, String Set, Number Set, or Binary Set. If an item contains an AttributeValue of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not equal {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * LE : Less than or equal. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * LT : Less than. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * GE : Greater than or equal. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * GT : Greater than. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * NOT_NULL : The attribute exists. NOT_NULL is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. * NULL : The attribute does not exist. NULL is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. * CONTAINS : Checks for a subsequence, or value in a set. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If the target attribute of the comparison is of type String, then the operator checks for a substring match. If the target attribute of the comparison is of type Binary, then the operator looks for a subsequence of the target that matches the input. If the target attribute of the comparison is a set ("SS ", "NS ", or "BS "), then the operator evaluates to true if it finds an exact match with any member of the set. CONTAINS is supported for lists: When evaluating "a CONTAINS b ", "a " can be a list; however, "b " cannot be a set, a map, or a list. * NOT_CONTAINS : Checks for absence of a subsequence, or absence of a value in a set. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If the target attribute of the comparison is a String, then the operator checks for the absence of a substring match. If the target attribute of the comparison is Binary, then the operator checks for the absence of a subsequence of the target that matches the input. If the target attribute of the comparison is a set ("SS ", "NS ", or "BS "), then the operator evaluates to true if it does not find an exact match with any member of the set. NOT_CONTAINS is supported for lists: When evaluating "a NOT CONTAINS b ", "a " can be a list; however, "b " cannot be a set, a map, or a list. * BEGINS_WITH : Checks for a prefix. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String or Binary (not a Number or a set type). The target attribute of the comparison must be of type String or Binary (not a Number or a set type). * IN : Checks for matching elements within two sets. AttributeValueList can contain one or more AttributeValue elements of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). These attributes are compared against an existing set type attribute of an item. If any elements of the input set are present in the item attribute, the expression evaluates to true. * BETWEEN : Greater than or equal to the first value, and less than or equal to the second value. AttributeValueList must contain two AttributeValue elements of the same type, either String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). A target attribute matches if the target value is greater than, or equal to, the first element and less than, or equal to, the second element. If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not compare to {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} For usage examples of AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator , see <http:docs.aws.amazon.comamazondynamodblatestdeveloperguideLegacyConditionalParameters.html Legacy Conditional Parameters> in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide . For backward compatibility with previous DynamoDB releases, the following parameters can be used instead of AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator : * Value - A value for DynamoDB to compare with an attribute. * Exists - A Boolean value that causes DynamoDB to evaluate the value before attempting the conditional operation: * If Exists is true , DynamoDB will check to see if that attribute value already exists in the table. If it is found, then the condition evaluates to true; otherwise the condition evaluate to false. * If Exists is false , DynamoDB assumes that the attribute value does not exist in the table. If in fact the value does not exist, then the assumption is valid and the condition evaluates to true. If the value is found, despite the assumption that it does not exist, the condition evaluates to false. Note that the default value for Exists is true . The Value and Exists parameters are incompatible with AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator . Note that if you use both sets of parameters at once, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException/ exception.
  • diTableName - The name of the table from which to delete the item.
  • diKey - A map of attribute names to AttributeValue objects, representing the primary key of the item to delete. For the primary key, you must provide all of the attributes. For example, with a simple primary key, you only need to provide a value for the partition key. For a composite primary key, you must provide values for both the partition key and the sort key.

data DeleteItem Source #

Represents the input of a DeleteItem operation.

See: deleteItem smart constructor.

Instances

Eq DeleteItem Source # 
Data DeleteItem Source # 

Methods

gfoldl :: (forall d b. Data d => c (d -> b) -> d -> c b) -> (forall g. g -> c g) -> DeleteItem -> c DeleteItem #

gunfold :: (forall b r. Data b => c (b -> r) -> c r) -> (forall r. r -> c r) -> Constr -> c DeleteItem #

toConstr :: DeleteItem -> Constr #

dataTypeOf :: DeleteItem -> DataType #

dataCast1 :: Typeable (* -> *) t => (forall d. Data d => c (t d)) -> Maybe (c DeleteItem) #

dataCast2 :: Typeable (* -> * -> *) t => (forall d e. (Data d, Data e) => c (t d e)) -> Maybe (c DeleteItem) #

gmapT :: (forall b. Data b => b -> b) -> DeleteItem -> DeleteItem #

gmapQl :: (r -> r' -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> DeleteItem -> r #

gmapQr :: (r' -> r -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> DeleteItem -> r #

gmapQ :: (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> DeleteItem -> [u] #

gmapQi :: Int -> (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> DeleteItem -> u #

gmapM :: Monad m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItem -> m DeleteItem #

gmapMp :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItem -> m DeleteItem #

gmapMo :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItem -> m DeleteItem #

Read DeleteItem Source # 
Show DeleteItem Source # 
Generic DeleteItem Source # 

Associated Types

type Rep DeleteItem :: * -> * #

Hashable DeleteItem Source # 
ToJSON DeleteItem Source # 
NFData DeleteItem Source # 

Methods

rnf :: DeleteItem -> () #

AWSRequest DeleteItem Source # 
ToPath DeleteItem Source # 
ToHeaders DeleteItem Source # 

Methods

toHeaders :: DeleteItem -> [Header] #

ToQuery DeleteItem Source # 
type Rep DeleteItem Source # 
type Rep DeleteItem = D1 (MetaData "DeleteItem" "Network.AWS.DynamoDB.DeleteItem" "amazonka-dynamodb-1.4.5-9Gf0U64x7l0KacBmJaIMNw" False) (C1 (MetaCons "DeleteItem'" PrefixI True) ((:*:) ((:*:) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diExpressionAttributeNames") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe (Map Text Text)))) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diReturnValues") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ReturnValue)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diExpressionAttributeValues") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe (Map Text AttributeValue)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diReturnConsumedCapacity") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ReturnConsumedCapacity))) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diReturnItemCollectionMetrics") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ReturnItemCollectionMetrics)))))) ((:*:) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diConditionExpression") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe Text))) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diConditionalOperator") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ConditionalOperator)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diExpected") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe (Map Text ExpectedAttributeValue)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diTableName") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 Text)) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_diKey") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Map Text AttributeValue))))))))
type Rs DeleteItem Source # 

Request Lenses

diExpressionAttributeNames :: Lens' DeleteItem (HashMap Text Text) Source #

One or more substitution tokens for attribute names in an expression. The following are some use cases for using ExpressionAttributeNames : * To access an attribute whose name conflicts with a DynamoDB reserved word. * To create a placeholder for repeating occurrences of an attribute name in an expression. * To prevent special characters in an attribute name from being misinterpreted in an expression. Use the # character in an expression to dereference an attribute name. For example, consider the following attribute name: * Percentile The name of this attribute conflicts with a reserved word, so it cannot be used directly in an expression. (For the complete list of reserved words, see Reserved Words in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide ). To work around this, you could specify the following for ExpressionAttributeNames : * {"#P":Percentile} You could then use this substitution in an expression, as in this example: * #P = :val For more information on expression attribute names, see Accessing Item Attributes in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .

diReturnValues :: Lens' DeleteItem (Maybe ReturnValue) Source #

Use ReturnValues if you want to get the item attributes as they appeared before they were deleted. For DeleteItem , the valid values are: * NONE - If ReturnValues is not specified, or if its value is NONE , then nothing is returned. (This setting is the default for ReturnValues .) * ALL_OLD - The content of the old item is returned.

diExpressionAttributeValues :: Lens' DeleteItem (HashMap Text AttributeValue) Source #

One or more values that can be substituted in an expression. Use the : (colon) character in an expression to dereference an attribute value. For example, suppose that you wanted to check whether the value of the ProductStatus attribute was one of the following: Available | Backordered | Discontinued You would first need to specify ExpressionAttributeValues as follows: { ":avail":{S:Available}, ":back":{S:Backordered}, ":disc":{S:Discontinued} } You could then use these values in an expression, such as this: ProductStatus IN (:avail, :back, :disc) For more information on expression attribute values, see Specifying Conditions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .

diReturnItemCollectionMetrics :: Lens' DeleteItem (Maybe ReturnItemCollectionMetrics) Source #

Determines whether item collection metrics are returned. If set to SIZE , the response includes statistics about item collections, if any, that were modified during the operation are returned in the response. If set to NONE (the default), no statistics are returned.

diConditionExpression :: Lens' DeleteItem (Maybe Text) Source #

A condition that must be satisfied in order for a conditional DeleteItem to succeed. An expression can contain any of the following: * Functions: attribute_exists | attribute_not_exists | attribute_type | contains | begins_with | size These function names are case-sensitive. * Comparison operators: = | <> | < | > | <= | >= | BETWEEN | IN * Logical operators: AND | OR | NOT For more information on condition expressions, see Specifying Conditions in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide .

diConditionalOperator :: Lens' DeleteItem (Maybe ConditionalOperator) Source #

Important: This is a legacy parameter, for backward compatibility. New applications should use ConditionExpression instead. Do not combine legacy parameters and expression parameters in a single API call; otherwise, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException exception. A logical operator to apply to the conditions in the Expected map: * AND - If all of the conditions evaluate to true, then the entire map evaluates to true. * OR - If at least one of the conditions evaluate to true, then the entire map evaluates to true. If you omit ConditionalOperator , then AND is the default. The operation will succeed only if the entire map evaluates to true.

diExpected :: Lens' DeleteItem (HashMap Text ExpectedAttributeValue) Source #

Important: This is a legacy parameter, for backward compatibility. New applications should use ConditionExpression instead. Do not combine legacy parameters and expression parameters in a single API call; otherwise, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException exception. A map of attributecondition pairs. Expected provides a conditional block for the DeleteItem operation. Each element of Expected consists of an attribute name, a comparison operator, and one or more values. DynamoDB compares the attribute with the value(s) you supplied, using the comparison operator. For each Expected element, the result of the evaluation is either true or false. If you specify more than one element in the Expected map, then by default all of the conditions must evaluate to true. In other words, the conditions are ANDed together. (You can use the ConditionalOperator parameter to OR the conditions instead. If you do this, then at least one of the conditions must evaluate to true, rather than all of them.) If the Expected map evaluates to true, then the conditional operation succeeds; otherwise, it fails. Expected contains the following: * AttributeValueList - One or more values to evaluate against the supplied attribute. The number of values in the list depends on the ComparisonOperator being used. For type Number, value comparisons are numeric. String value comparisons for greater than, equals, or less than are based on ASCII character code values. For example, a is greater than A , and a is greater than B . For a list of code values, see <http:en.wikipedia.orgwikiASCII#ASCII_printable_characters http:en.wikipedia.orgwikiASCII#ASCII_printable_characters> . For type Binary, DynamoDB treats each byte of the binary data as unsigned when it compares binary values. * ComparisonOperator - A comparator for evaluating attributes in the AttributeValueList . When performing the comparison, DynamoDB uses strongly consistent reads. The following comparison operators are available: EQ | NE | LE | LT | GE | GT | NOT_NULL | NULL | CONTAINS | NOT_CONTAINS | BEGINS_WITH | IN | BETWEEN The following are descriptions of each comparison operator. * EQ : Equal. EQ is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, Binary, String Set, Number Set, or Binary Set. If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not equal {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * NE : Not equal. NE is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String, Number, Binary, String Set, Number Set, or Binary Set. If an item contains an AttributeValue of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not equal {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * LE : Less than or equal. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * LT : Less than. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * GE : Greater than or equal. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * GT : Greater than. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not equal {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} . * NOT_NULL : The attribute exists. NOT_NULL is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. * NULL : The attribute does not exist. NULL is supported for all datatypes, including lists and maps. * CONTAINS : Checks for a subsequence, or value in a set. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If the target attribute of the comparison is of type String, then the operator checks for a substring match. If the target attribute of the comparison is of type Binary, then the operator looks for a subsequence of the target that matches the input. If the target attribute of the comparison is a set ("SS ", "NS ", or "BS "), then the operator evaluates to true if it finds an exact match with any member of the set. CONTAINS is supported for lists: When evaluating "a CONTAINS b ", "a " can be a list; however, "b " cannot be a set, a map, or a list. * NOT_CONTAINS : Checks for absence of a subsequence, or absence of a value in a set. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue element of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). If the target attribute of the comparison is a String, then the operator checks for the absence of a substring match. If the target attribute of the comparison is Binary, then the operator checks for the absence of a subsequence of the target that matches the input. If the target attribute of the comparison is a set ("SS ", "NS ", or "BS "), then the operator evaluates to true if it does not find an exact match with any member of the set. NOT_CONTAINS is supported for lists: When evaluating "a NOT CONTAINS b ", "a " can be a list; however, "b " cannot be a set, a map, or a list. * BEGINS_WITH : Checks for a prefix. AttributeValueList can contain only one AttributeValue of type String or Binary (not a Number or a set type). The target attribute of the comparison must be of type String or Binary (not a Number or a set type). * IN : Checks for matching elements within two sets. AttributeValueList can contain one or more AttributeValue elements of type String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). These attributes are compared against an existing set type attribute of an item. If any elements of the input set are present in the item attribute, the expression evaluates to true. * BETWEEN : Greater than or equal to the first value, and less than or equal to the second value. AttributeValueList must contain two AttributeValue elements of the same type, either String, Number, or Binary (not a set type). A target attribute matches if the target value is greater than, or equal to, the first element and less than, or equal to, the second element. If an item contains an AttributeValue element of a different type than the one provided in the request, the value does not match. For example, {S:"6"} does not compare to {N:"6"} . Also, {N:"6"} does not compare to {NS:["6", "2", "1"]} For usage examples of AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator , see <http:docs.aws.amazon.comamazondynamodblatestdeveloperguideLegacyConditionalParameters.html Legacy Conditional Parameters> in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide . For backward compatibility with previous DynamoDB releases, the following parameters can be used instead of AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator : * Value - A value for DynamoDB to compare with an attribute. * Exists - A Boolean value that causes DynamoDB to evaluate the value before attempting the conditional operation: * If Exists is true , DynamoDB will check to see if that attribute value already exists in the table. If it is found, then the condition evaluates to true; otherwise the condition evaluate to false. * If Exists is false , DynamoDB assumes that the attribute value does not exist in the table. If in fact the value does not exist, then the assumption is valid and the condition evaluates to true. If the value is found, despite the assumption that it does not exist, the condition evaluates to false. Note that the default value for Exists is true . The Value and Exists parameters are incompatible with AttributeValueList and ComparisonOperator . Note that if you use both sets of parameters at once, DynamoDB will return a ValidationException/ exception.

diTableName :: Lens' DeleteItem Text Source #

The name of the table from which to delete the item.

diKey :: Lens' DeleteItem (HashMap Text AttributeValue) Source #

A map of attribute names to AttributeValue objects, representing the primary key of the item to delete. For the primary key, you must provide all of the attributes. For example, with a simple primary key, you only need to provide a value for the partition key. For a composite primary key, you must provide values for both the partition key and the sort key.

Destructuring the Response

deleteItemResponse Source #

Creates a value of DeleteItemResponse with the minimum fields required to make a request.

Use one of the following lenses to modify other fields as desired:

  • dirsItemCollectionMetrics - Information about item collections, if any, that were affected by the operation. ItemCollectionMetrics is only returned if the request asked for it. If the table does not have any local secondary indexes, this information is not returned in the response. Each ItemCollectionMetrics element consists of: * ItemCollectionKey - The partition key value of the item collection. This is the same as the partition key value of the item itself. * SizeEstimateRange - An estimate of item collection size, in gigabytes. This value is a two-element array containing a lower bound and an upper bound for the estimate. The estimate includes the size of all the items in the table, plus the size of all attributes projected into all of the local secondary indexes on that table. Use this estimate to measure whether a local secondary index is approaching its size limit. The estimate is subject to change over time; therefore, do not rely on the precision or accuracy of the estimate.
  • dirsConsumedCapacity - Undocumented member.
  • dirsAttributes - A map of attribute names to AttributeValue objects, representing the item as it appeared before the DeleteItem operation. This map appears in the response only if ReturnValues was specified as ALL_OLD in the request.
  • dirsResponseStatus - -- | The response status code.

data DeleteItemResponse Source #

Represents the output of a DeleteItem operation.

See: deleteItemResponse smart constructor.

Instances

Eq DeleteItemResponse Source # 
Data DeleteItemResponse Source # 

Methods

gfoldl :: (forall d b. Data d => c (d -> b) -> d -> c b) -> (forall g. g -> c g) -> DeleteItemResponse -> c DeleteItemResponse #

gunfold :: (forall b r. Data b => c (b -> r) -> c r) -> (forall r. r -> c r) -> Constr -> c DeleteItemResponse #

toConstr :: DeleteItemResponse -> Constr #

dataTypeOf :: DeleteItemResponse -> DataType #

dataCast1 :: Typeable (* -> *) t => (forall d. Data d => c (t d)) -> Maybe (c DeleteItemResponse) #

dataCast2 :: Typeable (* -> * -> *) t => (forall d e. (Data d, Data e) => c (t d e)) -> Maybe (c DeleteItemResponse) #

gmapT :: (forall b. Data b => b -> b) -> DeleteItemResponse -> DeleteItemResponse #

gmapQl :: (r -> r' -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> DeleteItemResponse -> r #

gmapQr :: (r' -> r -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> DeleteItemResponse -> r #

gmapQ :: (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> DeleteItemResponse -> [u] #

gmapQi :: Int -> (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> DeleteItemResponse -> u #

gmapM :: Monad m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItemResponse -> m DeleteItemResponse #

gmapMp :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItemResponse -> m DeleteItemResponse #

gmapMo :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> DeleteItemResponse -> m DeleteItemResponse #

Read DeleteItemResponse Source # 
Show DeleteItemResponse Source # 
Generic DeleteItemResponse Source # 
NFData DeleteItemResponse Source # 

Methods

rnf :: DeleteItemResponse -> () #

type Rep DeleteItemResponse Source # 
type Rep DeleteItemResponse = D1 (MetaData "DeleteItemResponse" "Network.AWS.DynamoDB.DeleteItem" "amazonka-dynamodb-1.4.5-9Gf0U64x7l0KacBmJaIMNw" False) (C1 (MetaCons "DeleteItemResponse'" PrefixI True) ((:*:) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_dirsItemCollectionMetrics") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ItemCollectionMetrics))) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_dirsConsumedCapacity") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe ConsumedCapacity)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_dirsAttributes") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedStrict) (Rec0 (Maybe (Map Text AttributeValue)))) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "_dirsResponseStatus") NoSourceUnpackedness SourceStrict DecidedUnpack) (Rec0 Int)))))

Response Lenses

dirsItemCollectionMetrics :: Lens' DeleteItemResponse (Maybe ItemCollectionMetrics) Source #

Information about item collections, if any, that were affected by the operation. ItemCollectionMetrics is only returned if the request asked for it. If the table does not have any local secondary indexes, this information is not returned in the response. Each ItemCollectionMetrics element consists of: * ItemCollectionKey - The partition key value of the item collection. This is the same as the partition key value of the item itself. * SizeEstimateRange - An estimate of item collection size, in gigabytes. This value is a two-element array containing a lower bound and an upper bound for the estimate. The estimate includes the size of all the items in the table, plus the size of all attributes projected into all of the local secondary indexes on that table. Use this estimate to measure whether a local secondary index is approaching its size limit. The estimate is subject to change over time; therefore, do not rely on the precision or accuracy of the estimate.

dirsAttributes :: Lens' DeleteItemResponse (HashMap Text AttributeValue) Source #

A map of attribute names to AttributeValue objects, representing the item as it appeared before the DeleteItem operation. This map appears in the response only if ReturnValues was specified as ALL_OLD in the request.

dirsResponseStatus :: Lens' DeleteItemResponse Int Source #

  • - | The response status code.