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Posted to jira@arrow.apache.org by "Weston Pace (Jira)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2022/04/22 18:55:00 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (ARROW-16289) [C++] (eventually) abandon scalar columns of an ExecBatch in favor of RLE encoded arrays

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ARROW-16289?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17526627#comment-17526627 ] 

Weston Pace commented on ARROW-16289:
-------------------------------------

CC [~lidavidm] [~edponce] [~apitrou] [~michalno] [~yibocai]

> [C++] (eventually) abandon scalar columns of an ExecBatch in favor of RLE encoded arrays
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: ARROW-16289
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ARROW-16289
>             Project: Apache Arrow
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: C++
>            Reporter: Weston Pace
>            Priority: Major
>
> This JIRA is a proposal / discussion.  I am not asserting this is the way to go but I would like to consider it.
> From the execution engine's perspective an exec batch's columns are always either arrays or scalars.  The only time we make use of scalars today is for the four augmented columns (e.g. __filename).  Once we have support for RLE arrays a scalar could easily be encoded as an RLE array and there would be no need to use scalars here.
> The advantage would be reducing the complexity in exec nodes and avoiding issues like ARROW-16288.  It is already rather difficult to explain the idea of a "scalar" and "vector" function and then have to turn around and explain that the word "scalar" has an entirely different meaning when talking about field shape.
> I think it's worth considering taking this even further and removing the concept from the compute layer entirely.  Kernel functions that want to have special logic for scalars could do so using the RLE array.  This would be a significant change to many kernels which currently declare the ANY shape and determine which logic to apply within the kernel itself (e.g. there is one array OR scalar kernel and not one kernel for each).
> Admittedly there is probably a few instructions and a few bytes more to handle an RLE scalar than the scalar we have today.  However, this is just different flavors of O(1) and not likely to have significant impact.



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