Hi Matt,Ron has already given you a perfect answer on how to utilize maps. Another slightly slower solution is to address the database twice, and let the compiler do its job:let $originalDB := db:get('OriginalDB')/data/item
let $updateDB := db:get('UpdateDB')/data/item
for $id in distinct-values(($originalDB/@id, $updateDB/@id))
let $original := db:get('OriginalDB')/data/item[@id = $id]
let $update := db:get('UpdateDB')/data/item[@id = $id]
return json:serialize(map {
'id': xs:long($id),
'original': $original,
'update': $update
})This may seem counterintuitive at first glance, but the expression "db:get('OriginalDB')/data/item[@id = $id]" is something that the optimizer will rewrite for index access. It is equivalent to:let $original := db:attribute("OriginalDB", $id)/self::attribute(id)/parent::item
let $update := db:attribute("UpdateDB", $id)/self::attribute(id)/parent::itemHope this helps,ChristianOn Tue, Jun 3, 2025 at 11:10 PM Matt Dziuban <mrdziuban@gmail.com> wrote:Hi all,I'm working on a query that reads from two databases -- OriginalDB and UpdateDB. The structure of each database is the same:<data><item id="1">...</item><item id="2">...</item>...</data>OriginalDB has 2,305,570 items and UpdateDB has 307,019.The query gets all distinct item ids from the two databases, then gets the item with a matching id (if there is one) from each database, and returns the id and both nodes in a JSON object. Here's the query:let $originalDB := db:get('OriginalDB')/data/item
let $updateDB := db:get('UpdateDB')/data/item
for $id in distinct-values(($originalDB/@id, $updateDB/@id))
let $original := $originalDB[@id = $id]
let $update := $updateDB[@id = $id]
return json:serialize(map {
'id': xs:long($id),
'original': $original,
'update': $update
}, map { 'indent': 'no' })In its current state this query is very slow -- it's returned only 35 JSON objects in ~30 minutes. How can I go about optimizing it to best take advantage of each database's indices?Thanks in advance,Matt