The JDBC driver converts the Java data type to the appropriate JDBC
type before sending it to the database. It uses a default mapping for
most data types. For example, a Java int is converted to an SQL INTEGER.
Default mappings were created to provide consistency between drivers.
The following table summarizes the default JDBC data type that the
Java data type is converted to when you call the setXXX() method of the
PreparedStatement or CallableStatement object or the
ResultSet.updateXXX() method.
SQL | JDBC/Java | setXXX | updateXXX |
---|---|---|---|
VARCHAR | java.lang.String | setString | updateString |
CHAR | java.lang.String | setString | updateString |
LONGVARCHAR | java.lang.String | setString | updateString |
BIT | boolean | setBoolean | updateBoolean |
NUMERIC | java.math.BigDecimal | setBigDecimal | updateBigDecimal |
TINYINT | byte | setByte | updateByte |
SMALLINT | short | setShort | updateShort |
INTEGER | int | setInt | updateInt |
BIGINT | long | setLong | updateLong |
REAL | float | setFloat | updateFloat |
FLOAT | float | setFloat | updateFloat |
DOUBLE | double | setDouble | updateDouble |
VARBINARY | byte[ ] | setBytes | updateBytes |
BINARY | byte[ ] | setBytes | updateBytes |
DATE | java.sql.Date | setDate | updateDate |
TIME | java.sql.Time | setTime | updateTime |
TIMESTAMP | java.sql.Timestamp | setTimestamp | updateTimestamp |
CLOB | java.sql.Clob | setClob | updateClob |
BLOB | java.sql.Blob | setBlob | updateBlob |
ARRAY | java.sql.Array | setARRAY | updateARRAY |
REF | java.sql.Ref | SetRef | updateRef |
STRUCT | java.sql.Struct | SetStruct | updateStruct |
The setXXX() and updateXXX() methods enable you to convert specific Java types to specific JDBC data types. The methods, setObject() and updateObject(), enable you to map almost any Java type to a JDBC data type.
ResultSet object provides corresponding getXXX() method for each data type to retrieve column value. Each method can be used with column name or by its ordinal position.
SQL | JDBC/Java | setXXX | getXXX |
---|---|---|---|
VARCHAR | java.lang.String | setString | getString |
CHAR | java.lang.String | setString | getString |
LONGVARCHAR | java.lang.String | setString | getString |
BIT | boolean | setBoolean | getBoolean |
NUMERIC | java.math.BigDecimal | setBigDecimal | getBigDecimal |
TINYINT | byte | setByte | getByte |
SMALLINT | short | setShort | getShort |
INTEGER | int | setInt | getInt |
BIGINT | long | setLong | getLong |
REAL | float | setFloat | getFloat |
FLOAT | float | setFloat | getFloat |
DOUBLE | double | setDouble | getDouble |
VARBINARY | byte[ ] | setBytes | getBytes |
BINARY | byte[ ] | setBytes | getBytes |
DATE | java.sql.Date | setDate | getDate |
TIME | java.sql.Time | setTime | getTime |
TIMESTAMP | java.sql.Timestamp | setTimestamp | getTimestamp |
CLOB | java.sql.Clob | setClob | getClob |
BLOB | java.sql.Blob | setBlob | getBlob |
ARRAY | java.sql.Array | setARRAY | getARRAY |
REF | java.sql.Ref | SetRef | getRef |
STRUCT | java.sql.Struct | SetStruct | getStruct |
Date & Time Data Types:
The java.sql.Date class maps to the SQL DATE type, and the java.sql.Time and java.sql.Timestamp classes map to the SQL TIME and SQL TIMESTAMP data types, respectively.Following examples shows how the Date and Time classes format standard Java date and time values to match the SQL data type requirements.
import java.sql.Date;
import java.sql.Time;
import java.sql.Timestamp;
import java.util.*;
public class SqlDateTime {
public static void main(String[] args) {
//Get standard date and time
java.util.Date javaDate = new java.util.Date();
long javaTime = javaDate.getTime();
System.out.println("The Java Date is:" +
javaDate.toString());
//Get and display SQL DATE
java.sql.Date sqlDate = new java.sql.Date(javaTime);
System.out.println("The SQL DATE is: " +
sqlDate.toString());
//Get and display SQL TIME
java.sql.Time sqlTime = new java.sql.Time(javaTime);
System.out.println("The SQL TIME is: " +
sqlTime.toString());
//Get and display SQL TIMESTAMP
java.sql.Timestamp sqlTimestamp =
new java.sql.Timestamp(javaTime);
System.out.println("The SQL TIMESTAMP is: " +
sqlTimestamp.toString());
}//end main
}//end SqlDateTime
Now let us compile above example as follows:C:\>javac SqlDateTime.java
C:\>
When you run JDBCExample, it produces following result:C:\>java SqlDateTime
The Java Date is:Tue Aug 18 13:46:02 GMT+04:00 2009
The SQL DATE is: 2009-08-18
The SQL TIME is: 13:46:02
The SQL TIMESTAMP is: 2009-08-18 13:46:02.828
C:\>
Handling NULL Values:
SQL's use of NULL values and Java's use of null are different concepts. So how do you handle SQL NULL values in Java? There are three tactics you can use:- Avoid using getXXX( ) methods that return primitive data types.
- Use wrapper classes for primitive data types, and use the ResultSet object's wasNull( ) method to test whether the wrapper class variable that received the value returned by the getXXX( ) method should be set to null.
- Use primitive data types and the ResultSet object's wasNull( ) method to test whether the primitive variable that received the value returned by the getXXX( ) method should be set to an acceptable value that you've chosen to represent a NULL.
Statement stmt = conn.createStatement( );
String sql = "SELECT id, first, last, age FROM Employees";
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
int id = rs.getInt(1);
if( rs.wasNull( ) ) {
id = 0;
}
0 comments:
Post a Comment