source: trunk/src/sql/kernel/qsqlquery.cpp@ 1008

Last change on this file since 1008 was 846, checked in by Dmitry A. Kuminov, 14 years ago

trunk: Merged in qt 4.7.2 sources from branches/vendor/nokia/qt.

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1/****************************************************************************
2**
3** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
4** All rights reserved.
5** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
6**
7** This file is part of the QtSql module of the Qt Toolkit.
8**
9** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
10** Commercial Usage
11** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in
12** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the
13** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in
14** a written agreement between you and Nokia.
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16** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
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20** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
21** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements
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25** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception
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28** GNU General Public License Usage
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40****************************************************************************/
41
42#include "qsqlquery.h"
43
44//#define QT_DEBUG_SQL
45
46#include "qatomic.h"
47#include "qsqlrecord.h"
48#include "qsqlresult.h"
49#include "qsqldriver.h"
50#include "qsqldatabase.h"
51#include "private/qsqlnulldriver_p.h"
52#include "qvector.h"
53#include "qmap.h"
54
55QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
56
57class QSqlQueryPrivate
58{
59public:
60 QSqlQueryPrivate(QSqlResult* result);
61 ~QSqlQueryPrivate();
62 QAtomicInt ref;
63 QSqlResult* sqlResult;
64
65 static QSqlQueryPrivate* shared_null();
66};
67
68Q_GLOBAL_STATIC_WITH_ARGS(QSqlQueryPrivate, nullQueryPrivate, (0))
69Q_GLOBAL_STATIC(QSqlNullDriver, nullDriver)
70Q_GLOBAL_STATIC_WITH_ARGS(QSqlNullResult, nullResult, (nullDriver()))
71
72QSqlQueryPrivate* QSqlQueryPrivate::shared_null()
73{
74 QSqlQueryPrivate *null = nullQueryPrivate();
75 null->ref.ref();
76 return null;
77}
78
79/*!
80\internal
81*/
82QSqlQueryPrivate::QSqlQueryPrivate(QSqlResult* result)
83 : ref(1), sqlResult(result)
84{
85 if (!sqlResult)
86 sqlResult = nullResult();
87}
88
89QSqlQueryPrivate::~QSqlQueryPrivate()
90{
91 QSqlResult *nr = nullResult();
92 if (!nr || sqlResult == nr)
93 return;
94 delete sqlResult;
95}
96
97/*!
98 \class QSqlQuery
99 \brief The QSqlQuery class provides a means of executing and
100 manipulating SQL statements.
101
102 \ingroup database
103 \ingroup shared
104
105 \inmodule QtSql
106
107 QSqlQuery encapsulates the functionality involved in creating,
108 navigating and retrieving data from SQL queries which are
109 executed on a \l QSqlDatabase. It can be used to execute DML
110 (data manipulation language) statements, such as \c SELECT, \c
111 INSERT, \c UPDATE and \c DELETE, as well as DDL (data definition
112 language) statements, such as \c{CREATE} \c{TABLE}. It can also
113 be used to execute database-specific commands which are not
114 standard SQL (e.g. \c{SET DATESTYLE=ISO} for PostgreSQL).
115
116 Successfully executed SQL statements set the query's state to
117 active so that isActive() returns true. Otherwise the query's
118 state is set to inactive. In either case, when executing a new SQL
119 statement, the query is positioned on an invalid record. An active
120 query must be navigated to a valid record (so that isValid()
121 returns true) before values can be retrieved.
122
123 For some databases, if an active query that is a \c{SELECT}
124 statement exists when you call \l{QSqlDatabase::}{commit()} or
125 \l{QSqlDatabase::}{rollback()}, the commit or rollback will
126 fail. See isActive() for details.
127
128 \target QSqlQuery examples
129
130 Navigating records is performed with the following functions:
131
132 \list
133 \o next()
134 \o previous()
135 \o first()
136 \o last()
137 \o seek()
138 \endlist
139
140 These functions allow the programmer to move forward, backward
141 or arbitrarily through the records returned by the query. If you
142 only need to move forward through the results (e.g., by using
143 next()), you can use setForwardOnly(), which will save a
144 significant amount of memory overhead and improve performance on
145 some databases. Once an active query is positioned on a valid
146 record, data can be retrieved using value(). All data is
147 transferred from the SQL backend using QVariants.
148
149 For example:
150
151 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 7
152
153 To access the data returned by a query, use value(int). Each
154 field in the data returned by a \c SELECT statement is accessed
155 by passing the field's position in the statement, starting from
156 0. This makes using \c{SELECT *} queries inadvisable because the
157 order of the fields returned is indeterminate.
158
159 For the sake of efficiency, there are no functions to access a
160 field by name (unless you use prepared queries with names, as
161 explained below). To convert a field name into an index, use
162 record().\l{QSqlRecord::indexOf()}{indexOf()}, for example:
163
164 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 8
165
166 QSqlQuery supports prepared query execution and the binding of
167 parameter values to placeholders. Some databases don't support
168 these features, so for those, Qt emulates the required
169 functionality. For example, the Oracle and ODBC drivers have
170 proper prepared query support, and Qt makes use of it; but for
171 databases that don't have this support, Qt implements the feature
172 itself, e.g. by replacing placeholders with actual values when a
173 query is executed. Use numRowsAffected() to find out how many rows
174 were affected by a non-\c SELECT query, and size() to find how
175 many were retrieved by a \c SELECT.
176
177 Oracle databases identify placeholders by using a colon-name
178 syntax, e.g \c{:name}. ODBC simply uses \c ? characters. Qt
179 supports both syntaxes, with the restriction that you can't mix
180 them in the same query.
181
182 You can retrieve the values of all the fields in a single variable
183 (a map) using boundValues().
184
185 \section1 Approaches to Binding Values
186
187 Below we present the same example using each of the four
188 different binding approaches, as well as one example of binding
189 values to a stored procedure.
190
191 \bold{Named binding using named placeholders:}
192
193 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 9
194
195 \bold{Positional binding using named placeholders:}
196
197 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 10
198
199 \bold{Binding values using positional placeholders (version 1):}
200
201 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 11
202
203 \bold{Binding values using positional placeholders (version 2):}
204
205 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 12
206
207 \bold{Binding values to a stored procedure:}
208
209 This code calls a stored procedure called \c AsciiToInt(), passing
210 it a character through its in parameter, and taking its result in
211 the out parameter.
212
213 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 13
214
215 Note that unbound parameters will retain their values.
216
217 Stored procedures that uses the return statement to return values,
218 or return multiple result sets, are not fully supported. For specific
219 details see \l{SQL Database Drivers}.
220
221 \warning You must load the SQL driver and open the connection before a
222 QSqlQuery is created. Also, the connection must remain open while the
223 query exists; otherwise, the behavior of QSqlQuery is undefined.
224
225 \sa QSqlDatabase, QSqlQueryModel, QSqlTableModel, QVariant
226*/
227
228/*!
229 Constructs a QSqlQuery object which uses the QSqlResult \a result
230 to communicate with a database.
231*/
232
233QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery(QSqlResult *result)
234{
235 d = new QSqlQueryPrivate(result);
236}
237
238/*!
239 Destroys the object and frees any allocated resources.
240*/
241
242QSqlQuery::~QSqlQuery()
243{
244 if (!d->ref.deref())
245 delete d;
246}
247
248/*!
249 Constructs a copy of \a other.
250*/
251
252QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery(const QSqlQuery& other)
253{
254 d = other.d;
255 d->ref.ref();
256}
257
258/*!
259 \internal
260*/
261static void qInit(QSqlQuery *q, const QString& query, QSqlDatabase db)
262{
263 QSqlDatabase database = db;
264 if (!database.isValid())
265 database = QSqlDatabase::database(QLatin1String(QSqlDatabase::defaultConnection), false);
266 if (database.isValid()) {
267 *q = QSqlQuery(database.driver()->createResult());
268 }
269 if (!query.isEmpty())
270 q->exec(query);
271}
272
273/*!
274 Constructs a QSqlQuery object using the SQL \a query and the
275 database \a db. If \a db is not specified, or is invalid, the application's
276 default database is used. If \a query is not an empty string, it
277 will be executed.
278
279 \sa QSqlDatabase
280*/
281QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery(const QString& query, QSqlDatabase db)
282{
283 d = QSqlQueryPrivate::shared_null();
284 qInit(this, query, db);
285}
286
287/*!
288 Constructs a QSqlQuery object using the database \a db.
289 If \a db is invalid, the application's default database will be used.
290
291 \sa QSqlDatabase
292*/
293
294QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery(QSqlDatabase db)
295{
296 d = QSqlQueryPrivate::shared_null();
297 qInit(this, QString(), db);
298}
299
300
301/*!
302 Assigns \a other to this object.
303*/
304
305QSqlQuery& QSqlQuery::operator=(const QSqlQuery& other)
306{
307 qAtomicAssign(d, other.d);
308 return *this;
309}
310
311/*!
312 Returns true if the query is \l{isActive()}{active} and positioned
313 on a valid record and the \a field is NULL; otherwise returns
314 false. Note that for some drivers, isNull() will not return accurate
315 information until after an attempt is made to retrieve data.
316
317 \sa isActive(), isValid(), value()
318*/
319
320bool QSqlQuery::isNull(int field) const
321{
322 if (d->sqlResult->isActive() && d->sqlResult->isValid())
323 return d->sqlResult->isNull(field);
324 return true;
325}
326
327/*!
328
329 Executes the SQL in \a query. Returns true and sets the query state
330 to \l{isActive()}{active} if the query was successful; otherwise
331 returns false. The \a query string must use syntax appropriate for
332 the SQL database being queried (for example, standard SQL).
333
334 After the query is executed, the query is positioned on an \e
335 invalid record and must be navigated to a valid record before data
336 values can be retrieved (for example, using next()).
337
338 Note that the last error for this query is reset when exec() is
339 called.
340
341 Example:
342
343 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 34
344
345 \sa isActive(), isValid(), next(), previous(), first(), last(),
346 seek()
347*/
348
349bool QSqlQuery::exec(const QString& query)
350{
351 if (d->ref != 1) {
352 bool fo = isForwardOnly();
353 *this = QSqlQuery(driver()->createResult());
354 d->sqlResult->setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(d->sqlResult->numericalPrecisionPolicy());
355 setForwardOnly(fo);
356 } else {
357 d->sqlResult->clear();
358 d->sqlResult->setActive(false);
359 d->sqlResult->setLastError(QSqlError());
360 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
361 d->sqlResult->setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(d->sqlResult->numericalPrecisionPolicy());
362 }
363 d->sqlResult->setQuery(query.trimmed());
364 if (!driver()->isOpen() || driver()->isOpenError()) {
365 qWarning("QSqlQuery::exec: database not open");
366 return false;
367 }
368 if (query.isEmpty()) {
369 qWarning("QSqlQuery::exec: empty query");
370 return false;
371 }
372#ifdef QT_DEBUG_SQL
373 qDebug("\n QSqlQuery: %s", query.toLocal8Bit().constData());
374#endif
375 return d->sqlResult->reset(query);
376}
377
378/*!
379 Returns the value of field \a index in the current record.
380
381 The fields are numbered from left to right using the text of the
382 \c SELECT statement, e.g. in
383
384 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_sql_kernel_qsqlquery.cpp 0
385
386 field 0 is \c forename and field 1 is \c
387 surname. Using \c{SELECT *} is not recommended because the order
388 of the fields in the query is undefined.
389
390 An invalid QVariant is returned if field \a index does not
391 exist, if the query is inactive, or if the query is positioned on
392 an invalid record.
393
394 \sa previous() next() first() last() seek() isActive() isValid()
395*/
396
397QVariant QSqlQuery::value(int index) const
398{
399 if (isActive() && isValid() && (index > QSql::BeforeFirstRow))
400 return d->sqlResult->data(index);
401 qWarning("QSqlQuery::value: not positioned on a valid record");
402 return QVariant();
403}
404
405/*!
406 Returns the current internal position of the query. The first
407 record is at position zero. If the position is invalid, the
408 function returns QSql::BeforeFirstRow or
409 QSql::AfterLastRow, which are special negative values.
410
411 \sa previous() next() first() last() seek() isActive() isValid()
412*/
413
414int QSqlQuery::at() const
415{
416 return d->sqlResult->at();
417}
418
419/*!
420 Returns the text of the current query being used, or an empty
421 string if there is no current query text.
422
423 \sa executedQuery()
424*/
425
426QString QSqlQuery::lastQuery() const
427{
428 return d->sqlResult->lastQuery();
429}
430
431/*!
432 Returns the database driver associated with the query.
433*/
434
435const QSqlDriver *QSqlQuery::driver() const
436{
437 return d->sqlResult->driver();
438}
439
440/*!
441 Returns the result associated with the query.
442*/
443
444const QSqlResult* QSqlQuery::result() const
445{
446 return d->sqlResult;
447}
448
449/*!
450 Retrieves the record at position \a index, if available, and
451 positions the query on the retrieved record. The first record is at
452 position 0. Note that the query must be in an \l{isActive()}
453 {active} state and isSelect() must return true before calling this
454 function.
455
456 If \a relative is false (the default), the following rules apply:
457
458 \list
459
460 \o If \a index is negative, the result is positioned before the
461 first record and false is returned.
462
463 \o Otherwise, an attempt is made to move to the record at position
464 \a index. If the record at position \a index could not be retrieved,
465 the result is positioned after the last record and false is
466 returned. If the record is successfully retrieved, true is returned.
467
468 \endlist
469
470 If \a relative is true, the following rules apply:
471
472 \list
473
474 \o If the result is currently positioned before the first record or
475 on the first record, and \a index is negative, there is no change,
476 and false is returned.
477
478 \o If the result is currently located after the last record, and \a
479 index is positive, there is no change, and false is returned.
480
481 \o If the result is currently located somewhere in the middle, and
482 the relative offset \a index moves the result below zero, the result
483 is positioned before the first record and false is returned.
484
485 \o Otherwise, an attempt is made to move to the record \a index
486 records ahead of the current record (or \a index records behind the
487 current record if \a index is negative). If the record at offset \a
488 index could not be retrieved, the result is positioned after the
489 last record if \a index >= 0, (or before the first record if \a
490 index is negative), and false is returned. If the record is
491 successfully retrieved, true is returned.
492
493 \endlist
494
495 \sa next() previous() first() last() at() isActive() isValid()
496*/
497bool QSqlQuery::seek(int index, bool relative)
498{
499 if (!isSelect() || !isActive())
500 return false;
501 int actualIdx;
502 if (!relative) { // arbitrary seek
503 if (index < 0) {
504 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
505 return false;
506 }
507 actualIdx = index;
508 } else {
509 switch (at()) { // relative seek
510 case QSql::BeforeFirstRow:
511 if (index > 0)
512 actualIdx = index;
513 else {
514 return false;
515 }
516 break;
517 case QSql::AfterLastRow:
518 if (index < 0) {
519 d->sqlResult->fetchLast();
520 actualIdx = at() + index;
521 } else {
522 return false;
523 }
524 break;
525 default:
526 if ((at() + index) < 0) {
527 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
528 return false;
529 }
530 actualIdx = at() + index;
531 break;
532 }
533 }
534 // let drivers optimize
535 if (isForwardOnly() && actualIdx < at()) {
536 qWarning("QSqlQuery::seek: cannot seek backwards in a forward only query");
537 return false;
538 }
539 if (actualIdx == (at() + 1) && at() != QSql::BeforeFirstRow) {
540 if (!d->sqlResult->fetchNext()) {
541 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::AfterLastRow);
542 return false;
543 }
544 return true;
545 }
546 if (actualIdx == (at() - 1)) {
547 if (!d->sqlResult->fetchPrevious()) {
548 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
549 return false;
550 }
551 return true;
552 }
553 if (!d->sqlResult->fetch(actualIdx)) {
554 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::AfterLastRow);
555 return false;
556 }
557 return true;
558}
559
560/*!
561
562 Retrieves the next record in the result, if available, and positions
563 the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in
564 the \l{isActive()}{active} state and isSelect() must return true
565 before calling this function or it will do nothing and return false.
566
567 The following rules apply:
568
569 \list
570
571 \o If the result is currently located before the first record,
572 e.g. immediately after a query is executed, an attempt is made to
573 retrieve the first record.
574
575 \o If the result is currently located after the last record, there
576 is no change and false is returned.
577
578 \o If the result is located somewhere in the middle, an attempt is
579 made to retrieve the next record.
580
581 \endlist
582
583 If the record could not be retrieved, the result is positioned after
584 the last record and false is returned. If the record is successfully
585 retrieved, true is returned.
586
587 \sa previous() first() last() seek() at() isActive() isValid()
588*/
589bool QSqlQuery::next()
590{
591 if (!isSelect() || !isActive())
592 return false;
593 bool b = false;
594 switch (at()) {
595 case QSql::BeforeFirstRow:
596 b = d->sqlResult->fetchFirst();
597 return b;
598 case QSql::AfterLastRow:
599 return false;
600 default:
601 if (!d->sqlResult->fetchNext()) {
602 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::AfterLastRow);
603 return false;
604 }
605 return true;
606 }
607}
608
609/*!
610
611 Retrieves the previous record in the result, if available, and
612 positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result
613 must be in the \l{isActive()}{active} state and isSelect() must
614 return true before calling this function or it will do nothing and
615 return false.
616
617 The following rules apply:
618
619 \list
620
621 \o If the result is currently located before the first record, there
622 is no change and false is returned.
623
624 \o If the result is currently located after the last record, an
625 attempt is made to retrieve the last record.
626
627 \o If the result is somewhere in the middle, an attempt is made to
628 retrieve the previous record.
629
630 \endlist
631
632 If the record could not be retrieved, the result is positioned
633 before the first record and false is returned. If the record is
634 successfully retrieved, true is returned.
635
636 \sa next() first() last() seek() at() isActive() isValid()
637*/
638bool QSqlQuery::previous()
639{
640 if (!isSelect() || !isActive())
641 return false;
642 if (isForwardOnly()) {
643 qWarning("QSqlQuery::seek: cannot seek backwards in a forward only query");
644 return false;
645 }
646
647 bool b = false;
648 switch (at()) {
649 case QSql::BeforeFirstRow:
650 return false;
651 case QSql::AfterLastRow:
652 b = d->sqlResult->fetchLast();
653 return b;
654 default:
655 if (!d->sqlResult->fetchPrevious()) {
656 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
657 return false;
658 }
659 return true;
660 }
661}
662
663/*!
664 Retrieves the first record in the result, if available, and
665 positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result
666 must be in the \l{isActive()}{active} state and isSelect() must
667 return true before calling this function or it will do nothing and
668 return false. Returns true if successful. If unsuccessful the query
669 position is set to an invalid position and false is returned.
670
671 \sa next() previous() last() seek() at() isActive() isValid()
672 */
673bool QSqlQuery::first()
674{
675 if (!isSelect() || !isActive())
676 return false;
677 if (isForwardOnly() && at() > QSql::BeforeFirstRow) {
678 qWarning("QSqlQuery::seek: cannot seek backwards in a forward only query");
679 return false;
680 }
681 bool b = false;
682 b = d->sqlResult->fetchFirst();
683 return b;
684}
685
686/*!
687
688 Retrieves the last record in the result, if available, and positions
689 the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in
690 the \l{isActive()}{active} state and isSelect() must return true
691 before calling this function or it will do nothing and return false.
692 Returns true if successful. If unsuccessful the query position is
693 set to an invalid position and false is returned.
694
695 \sa next() previous() first() seek() at() isActive() isValid()
696*/
697
698bool QSqlQuery::last()
699{
700 if (!isSelect() || !isActive())
701 return false;
702 bool b = false;
703 b = d->sqlResult->fetchLast();
704 return b;
705}
706
707/*!
708 Returns the size of the result (number of rows returned), or -1 if
709 the size cannot be determined or if the database does not support
710 reporting information about query sizes. Note that for non-\c SELECT
711 statements (isSelect() returns false), size() will return -1. If the
712 query is not active (isActive() returns false), -1 is returned.
713
714 To determine the number of rows affected by a non-\c SELECT
715 statement, use numRowsAffected().
716
717 \sa isActive() numRowsAffected() QSqlDriver::hasFeature()
718*/
719int QSqlQuery::size() const
720{
721 if (isActive() && d->sqlResult->driver()->hasFeature(QSqlDriver::QuerySize))
722 return d->sqlResult->size();
723 return -1;
724}
725
726/*!
727 Returns the number of rows affected by the result's SQL statement,
728 or -1 if it cannot be determined. Note that for \c SELECT
729 statements, the value is undefined; use size() instead. If the query
730 is not \l{isActive()}{active}, -1 is returned.
731
732 \sa size() QSqlDriver::hasFeature()
733*/
734
735int QSqlQuery::numRowsAffected() const
736{
737 if (isActive())
738 return d->sqlResult->numRowsAffected();
739 return -1;
740}
741
742/*!
743 Returns error information about the last error (if any) that
744 occurred with this query.
745
746 \sa QSqlError, QSqlDatabase::lastError()
747*/
748
749QSqlError QSqlQuery::lastError() const
750{
751 return d->sqlResult->lastError();
752}
753
754/*!
755 Returns true if the query is currently positioned on a valid
756 record; otherwise returns false.
757*/
758
759bool QSqlQuery::isValid() const
760{
761 return d->sqlResult->isValid();
762}
763
764/*!
765
766 Returns true if the query is \e{active}. An active QSqlQuery is one
767 that has been \l{QSqlQuery::exec()} {exec()'d} successfully but not
768 yet finished with. When you are finished with an active query, you
769 can make make the query inactive by calling finish() or clear(), or
770 you can delete the QSqlQuery instance.
771
772 \note Of particular interest is an active query that is a \c{SELECT}
773 statement. For some databases that support transactions, an active
774 query that is a \c{SELECT} statement can cause a \l{QSqlDatabase::}
775 {commit()} or a \l{QSqlDatabase::} {rollback()} to fail, so before
776 committing or rolling back, you should make your active \c{SELECT}
777 statement query inactive using one of the ways listed above.
778
779 \sa isSelect()
780 */
781bool QSqlQuery::isActive() const
782{
783 return d->sqlResult->isActive();
784}
785
786/*!
787 Returns true if the current query is a \c SELECT statement;
788 otherwise returns false.
789*/
790
791bool QSqlQuery::isSelect() const
792{
793 return d->sqlResult->isSelect();
794}
795
796/*!
797 Returns true if you can only scroll forward through a result set;
798 otherwise returns false.
799
800 \sa setForwardOnly(), next()
801*/
802bool QSqlQuery::isForwardOnly() const
803{
804 return d->sqlResult->isForwardOnly();
805}
806
807/*!
808 Sets forward only mode to \a forward. If \a forward is true, only
809 next() and seek() with positive values, are allowed for navigating
810 the results.
811
812 Forward only mode can be (depending on the driver) more memory
813 efficient since results do not need to be cached. It will also
814 improve performance on some databases. For this to be true, you must
815 call \c setForwardOnly() before the query is prepared or executed.
816 Note that the constructor that takes a query and a database may
817 execute the query.
818
819 Forward only mode is off by default.
820
821 Setting forward only to false is a suggestion to the database engine,
822 which has the final say on whether a result set is forward only or
823 scrollable. isForwardOnly() will always return the correct status of
824 the result set.
825
826 \note Calling setForwardOnly after execution of the query will result
827 in unexpected results at best, and crashes at worst.
828
829 \sa isForwardOnly(), next(), seek(), QSqlResult::setForwardOnly()
830*/
831void QSqlQuery::setForwardOnly(bool forward)
832{
833 d->sqlResult->setForwardOnly(forward);
834}
835
836/*!
837 Returns a QSqlRecord containing the field information for the
838 current query. If the query points to a valid row (isValid() returns
839 true), the record is populated with the row's values. An empty
840 record is returned when there is no active query (isActive() returns
841 false).
842
843 To retrieve values from a query, value() should be used since
844 its index-based lookup is faster.
845
846 In the following example, a \c{SELECT * FROM} query is executed.
847 Since the order of the columns is not defined, QSqlRecord::indexOf()
848 is used to obtain the index of a column.
849
850 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_sql_kernel_qsqlquery.cpp 1
851
852 \sa value()
853*/
854QSqlRecord QSqlQuery::record() const
855{
856 QSqlRecord rec = d->sqlResult->record();
857
858 if (isValid()) {
859 for (int i = 0; i < rec.count(); ++i)
860 rec.setValue(i, value(i));
861 }
862 return rec;
863}
864
865/*!
866 Clears the result set and releases any resources held by the
867 query. Sets the query state to inactive. You should rarely if ever
868 need to call this function.
869*/
870void QSqlQuery::clear()
871{
872 *this = QSqlQuery(driver()->createResult());
873}
874
875/*!
876 Prepares the SQL query \a query for execution. Returns true if the
877 query is prepared successfully; otherwise returns false.
878
879 The query may contain placeholders for binding values. Both Oracle
880 style colon-name (e.g., \c{:surname}), and ODBC style (\c{?})
881 placeholders are supported; but they cannot be mixed in the same
882 query. See the \l{QSqlQuery examples}{Detailed Description} for
883 examples.
884
885 Portability note: Some databases choose to delay preparing a query
886 until it is executed the first time. In this case, preparing a
887 syntactically wrong query succeeds, but every consecutive exec()
888 will fail.
889
890 Example:
891
892 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 9
893
894 \sa exec(), bindValue(), addBindValue()
895*/
896bool QSqlQuery::prepare(const QString& query)
897{
898 if (d->ref != 1) {
899 bool fo = isForwardOnly();
900 *this = QSqlQuery(driver()->createResult());
901 setForwardOnly(fo);
902 d->sqlResult->setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(d->sqlResult->numericalPrecisionPolicy());
903 } else {
904 d->sqlResult->setActive(false);
905 d->sqlResult->setLastError(QSqlError());
906 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
907 d->sqlResult->setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(d->sqlResult->numericalPrecisionPolicy());
908 }
909 if (!driver()) {
910 qWarning("QSqlQuery::prepare: no driver");
911 return false;
912 }
913 if (!driver()->isOpen() || driver()->isOpenError()) {
914 qWarning("QSqlQuery::prepare: database not open");
915 return false;
916 }
917 if (query.isEmpty()) {
918 qWarning("QSqlQuery::prepare: empty query");
919 return false;
920 }
921#ifdef QT_DEBUG_SQL
922 qDebug("\n QSqlQuery::prepare: %s", query.toLocal8Bit().constData());
923#endif
924 return d->sqlResult->savePrepare(query);
925}
926
927/*!
928 Executes a previously prepared SQL query. Returns true if the query
929 executed successfully; otherwise returns false.
930
931 Note that the last error for this query is reset when exec() is
932 called.
933
934 \sa prepare() bindValue() addBindValue() boundValue() boundValues()
935*/
936bool QSqlQuery::exec()
937{
938 d->sqlResult->resetBindCount();
939
940 if (d->sqlResult->lastError().isValid())
941 d->sqlResult->setLastError(QSqlError());
942
943 return d->sqlResult->exec();
944}
945
946/*! \enum QSqlQuery::BatchExecutionMode
947
948 \value ValuesAsRows - Updates multiple rows. Treats every entry in a QVariantList as a value for updating the next row.
949 \value ValuesAsColumns - Updates a single row. Treats every entry in a QVariantList as a single value of an array type.
950*/
951
952/*!
953 \since 4.2
954
955 Executes a previously prepared SQL query in a batch. All the bound
956 parameters have to be lists of variants. If the database doesn't
957 support batch executions, the driver will simulate it using
958 conventional exec() calls.
959
960 Returns true if the query is executed successfully; otherwise
961 returns false.
962
963 Example:
964
965 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_sql_kernel_qsqlquery.cpp 2
966
967 The example above inserts four new rows into \c myTable:
968
969 \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_sql_kernel_qsqlquery.cpp 3
970
971 To bind NULL values, a null QVariant of the relevant type has to be
972 added to the bound QVariantList; for example, \c
973 {QVariant(QVariant::String)} should be used if you are using
974 strings.
975
976 \note Every bound QVariantList must contain the same amount of
977 variants.
978
979 \note The type of the QVariants in a list must not change. For
980 example, you cannot mix integer and string variants within a
981 QVariantList.
982
983 The \a mode parameter indicates how the bound QVariantList will be
984 interpreted. If \a mode is \c ValuesAsRows, every variant within
985 the QVariantList will be interpreted as a value for a new row. \c
986 ValuesAsColumns is a special case for the Oracle driver. In this
987 mode, every entry within a QVariantList will be interpreted as
988 array-value for an IN or OUT value within a stored procedure. Note
989 that this will only work if the IN or OUT value is a table-type
990 consisting of only one column of a basic type, for example \c{TYPE
991 myType IS TABLE OF VARCHAR(64) INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;}
992
993 \sa prepare(), bindValue(), addBindValue()
994*/
995bool QSqlQuery::execBatch(BatchExecutionMode mode)
996{
997 return d->sqlResult->execBatch(mode == ValuesAsColumns);
998}
999
1000/*!
1001 Set the placeholder \a placeholder to be bound to value \a val in
1002 the prepared statement. Note that the placeholder mark (e.g \c{:})
1003 must be included when specifying the placeholder name. If \a
1004 paramType is QSql::Out or QSql::InOut, the placeholder will be
1005 overwritten with data from the database after the exec() call.
1006 In this case, sufficient space must be pre-allocated to store
1007 the result into.
1008
1009 To bind a NULL value, use a null QVariant; for example, use
1010 \c {QVariant(QVariant::String)} if you are binding a string.
1011
1012 Values cannot be bound to multiple locations in the query, eg:
1013 \code
1014 INSERT INTO testtable (id, name, samename) VALUES (:id, :name, :name)
1015 \endcode
1016 Binding to name will bind to the first :name, but not the second.
1017
1018 \sa addBindValue(), prepare(), exec(), boundValue() boundValues()
1019*/
1020void QSqlQuery::bindValue(const QString& placeholder, const QVariant& val,
1021 QSql::ParamType paramType
1022)
1023{
1024 d->sqlResult->bindValue(placeholder, val, paramType);
1025}
1026
1027/*!
1028 Set the placeholder in position \a pos to be bound to value \a val
1029 in the prepared statement. Field numbering starts at 0. If \a
1030 paramType is QSql::Out or QSql::InOut, the placeholder will be
1031 overwritten with data from the database after the exec() call.
1032*/
1033void QSqlQuery::bindValue(int pos, const QVariant& val, QSql::ParamType paramType)
1034{
1035 d->sqlResult->bindValue(pos, val, paramType);
1036}
1037
1038/*!
1039 Adds the value \a val to the list of values when using positional
1040 value binding. The order of the addBindValue() calls determines
1041 which placeholder a value will be bound to in the prepared query.
1042 If \a paramType is QSql::Out or QSql::InOut, the placeholder will be
1043 overwritten with data from the database after the exec() call.
1044
1045 To bind a NULL value, use a null QVariant; for example, use \c
1046 {QVariant(QVariant::String)} if you are binding a string.
1047
1048 \sa bindValue(), prepare(), exec(), boundValue() boundValues()
1049*/
1050void QSqlQuery::addBindValue(const QVariant& val, QSql::ParamType paramType)
1051{
1052 d->sqlResult->addBindValue(val, paramType);
1053}
1054
1055/*!
1056 Returns the value for the \a placeholder.
1057
1058 \sa boundValues() bindValue() addBindValue()
1059*/
1060QVariant QSqlQuery::boundValue(const QString& placeholder) const
1061{
1062 return d->sqlResult->boundValue(placeholder);
1063}
1064
1065/*!
1066 Returns the value for the placeholder at position \a pos.
1067*/
1068QVariant QSqlQuery::boundValue(int pos) const
1069{
1070 return d->sqlResult->boundValue(pos);
1071}
1072
1073/*!
1074 Returns a map of the bound values.
1075
1076 With named binding, the bound values can be examined in the
1077 following ways:
1078
1079 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 14
1080
1081 With positional binding, the code becomes:
1082
1083 \snippet doc/src/snippets/sqldatabase/sqldatabase.cpp 15
1084
1085 \sa boundValue() bindValue() addBindValue()
1086*/
1087QMap<QString,QVariant> QSqlQuery::boundValues() const
1088{
1089 QMap<QString,QVariant> map;
1090
1091 const QVector<QVariant> values(d->sqlResult->boundValues());
1092 for (int i = 0; i < values.count(); ++i)
1093 map[d->sqlResult->boundValueName(i)] = values.at(i);
1094 return map;
1095}
1096
1097/*!
1098 Returns the last query that was successfully executed.
1099
1100 In most cases this function returns the same string as lastQuery().
1101 If a prepared query with placeholders is executed on a DBMS that
1102 does not support it, the preparation of this query is emulated. The
1103 placeholders in the original query are replaced with their bound
1104 values to form a new query. This function returns the modified
1105 query. It is mostly useful for debugging purposes.
1106
1107 \sa lastQuery()
1108*/
1109QString QSqlQuery::executedQuery() const
1110{
1111 return d->sqlResult->executedQuery();
1112}
1113
1114/*!
1115 \fn bool QSqlQuery::prev()
1116
1117 Use previous() instead.
1118*/
1119
1120/*!
1121 Returns the object ID of the most recent inserted row if the
1122 database supports it. An invalid QVariant will be returned if the
1123 query did not insert any value or if the database does not report
1124 the id back. If more than one row was touched by the insert, the
1125 behavior is undefined.
1126
1127 For MySQL databases the row's auto-increment field will be returned.
1128
1129 \note For this function to work in PSQL, the table table must
1130 contain OIDs, which may not have been created by default. Check the
1131 \c default_with_oids configuration variable to be sure.
1132
1133 \sa QSqlDriver::hasFeature()
1134*/
1135QVariant QSqlQuery::lastInsertId() const
1136{
1137 return d->sqlResult->lastInsertId();
1138}
1139
1140/*!
1141
1142 Instruct the database driver to return numerical values with a
1143 precision specified by \a precisionPolicy.
1144
1145 The Oracle driver, for example, can retrieve numerical values as
1146 strings to prevent the loss of precision. If high precision doesn't
1147 matter, use this method to increase execution speed by bypassing
1148 string conversions.
1149
1150 Note: Drivers that don't support fetching numerical values with low
1151 precision will ignore the precision policy. You can use
1152 QSqlDriver::hasFeature() to find out whether a driver supports this
1153 feature.
1154
1155 Note: Setting the precision policy doesn't affect the currently
1156 active query. Call \l{exec()}{exec(QString)} or prepare() in order
1157 to activate the policy.
1158
1159 \sa QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy, numericalPrecisionPolicy()
1160*/
1161void QSqlQuery::setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy precisionPolicy)
1162{
1163 d->sqlResult->setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(precisionPolicy);
1164}
1165
1166/*!
1167 Returns the current precision policy.
1168
1169 \sa QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy, setNumericalPrecisionPolicy()
1170*/
1171QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy QSqlQuery::numericalPrecisionPolicy() const
1172{
1173 return d->sqlResult->numericalPrecisionPolicy();
1174}
1175
1176/*!
1177 \since 4.3.2
1178
1179 Instruct the database driver that no more data will be fetched from
1180 this query until it is re-executed. There is normally no need to
1181 call this function, but it may be helpful in order to free resources
1182 such as locks or cursors if you intend to re-use the query at a
1183 later time.
1184
1185 Sets the query to inactive. Bound values retain their values.
1186
1187 \sa prepare() exec() isActive()
1188*/
1189void QSqlQuery::finish()
1190{
1191 if (isActive()) {
1192 d->sqlResult->setLastError(QSqlError());
1193 d->sqlResult->setAt(QSql::BeforeFirstRow);
1194 d->sqlResult->detachFromResultSet();
1195 d->sqlResult->setActive(false);
1196 }
1197}
1198
1199/*!
1200 \since 4.4
1201
1202 Discards the current result set and navigates to the next if available.
1203
1204 Some databases are capable of returning multiple result sets for
1205 stored procedures or SQL batches (a query strings that contains
1206 multiple statements). If multiple result sets are available after
1207 executing a query this function can be used to navigate to the next
1208 result set(s).
1209
1210 If a new result set is available this function will return true.
1211 The query will be repositioned on an \e invalid record in the new
1212 result set and must be navigated to a valid record before data
1213 values can be retrieved. If a new result set isn't available the
1214 function returns false and the query is set to inactive. In any
1215 case the old result set will be discarded.
1216
1217 When one of the statements is a non-select statement a count of
1218 affected rows may be available instead of a result set.
1219
1220 Note that some databases, i.e. Microsoft SQL Server, requires
1221 non-scrollable cursors when working with multiple result sets. Some
1222 databases may execute all statements at once while others may delay
1223 the execution until the result set is actually accessed, and some
1224 databases may have restrictions on which statements are allowed to
1225 be used in a SQL batch.
1226
1227 \sa QSqlDriver::hasFeature() setForwardOnly() next() isSelect() numRowsAffected() isActive() lastError()
1228*/
1229bool QSqlQuery::nextResult()
1230{
1231 if (isActive())
1232 return d->sqlResult->nextResult();
1233 return false;
1234}
1235
1236QT_END_NAMESPACE
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