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%SQL.Statement

class %SQL.Statement extends %Library.RegisteredObject [ Final ]

%SQL.Statement implements an interface to prepare and execute dynamic SQL statements.

Dynamic SQL

Dynamic SQL

Overview

The %SQL.Statement class implements an interface for managing dynamic SQL statements. The interface consists of %Prepare, %Execute, %ExecDirect methods and the %Dialect, %Metadata, %SchemaPath, and %Selectmode properties.

To prepare and execute a dynamic SQL statement, use an instance of %SQL.Statement, such as:

	set tStatement = ##class(%SQL.Statement).%New(2,"Sample")
	

%New() accepts three optional parameters that allow you to specify the value of the %SelectMode, %SchemaPath and %Dialect properties. You can explicitly set these properties at any time; the value of each affects subsequent statement preparation and execution.

Next, prepare the dynamic statement by invoking the %Prepare() method. %Prepare() accepts an SQL statement in the form of a simple value or in an array passed by reference. For an array, the value of the base node is the number of lines in the array and each node’s subscript specifies its line number; the value of each subnode is a portion of the SQL statement. An example of preparing an array is:

	    set tSQL = 3
	    set tSQL(1) = "select %ID as id, Name, DOB, Home_State"
	    set tSQL(2) = "from Person where Age > 80"
	    set tSQL(3) = "order by 2"
	    set tStatus = tStatement.%Prepare(.tSQL)
	

%Prepare() returns a status value that indicates success or failure. If the statement is successfully prepared, the next step is to execute it by invoking the %Execute() method.

	   set tResult = tStatement.%Execute()
	

The %Execute() method returns an instance of the %SQL.StatementResult class. Refer to that class for more information on the result object interface. All result objects support a %Display() method that is useful for testing.

The following example demonstrates the use of the %Prepare(), %Execute, and %Display() methods:

	   SAMPLES>s tStatus = tStatement.%Prepare(.tSQL)
	
	   SAMPLES>w tStatus
	   1
	   SAMPLES>s tResult = tStatement.%Execute()
	
	   SAMPLES>d tResult.%Display()
	   id    Name                  DOB           Home_State
	   99    Finn,George V.        03/23/1928    MA
	   140   Hanson,James K.       04/02/1928    VT
	   14    Klein,Michael X.      06/17/1923    WV
	   159   Klingman,Brenda U.    07/09/1924    WA
	   49    Paladino,Rhonda H.    06/29/1923    AR
	   63    Vonnegut,Nellie K.    03/24/1926    HI
	   146   Zimmerman,Martin K.   05/25/1924    OH
	
	7 Rows(s) Affected
	

Once an SQL statement has been successfully prepared, its %Metadata property is available. %Metadata is an instance of the %SQL.StatementMetadata class. %SQL.Metadata implements a %Display() method that is useful for examining the metadata interactively, such as:

	    SAMPLES>do tStatement.%Metadata.%Display()
	    Columns (property 'columns'):
	    Column Name  Type Prec Scale Null
	    -----------  ---- ---- ----- ----
	    id              4   10     0    0 id           Person       Sample       0            Y  N  N  Y0    1
	    Name           12   50     0    0 Name         Person       Sample       0            N  N  N  N0    0
	    DOB             9   10     0    1 DOB          Person       Sample       0            N  N  N  N0    0
	    Home_State     12    2     0    1 Home_State   Person       Sample       0            N  N  N  N0    0
	
	    Statement Parameters (property 'parameters'):
	
	    Nbr. Type precision scale nullable colName      columntype
	    ---- ---- --------- ----- -------- ------------ ----------
	       1    4     10        0     1    %parm(1)        1
	       2   12      2        0     1    %parm(2)        1
	
	    Formal Parameters (property 'formalParameters'):
	
	    Nbr. Type precision scale nullable colName      columntype
	    ---- ---- --------- ----- -------- ------------ ----------
	       2    4     10        0     1    %parm(1)        1
	       2   12      2        0     1    %parm(2)        1
	
	    Objects:
	
	    Column Name    Extent    ExportCall
	    -----------    ------    ----------
	    %%ID        Sample.Person    %QuickLoad^Sample.Person.T1(%rowid,%nolock,0,0,1)
	SAMPLES>
	

You can execute a successfully prepared statement repeatedly. This is most useful when the statement includes parameters, where a parameter is defined in the SQL statement source by a question mark (“?”). A statement may include an arbitrary number of parameters. (There are system limitations that limit the number of dynamic parameters; this limit varies but up to 200 should work with most Caché versions.)

The %Execute() method accepts parameter values in the order in which they appear in the source statement. For example:

	   SAMPLES>set tSQL=3
	
	   SAMPLES>set tSQL(1)="select %ID as id,Name,DOB,Home_State"
	
	   SAMPLES>set tSQL(2)="from Person where Age > ? and Home_State = ?"
	
	   SAMPLES>set tSQL(3)="order by 2"
	
	   SAMPLES>set tStatus = tStatement.%Prepare(.tSQL)
	
	   SAMPLES>set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(80,"VT")
	
	   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
	   id     Name                DOB           Home_State
	   140    Hanson,James K.     04/02/1928    VT
	
	   1 Rows(s) Affected
	   SAMPLES>set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(50,"VT")
	
	   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
	   id     Name                DOB           Home_State
	   3      Eagleman,Emilio N.  09/01/1946    VT
	   140    Hanson,James K.     04/02/1928    VT
	   167    Hertz,Keith O.      01/01/1952    VT
	
	   3 Rows(s) Affected
	   SAMPLES>
	   

You can also use the same statement object for many different statements by simply invoking %Prepare() with the new statement. This is because %Prepare() initializes the statement’s execution plan and metadata. Also, an arbitrary number of statement objects can coexist in the same process.

You can also prepare and execute dynamic SQL statements by calling %ExecDirect(). This method prepares the statement and, if it prepares the statement successfully, executes it with the supplied argument values. An optional by-reference parameter returns an instance of %SQL.Statement; this instance contains the currently prepared statement. You can then execute that statement instance just as if it had been instantiated by invoking %New() followed by a call to %Prepare(). You can also use that statement instance to prepare other dynamic statements just as if it were instantiated by %New().

If an error occurs during either statement preparation or execution, then the error is described in the result object properties of %SQLCODE and %Message. Always check the result property %SQLCODE for an error following %Execute() and %ExecDirect().

	   SAMPLES>set tResult = ##class(%SQL.Statement).%ExecDirect(.tStatement,"select name,age from Sample.Person where age > ? and home_state = ?",50,"VT")
	
	   SAMPLES>write tResult.%SQLCODE
	   0
	   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
	   Name                  Age
	   Eagleman,Emilio N.    62
	   Hanson,James K.       81
	   Hertz,Keith O.        57
	
	   3 Rows(s) Affected
	
	   SAMPLES>write tStatement
	
	   1@%SQL.Statement
	
	   SAMPLES>set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(40,"AK")
	
	   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
	   Name                  Age
	   Finn,Quentin O.       66
	
	   1 Rows(s) Affected
	
	   SAMPLES>
	

Property Inventory

Method Inventory

Properties

property %Dialect as %String;
%Dialect defines the SQL dialect used to prepare dynamic SQL statements. Valid values are CACHE, MSSQLSERVER, MSSQL, and SYBASE. The default is CACHE. Support for MSSQLSERVER and SYBASE dialects is limited to a subset of the TSQL grammar supported by the Cache TSQL language mode.
Property methods: %DialectDisplayToLogical(), %DialectGet(), %DialectIsValid(), %DialectLogicalToDisplay(), %DialectLogicalToOdbc(), %DialectNormalize()
property %Metadata as %SQL.StatementMetadata;
%Metadata is the statement descriptor. It is an instance of %SQL.StatementMetadata.
Property methods: %MetadataGet(), %MetadataGetSwizzled(), %MetadataIsValid(), %MetadataNewObject(), %MetadataSet()
property %ObjectSelectMode as %Library.Boolean [ InitialExpression = 0 ];
%ObjectSelectMode allows the user to specify how columns whose type class is a swizzleable class will be defined in the result set class generated from a SELECT statement. If %ObjectSelectMode is false (the default) then the property corresponding to the swizzleable column will be defined in result sets as a simple literal type corresponding to the SQL table's ROWID type. If %ObjectSelectMode is true then the property will be defined with the columns declared type. That means that accessing the result set property will trigger swizzling.
Property methods: %ObjectSelectModeDisplayToLogical(), %ObjectSelectModeGet(), %ObjectSelectModeIsValid(), %ObjectSelectModeLogicalToDisplay(), %ObjectSelectModeNormalize(), %ObjectSelectModeSet()
property %SchemaPath as %String);

%SchemaPath provides a list of schema names for resolving unqualified names during statement preparation. By default, its value is null; to set its value, use a comma-delimited list of schema names:

Set %SQL.Statement.%SchemaPath = "My_Schema,Your_Schema,DEFAULT_SCHEMA"

This is equivalent to the macro-preprocessor directive for embedded SQL:

#sqlcompile PATH = My_Schema,Your_Schema,DEFAULT_SCHEMA

PATH is a search path: if the unqualified name is found in a schema in the PATH, then this schema is used to qualify the name and no further searching is performed.

You can set the value of %SchemaPath at any time, but it is only used by the %Prepare method.

%SchemaPath can contain special schema name tokens that are resolved by the SQL compiler. Special tokens are:

  • CURRENT_SCHEMA is the current default schema. If the %SQL.Statement call is defined in a class method, CURRENT_SCHEMA is the schema mapped to the current class package. If the statement is defined in a .MAC routine, CURRENT_SCHEMA is the configuration default schema.
  • CURRENT_PATH is the currently defined schema search path. You can use this to add an additional schema to the search path while retaining the current search path.
  • DEFAULT_SCHEMA specifies the use of the system-defined default schema.

You can also set %SchemaPath to a PATH value that is constructed from a given class definition; simply set %SchemaPath to ##class(%SQL.Statement).%ClassPath(classname).

Property methods: %SchemaPathDisplayToLogical(), %SchemaPathGet(), %SchemaPathIsValid(), %SchemaPathLogicalToDisplay(), %SchemaPathLogicalToOdbc(), %SchemaPathNormalize(), %SchemaPathSet()
property %SelectMode as %Library.String [ InitialExpression = $zu(115,5) ];
This property is set on instantiation to the current select mode as returned by $system.SQL.GetSelectMode(). It can be set directly by the user. It is used by the statement object to establish the SQL SELECTMODE value used by dynamic statements.
Possible values are:
  • 0 for LOGICAL mode.
  • 1 for ODBC mode.
  • 2 for DISPLAY mode.
Property methods: %SelectModeDisplayToLogical(), %SelectModeGet(), %SelectModeIsValid(), %SelectModeLogicalToDisplay(), %SelectModeLogicalToOdbc(), %SelectModeNormalize(), %SelectModeSet()

Methods

classmethod %ClassPath(pClassName As %Library.String) as %Library.String
%ClassPath returns the PATH string for a given class name. The PATH string is essentially the same as a default schema that is determined from the compiled class. If no extra IMPORT or inheritance rules are present, the default schema within a class context is determined from the class's package. IMPORT and inheritance add additional items to the PATH.
method %DialectSet(pValue As %String = "") as %Status
method %Display()
%Display() - display the details of the currently prepared statement.
classmethod %ExecDirect(ByRef pHStatement As %SQL.Statement = $$$NULLOREF, ByRef pStatementText As %CacheString = "", %parm...) as %SQL.StatementResult
Prepare and execute an SQL statement. If no statement handle is allocated in pHStatement then a new statement handle will be allocated and returned by reference. That behavior is different from SQLPrepare. Formal Parameters: pHStatement - OPTIONAL (byref) the statement handle. If an actual arg is passed by reference then it will be populated with an oref to a new statement object; pStatementText - (byref) SQL statement text. This can be an array of SQL statement lines with the base node set to the number of lines or - it can be a single string; %parm... - variable number of arguments that represent the values to be bound to parameters contained in pStatementText. only parameters with input direction (input or input-output) are actually used but a position for each '?' contained in pStatementText needs to be represented. In the statement: ? = call Sample.PersonSets(?,?) the %parms... list must contain an empty position for the return value. An example of a call to %ExecDirect for such a statement is: set tResult = ##class(%SQL.Statement).%ExecDirect(.tStatement,"?=call Sample.PersonSets(?,?)",,"A","NY") In this example, the return value is allocated a position in the %parms list (the ,,), "A" is bound to the first argument passed to Sample.PersonSets and "NY" is bound to the second. This method returns a %SQL.StatementResult object.
method %Execute(%parm...) as %SQL.StatementResult

Execute the current statement and return the result. The result of the execute is always the return value. Success/Failure information is reported in the result object as %SQLCODE, %Message, %ROWCOUNT, and/or %ROWID.

The %Execute() method accepts parameter values in the order in which they appear in the source statement. For example:

   SAMPLES>set tSQL=3

   SAMPLES>set tSQL(1)="select %ID as id,Name,DOB,Home_State"

   SAMPLES>set tSQL(2)="from Person where Age > ? and Home_State = ?"

   SAMPLES>set tSQL(3)="order by 2"

   SAMPLES>set tStatus = tStatement.%Prepare(.tSQL)

   SAMPLES>set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(80,"VT")

   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
   id     Name                DOB           Home_State
   140    Hanson,James K.     04/02/1928    VT

   1 Rows(s) Affected
   SAMPLES>set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(50,"VT")

   SAMPLES>do tResult.%Display()
   id     Name                DOB           Home_State
   3      Eagleman,Emilio N.  09/01/1946    VT
   140    Hanson,James K.     04/02/1928    VT
   167    Hertz,Keith O.      01/01/1952    VT

   3 Rows(s) Affected
   SAMPLES>
   

You can also use the same statement object for many different statements by simply invoking %Prepare() with the new statement. This is because %Prepare() initializes the statement’s execution plan and metadata. Also, an arbitrary number of statement objects can coexist in the same process.

Parameters
%parm... Input

Variable number of arguments that represent the values to be bound to parameters contained in pStatementText. only parameters with input direction (input or input-output) are actually used but the position of each '?' contained in the source statement must be maintained.

An example of calling %Execute for a prepared statement "? = call Sample.PersonSets(?,?)" is:

	set tStatement = ##class(%SQL.Statement).%New()
	set tStatus = tStatement.%Prepare("?=call Sample.PersonSets(?,?)")
	set tResult = tStatement.%Execute(,"A","NY")
				

In this example, the return value is allocated a position in the %parms list (the ','), "A" is bound to the first argument passed to Sample.PersonSets and "NY" is bound to the second.


Return value: This method returns a %SQL.StatementResult object.

method %GetImplementationDetails(Output pClassName As %Library.String(MAXLEN=300), Output pStatementText As %Library.String(MAXLEN=""), Output pArguments As %Library.List, Output pStatementType As %Integer) as %Integer
method %Prepare(ByRef pStatementText As %CacheString = "") as %Status
Prepare an SQL statement. Pass the statement as a simple string or an array of lines with the root containing the number of lines. A comma delimited list of packages can also be passed. This list of packages will be used to qualify any unqualified names referenced in the statement source. This method returns a %Status value.
method %PrepareClassQuery(pClassName As %String = "", pQueryName As %String = "") as %Library.Status
%PrepareClassQuery will generate the appropriate CALL statement for invoking a class query. That generated statement is then %Prepare'd and, if successful, the statement can be executed by invoking %Execute. All parameters defined in the formal specification of the query are assigned place holder '?' in the generated CALL statement. Actual values for those parameters can be passed in the %Execute() call. %Metadata is available after a successful prepare. Because %PrepareClassQuery generates a CALL statement, the executed class query must have the SqlProc keyword set to True. Class queries defined with SqlProc = False cannot be called by %PrepareClassQuery.
method %PreparedStatementSet(pPS As %ObjectHandle) as %Status
method execute(%parm...) as %SQL.StatementResult
classmethod preparse(ByRef pStatementText, ByRef pStatementPreparsed, ByRef pStatementArgs) as %Integer

Inherited Members

Inherited Methods

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