Class: DBI::BaseStatement
- Defined in:
- lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb
Overview
StatementHandles are used to encapsulate the process of managing a statement (DDL or DML) and its parameters, sending it to the database, and gathering any results from the execution of that statement.
As with the other ‘Base` classes, the terms “DBD Required” and “DBD Optional” are defined in DBI::BaseDatabase.
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#raise_error ⇒ Object
Returns the value of attribute raise_error.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#[](attr) ⇒ Object
Get statement attributes.
-
#[]=(attr, value) ⇒ Object
Set statement attributes.
-
#bind_param(param, value, attribs) ⇒ Object
Bind a parameter to the statement.
-
#bind_params(*bindvars) ⇒ Object
Take a list of bind variables and bind them successively using bind_param.
-
#cancel ⇒ Object
Cancel any result cursors.
-
#column_info ⇒ Object
returns result-set column information as array of hashs, where each hash represents one column.
-
#execute ⇒ Object
Execute the statement with the known binds.
-
#fetch ⇒ Object
Fetch the next row in the result set.
-
#fetch_all ⇒ Object
Fetch all available rows.
-
#fetch_many(cnt) ⇒ Object
fetch x rows.
-
#fetch_scroll(direction, offset) ⇒ Object
fetch_scroll is provided with a direction and offset and works similar to how seek() is used on files.
-
#finish ⇒ Object
Close the statement and any result cursors.
-
#initialize(attr = nil) ⇒ BaseStatement
constructor
A new instance of BaseStatement.
Constructor Details
#initialize(attr = nil) ⇒ BaseStatement
Returns a new instance of BaseStatement.
14 15 16 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 14 def initialize(attr=nil) @attr = attr || {} end |
Instance Attribute Details
#raise_error ⇒ Object
Returns the value of attribute raise_error.
12 13 14 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 12 def raise_error @raise_error end |
Instance Method Details
#[](attr) ⇒ Object
Get statement attributes.
159 160 161 162 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 159 def [](attr) @attr ||= { } @attr[attr] end |
#[]=(attr, value) ⇒ Object
Set statement attributes. DBD Optional.
167 168 169 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 167 def []=(attr, value) raise NotSupportedError end |
#bind_param(param, value, attribs) ⇒ Object
Bind a parameter to the statement. DBD Required.
The parameter number is numeric and indexes starting at 1. This corresponds to the question marks (?) in the statement from the left-most part of the statement moving forward.
The value may be any ruby type. How these are handled is DBD-dependent, but the vast majority of DBDs will convert these to string inside the query.
29 30 31 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 29 def bind_param(param, value, attribs) raise NotImplementedError end |
#bind_params(*bindvars) ⇒ Object
Take a list of bind variables and bind them successively using bind_param.
74 75 76 77 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 74 def bind_params(*bindvars) bindvars.each_with_index {|val,i| bind_param(i+1, val, nil) } self end |
#cancel ⇒ Object
Cancel any result cursors. DBD Optional, but intentionally does not raise any exception as it’s used internally to maintain consistency.
83 84 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 83 def cancel end |
#column_info ⇒ Object
returns result-set column information as array of hashs, where each hash represents one column. See BaseDatabase#columns. DBD Required.
63 64 65 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 63 def column_info raise NotImplementedError end |
#execute ⇒ Object
Execute the statement with the known binds. DBD Required.
36 37 38 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 36 def execute raise NotImplementedError end |
#fetch ⇒ Object
Fetch the next row in the result set. DBD Required.
DBI::Row is responsible for formatting the data the DBD provides it.
54 55 56 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 54 def fetch raise NotImplementedError end |
#fetch_all ⇒ Object
Fetch all available rows. Result is Array of DBI::Row.
141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 141 def fetch_all rows = [] loop do row = fetch break if row.nil? rows << row.dup end if rows.empty? nil else rows end end |
#fetch_many(cnt) ⇒ Object
fetch x rows. The result is Array of DBI::Row.
123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 123 def fetch_many(cnt) rows = [] cnt.times do row = fetch break if row.nil? rows << row.dup end if rows.empty? nil else rows end end |
#fetch_scroll(direction, offset) ⇒ Object
fetch_scroll is provided with a direction and offset and works similar to how seek() is used on files.
The constants available for direction are as follows:
-
SQL_FETCH_NEXT: fetch the next result.
-
SQL_FETCH_LAST: fetch the last result, period.
-
SQL_FETCH_RELATIVE: fetch the result at the offset.
Other constants can be used, but if this method is not supplied by the driver, they will result in a raise of DBI::NotSupportedError.
100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 100 def fetch_scroll(direction, offset) case direction when SQL_FETCH_NEXT return fetch when SQL_FETCH_LAST last_row = nil while (row=fetch) != nil last_row = row end return last_row when SQL_FETCH_RELATIVE raise NotSupportedError if offset <= 0 row = nil offset.times { row = fetch; break if row.nil? } return row else raise NotSupportedError end end |
#finish ⇒ Object
Close the statement and any result cursors. DBD Required.
- Note
-
Most implementations will fail miserably if you forget to finish your statement handles.
45 46 47 |
# File 'lib/dbi/base_classes/statement.rb', line 45 def finish raise NotImplementedError end |