QSqlResult Class ReferenceThe QSqlResult class provides an abstract interface for accessing data from specific SQL databases. More... #include <QSqlResult>
Public Functions
Protected Types
Protected Functions
Detailed DescriptionThe QSqlResult class provides an abstract interface for accessing data from specific SQL databases. Normally, you would use QSqlQuery instead of QSqlResult, since QSqlQuery provides a generic wrapper for database-specific implementations of QSqlResult. If you are implementing your own SQL driver (by subclassing QSqlDriver), you will need to provide your own QSqlResult subclass that implements all the pure virtual functions and other virtual functions that you need. See also QSqlDriver. Member Type Documentation
|
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QSqlResult::PositionalBinding | 0 | Use the ODBC-style positional syntax, with "?" as placeholders. |
QSqlResult::NamedBinding | 1 | Use the Oracle-style syntax with named placeholders (e.g., ":id") |
See also bindingSyntax().
Creates a QSqlResult using database driver db. The object is initialized to an inactive state.
See also isActive() and driver().
Destroys the object and frees any allocated resources.
Binds the value val of parameter type paramType to the next available position in the current record (row).
See also bindValue().
Returns the current (zero-based) row position of the result. May return the special values QSql::BeforeFirstRow or QSql::AfterLastRow.
See also setAt() and isValid().
Binds the value val of parameter type paramType to position index in the current record (row).
See also addBindValue().
This is an overloaded function.
Binds the value val of parameter type paramType to the placeholder name in the current record (row).
Values cannot be bound to multiple locations in the query, eg:
INSERT INTO testtable (id, name, samename) VALUES (:id, :name, :name)
Binding to name will bind to the first :name, but not the second.
Note: Binding an undefined placeholder will result in undefined behavior.
See also QSqlQuery::bindValue().
Returns the parameter type for the value bound at position index.
See also boundValue().
This is an overloaded function.
Returns the parameter type for the value bound with the given placeholder name.
Returns the binding syntax used by prepared queries.
Returns the value bound at position index in the current record (row).
See also bindValue() and boundValues().
This is an overloaded function.
Returns the value bound by the given placeholder name in the current record (row).
See also bindValueType().
Returns the number of bound values in the result.
See also boundValues().
Returns the name of the bound value at position index in the current record (row).
See also boundValue().
Returns a vector of the result's bound values for the current record (row).
See also boundValueCount().
Clears the entire result set and releases any associated resources.
Returns the data for field index in the current row as a QVariant. This function is only called if the result is in an active state and is positioned on a valid record and index is non-negative. Derived classes must reimplement this function and return the value of field index, or QVariant() if it cannot be determined.
Returns the driver associated with the result. This is the object that was passed to the constructor.
Executes the query, returning true if successful; otherwise returns false.
See also prepare().
Returns the query that was actually executed. This may differ from the query that was passed, for example if bound values were used with a prepared query and the underlying database doesn't support prepared queries.
See also exec() and setQuery().
Positions the result to an arbitrary (zero-based) row index.
This function is only called if the result is in an active state. Derived classes must reimplement this function and position the result to the row index, and call setAt() with an appropriate value. Return true to indicate success, or false to signify failure.
See also isActive(), fetchFirst(), fetchLast(), fetchNext(), and fetchPrevious().
Positions the result to the first record (row 0) in the result.
This function is only called if the result is in an active state. Derived classes must reimplement this function and position the result to the first record, and call setAt() with an appropriate value. Return true to indicate success, or false to signify failure.
See also fetch() and fetchLast().
Positions the result to the last record (last row) in the result.
This function is only called if the result is in an active state. Derived classes must reimplement this function and position the result to the last record, and call setAt() with an appropriate value. Return true to indicate success, or false to signify failure.
See also fetch() and fetchFirst().
Positions the result to the next available record (row) in the result.
This function is only called if the result is in an active state. The default implementation calls fetch() with the next index. Derived classes can reimplement this function and position the result to the next record in some other way, and call setAt() with an appropriate value. Return true to indicate success, or false to signify failure.
See also fetch() and fetchPrevious().
Positions the result to the previous record (row) in the result.
This function is only called if the result is in an active state. The default implementation calls fetch() with the previous index. Derived classes can reimplement this function and position the result to the next record in some other way, and call setAt() with an appropriate value. Return true to indicate success, or false to signify failure.
Returns the low-level database handle for this result set wrapped in a QVariant or an invalid QVariant if there is no handle.
Warning: Use this with uttermost care and only if you know what you're doing.
Warning: The handle returned here can become a stale pointer if the result is modified (for example, if you clear it).
Warning: The handle can be NULL if the result was not executed yet.
The handle returned here is database-dependent, you should query the type name of the variant before accessing it.
This example retrieves the handle for a sqlite result:
QSqlQuery query = ... QVariant v = query.result()->handle(); if (v.isValid() && qstrcmp(v.typeName(), "sqlite3_stmt*")) { // v.data() returns a pointer to the handle sqlite3_stmt *handle = *static_cast<sqlite3_stmt **>(v.data()); if (handle != 0) { // check that it is not NULL ... } }
This snippet returns the handle for PostgreSQL or MySQL:
if (v.typeName() == "PGresult*") { PGresult *handle = *static_cast<PGresult **>(v.data()); if (handle != 0) ... } if (v.typeName() == "MYSQL_STMT*") { MYSQL_STMT *handle = *static_cast<MYSQL_STMT **>(v.data()); if (handle != 0) ... }
See also QSqlDriver::handle().
Returns true if at least one of the query's bound values is a QSql::Out or a QSql::InOut; otherwise returns false.
See also bindValueType().
Returns true if the result has records to be retrieved; otherwise returns false.
Returns true if you can only scroll forward through the result set; otherwise returns false.
See also setForwardOnly().
Returns true if the field at position index in the current row is null; otherwise returns false.
Returns true if the current result is from a SELECT statement; otherwise returns false.
See also setSelect().
Returns true if the result is positioned on a valid record (that is, the result is not positioned before the first or after the last record); otherwise returns false.
See also at().
Returns the last error associated with the result.
See also setLastError().
Returns the object ID of the most recent inserted row if the database supports it. An invalid QVariant will be returned if the query did not insert any value or if the database does not report the id back. If more than one row was touched by the insert, the behavior is undefined.
Note that for Oracle databases the row's ROWID will be returned, while for MySQL databases the row's auto-increment field will be returned.
See also QSqlDriver::hasFeature().
Returns the current SQL query text, or an empty string if there isn't one.
See also setQuery().
Returns the number of rows affected by the last query executed, or -1 if it cannot be determined or if the query is a SELECT statement.
See also size().
Prepares the given query for execution; the query will normally use placeholders so that it can be executed repeatedly. Returns true if the query is prepared successfully; otherwise returns false.
See also exec().
Returns the current record if the query is active; otherwise returns an empty QSqlRecord.
The default implementation always returns an empty QSqlRecord.
See also isActive().
Sets the result to use the SQL statement query for subsequent data retrieval.
Derived classes must reimplement this function and apply the query to the database. This function is only called after the result is set to an inactive state and is positioned before the first record of the new result. Derived classes should return true if the query was successful and ready to be used, or false otherwise.
See also setQuery().
Prepares the given query, using the underlying database functionality where possible. Returns true if the query is prepared successfully; otherwise returns false.
See also prepare().
This function is provided for derived classes to set the internal active state to active.
See also isActive().
This function is provided for derived classes to set the internal (zero-based) row position to index.
See also at().
Sets forward only mode to forward. If forward is true, only fetchNext() is allowed for navigating the results. Forward only mode needs much less memory since results do not have to be cached. By default, this feature is disabled.
Setting forward only to false is a suggestion to the database engine, which has the final say on whether a result set is forward only or scrollable. isForwardOnly() will always return the correct status of the result set.
Note: Calling setForwardOnly after execution of the query will result in unexpected results at best, and crashes at worst.
See also isForwardOnly(), fetchNext(), and QSqlQuery::setForwardOnly().
This function is provided for derived classes to set the last error to error.
See also lastError().
Sets the current query for the result to query. You must call reset() to execute the query on the database.
See also reset() and lastQuery().
This function is provided for derived classes to indicate whether or not the current statement is a SQL SELECT statement. The select parameter should be true if the statement is a SELECT statement; otherwise it should be false.
See also isSelect().
Returns the size of the SELECT result, or -1 if it cannot be determined or if the query is not a SELECT statement.
See also numRowsAffected().