Home | All Classes | Main Classes | Annotated | Grouped Classes | Functions

QSqlQuery Class Reference
[sql module]

The QSqlQuery class provides a means of executing and manipulating SQL statements. More...

#include <qsqlquery.h>

Inherited by QSqlCursor.

List of all member functions.

Public Members

Protected Members


Detailed Description

The QSqlQuery class provides a means of executing and manipulating SQL statements.

QSqlQuery encapsulates the functionality involved in creating, navigating and retrieving data from SQL queries which are executed on a QSqlDatabase. It can be used to execute DML (data manipulation language) statements, e.g. SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE, and also DDL (data definition language) statements, e.g. CREATE TABLE. It can also be used to execute database-specific commands which are not standard SQL (e.g. SET DATESTYLE=ISO for PostgreSQL).

Successfully executed SQL statements set the query to an active state (isActive() returns TRUE) otherwise the query is set to an inactive state. In either case, when executing a new SQL statement, the query is positioned on an invalid record; an active query must be navigated to a valid record (so that isValid() returns TRUE) before values can be retrieved.

Navigating records is performed with the following functions:

These functions allow the programmer to move forward, backward or arbitrarily through the records returned by the query. Once an active query is positioned on a valid record, data can be retrieved using value(). All data is transferred from the SQL backend using QVariants.

For example:

    QSqlQuery query( "select name from customer" );
    while ( query.next() ) {
        QString name = query.value(0).toString();
        doSomething( name );
    }
    

To access the data returned by a query, use the value() method. Each field in the data returned by a SELECT statement is accessed by passing the index number of the desired field, starting with 0. There are no methods to access a field by name to make sure the usage of QSqlQuery is as optimal as possible (see QSqlCursor for a more flexible interface for selecting data from a table or view in the database).

See also QSqlDatabase, QSqlCursor, QVariant and Database Classes.


Member Function Documentation

QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery ( QSqlResult * r )

Creates a QSqlQuery object which uses the QSqlResult r to communicate with a database.

QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery ( const QString & query = QString::null, QSqlDatabase * db = 0 )

Creates a QSqlQuery object using the SQL query and the database db. If db is 0, (the default), the application's default database is used.

See also QSqlDatabase.

QSqlQuery::QSqlQuery ( const QSqlQuery & other )

Constructs a copy of other.

QSqlQuery::~QSqlQuery () [virtual]

Destroys the object and frees any allocated resources.

void QSqlQuery::afterSeek () [virtual protected]

Protected virtual function called after the internal record pointer is moved to a new record. The default implementation does nothing.

int QSqlQuery::at () const

Returns the current internal position of the query. The first record is at position zero. If the position is invalid, a QSql::Location will be returned indicating the invalid position.

See also isValid().

Example: sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp.

void QSqlQuery::beforeSeek () [virtual protected]

Protected virtual function called before the internal record pointer is moved to a new record. The default implementation does nothing.

const QSqlDriver * QSqlQuery::driver () const

Returns a pointer to the database driver associated with the query.

bool QSqlQuery::exec ( const QString & query ) [virtual]

Executes the SQL query. Returns TRUE if the query was successful sets the query state to active, otherwise returns FALSE and the query becomes inactive. The query string must use syntax appropriate for the SQL database being queried, for example, standard SQL.

After the query is executed, the query is positioned on an invalid record, and must be navigated to a valid record before data values can be retrieved.

Note that the last error for this query is reset when exec() is called.

See also isActive(), isValid(), next(), prev(), first(), last() and seek().

Examples: sql/overview/basicbrowsing/main.cpp, sql/overview/basicbrowsing2/main.cpp and sql/overview/basicdatamanip/main.cpp.

bool QSqlQuery::first () [virtual]

Retrieves the first record in the result, if available, and positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in an active state and isSelect() must return TRUE before calling this function or it will do nothing and return FALSE. Returns TRUE if successful. If unsuccessful the query position is set to an invalid position and FALSE is returned.

Example: sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp.

bool QSqlQuery::isActive () const

Returns TRUE if the query is currently active, otherwise returns FALSE.

Examples: sql/overview/basicbrowsing/main.cpp, sql/overview/basicbrowsing2/main.cpp, sql/overview/basicdatamanip/main.cpp, sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp and sql/overview/retrieve1/main.cpp.

bool QSqlQuery::isNull ( int field ) const

Returns TRUE if field is currently NULL, otherwise returns FALSE. The query must be active and positioned on a valid record before calling this function otherwise it returns FALSE. Note that, for some drivers, isNull() will not return accurate information until after an attempt is made to retrieve data.

See also isActive(), isValid() and value().

bool QSqlQuery::isSelect () const

Returns TRUE if the current query is a SELECT statement, otherwise returns FALSE.

bool QSqlQuery::isValid () const

Returns TRUE if the query is currently positioned on a valid record, otherwise returns FALSE.

bool QSqlQuery::last () [virtual]

Retrieves the last record in the result, if available, and positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in an active state and isSelect() must return TRUE before calling this function or it will do nothing and return FALSE. Returns TRUE if successful. If unsuccessful the query position is set to an invalid position and FALSE is returned.

Example: sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp.

QSqlError QSqlQuery::lastError () const

Returns error information about the last error (if any) that occurred.

See also QSqlError.

QString QSqlQuery::lastQuery () const

Returns the text of the current query being used, or QString::null if there is no current query text.

bool QSqlQuery::next () [virtual]

Retrieves the next record in the result, if available, and positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in an active state and isSelect() must return TRUE before calling this function or it will do nothing and return FALSE.

The following rules apply:

If the record could not be retrieved, the result is positioned after the last record and FALSE is returned. If the record is successfully retrieved, TRUE is returned.

See also at() and isValid().

Examples: sql/overview/basicbrowsing/main.cpp, sql/overview/basicbrowsing2/main.cpp, sql/overview/retrieve1/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass3/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass4/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass5/main.cpp and sql/sqltable/main.cpp.

int QSqlQuery::numRowsAffected () const

Returns the number of rows affected by the result's SQL statement, or -1 if it cannot be determined. Note that for SELECT statements, this value will be the same as size(). If the query is not active (isActive() returns FALSE), -1 is returned.

See also size() and QSqlDriver::hasFeature().

Examples: sql/overview/basicbrowsing2/main.cpp and sql/overview/basicdatamanip/main.cpp.

QSqlQuery & QSqlQuery::operator= ( const QSqlQuery & other )

Assigns other to the query.

bool QSqlQuery::prev () [virtual]

Retrieves the previous record in the result, if available, and positions the query on the retrieved record. Note that the result must be in an active state and isSelect() must return TRUE before calling this function or it will do nothing and return FALSE.

The following rules apply:

If the record could not be retrieved, the result is positioned before the first record and FALSE is returned. If the record is successfully retrieved, TRUE is returned.

See also at().

const QSqlResult * QSqlQuery::result () const

Returns a pointer to the result associated with the query.

bool QSqlQuery::seek ( int i, bool relative = FALSE ) [virtual]

Retrieves the record at position (or offset) i, if available, and positions the query on the retrieved record. The first record is at position zero. Note that the query must be in an active state and isSelect() must return TRUE before calling this function.

The following rules apply:

If relative is FALSE (the default), the following rules apply:

If relative is TRUE, the following rules apply:

Example: sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp.

int QSqlQuery::size () const

Returns the size of the result, (number of rows returned), or -1 if the size cannot be determined or the database does not support reporting information about query sizes. Note that for non-SELECT statements (isSelect() returns FALSE), size() will return -1. If the query is not active (isActive() returns FALSE), -1 is returned.

To determine the number of rows affected by a non-SELECT statement, use numRowsAffected().

See also isActive(), numRowsAffected() and QSqlDriver::hasFeature().

Example: sql/overview/navigating/main.cpp.

QVariant QSqlQuery::value ( int i ) const [virtual]

Returns the value of field i (zero based).

The fields are numbered from left to right using the text of the SELECT statement, e.g. in "select forename, surname from people", field 0 is forename and field 1 is surname. Using SELECT * is not recommended because the order of the fields in the query is undefined.

An invalid QVariant is returned if field i does not exist, if the query is inactive, or if the query is positioned on an invalid record.

See also prev(), next(), first(), last(), seek(), isActive() and isValid().

Examples: sql/overview/basicbrowsing/main.cpp, sql/overview/basicbrowsing2/main.cpp, sql/overview/retrieve1/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass3/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass4/main.cpp, sql/overview/subclass5/main.cpp and sql/sqltable/main.cpp.


This file is part of the Qt toolkit. Copyright © 1995-2002 Trolltech. All Rights Reserved.


Copyright © 2002 TrolltechTrademarks
Qt version 3.0.4