Oracle® Objects for OLE Developer's Guide 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14309-01 |
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This chapter introduces commonly used OO4O Automation Objects.
This chapter contains these topics:
The OO4O operational hierarchy of the objects expresses has-a and belongs-to relationships.
Figure 8-1 shows the operational hierarchy.
The Automation objects diagram illustrates this hierarchy.
The OraSession
object is returned when an instance of the OO4O Automation Server is created. It mainly serves as an interface for establishing connections to Oracle databases. It also contains methods for starting, committing, and canceling transactions on the connections contained in the OraDatabase
objects created. The following Visual Basic example creates an instance of the OO4O Automation Server.
'OracleInProcServer.XOraSession is the symbolic name for a 'globally unique component identifier. Set OO4OSession = CreateObject("OracleInProcServer.XOraSession")
The OraServer
object represents a physical connection to an Oracle database instance. It provides a method, OpenDatabase
, for creating user sessions, which represents OraDatabase
objects. It makes it possible to do "connection multiplexing."
The OraDatabase
object represents a user connection to an Oracle database instance, and provides methods to execute SQL statements and PL/SQL code. The OraDatabase
object is returned by the OpenDatabase
method of the OraSession
or the OraServer
object.
The following example illustrates the use of the OpenDatabase
method of the OraSession
. OraDatabase
objects created by this method contain a distinct physical connection to an Oracle database.
'Establish a connection to the ExampleDb database Set hrDBSession = OO4OSession.OpenDatabase("ExampleDb", "scott/tiger", 0&)
The following example demonstrates how a physical network connection to an Oracle database can be shared by multiple user sessions. Using a single connection that is shared by multiple user sessions results in reduced resource usage in an Oracle Database and can increase scalability.
'Create a server connection
Set hrDBServer = CreateObject("OracleInProcServer.XOraServer")
Set hrDBServer = oo4o.Open("ExampleDb")
Set userSession1 = hrDBServer.OpenDatabase("scott/tiger", 0)
'execute queries ...
Set userSession2= hrDBServer.OpenDatabase("scott/tiger", 0)
'execute queries ...
See Also:
OraDatabase ObjectAn OraDynaset
object represents the result set of a SQL SELECT
query or a PL/SQL cursor variable returned from a stored procedure or function. It is essentially a client-side scrollable and updatable cursor that allows for browsing the set of rows generated by the query it executes. It is created by the CreateDynaset
or CreateCustomDynaset
method of an OraDatabase
interface.
The following Visual Basic example executes a query, loops through the result set, and displays values of columns returned.
Set employees = OraDatabase.CreateDynaset("select empno, ename from emp", 0&) 'While there are more rows while not employees.EOF 'Display the values of empno and ename column of the current row msgbox employees("empno") & employees("ename") 'Move to the next row employees.MoveNext wend
The OraField
object is an abstraction of a column in an OraDynaset
object. It contains the value as well as the metadata that describes a column of the current row in the dynaset. In the previous example for the OraDynaset
object, the Field
interface for empno
can be obtained using this additional code:
set empno = employees.Fields("empno") msgbox "Employee Number: " & empno.Value
OraFields
is a collection object representing all columns in the current row.
OraField
objects can represent instances of any data type supported by Oracle Database. This includes all primitive types, such as VARCHAR2
, NUMBER
, INT
, and FLOAT
, as well all the object-relational types introduced in Oracle8i.
The OraParameters
object is a collection container for OraParameter
objects. An OraParameter
object is used to supply data values for placeholders used in the SQL statements or PL/SQL blocks at run time. It can be used to provide input values as well as contain values that are returned from the database. The following sample creates two parameter objects and uses them in an update query.
OraDatabase.Parameters.Add "SALARY", 4000, ORAPARM_INPUT OraDatabase.Parameters.Add "ENAME", "JONES", ORAPARM_INPUT Set updateStmt = OraDatabase.CreateSQL("update emp set sal = :SALARY" & _ "where ename = :ENAME ")
See Also:
OraParameters CollectionOraParameter
objects can contain values for all the data types supported by Oracle9i including object-relational data types. They can be passed as input or output arguments to PL/SQL stored procedures and functions. The values of the OraParameter
objects can also represent PL/SQL cursors in the form of OraDynaset
objects.
See Also:
An OraParamArray
object provides the mechanism for binding and fetching an array of values. It is typically used for performing bulk inserts and updates.
'Create a table OraDatabase.ExecuteSQL ("create table part_nos(partno number," & _ "description char(50), primary key(partno))") 'Create two parameter arrays of size 10 to hold values for 'part numbers (size 22 bytes), and their description (50 bytes long). OraDatabase.Parameters.AddTable "PARTNO", ORAPARM_INPUT, ORATYPE_NUMBER, 10, 22 OraDatabase.Parameters.AddTable "DESCRIPTION", ORAPARM_INPUT, _ ORATYPE_CHAR, 10, 50 'Initialize the arrays For I = 0 To 10 OraDatabase.Parameters("PARTNO").put_Value = I, I OraDatabase.Parameters("DESCRIPTION ") = "some description", I Next I 'Execute the query Set OraSqlStmt = OraDatabase.CreateSql("insert into " & _ "part_nos(partno, description) values(:PARTNO,:DESCRIPTION)", 0&)
See Also:
OraParamArray ObjectThe OraSQLStmt
object is typically used for executing non-select SQL queries and PL/SQL blocks. The following line of code executes an update query and displays the number of rows affected.
Set updateStmt = OraDatabase.CreateSQL("update emp set sal = 3000" & _ "where ename = 'JONES' ") MsgBox updateStmt.RecordCount
The OraSQLStmt
object (updateStmt
) can be used later to execute the same query with a different value for the :SALARY
placeholder. For example:
OraDatabase.Parameters("SALARY").value = 200000 updateStmt.Parameters("ENAME").value = "KING" updateStmt.Refresh
See Also:
OraSQLStmt Object