SQL::Eval - Base for deriving evalution objects for SQL::Statement |
SQL::Eval - Base for deriving evalution objects for SQL::Statement
=head1 SYNOPSIS
require SQL::Statement; require SQL::Eval;
# Create an SQL statement; use a concrete subclass of # SQL::Statement my $stmt = MyStatement->new("SELECT * FROM foo, bar", SQL::Parser->new('Ansi'));
# Get an eval object by calling open_tables; this # will call MyStatement::open_table my $eval = $stmt->open_tables($data);
# Set parameter 0 to 'Van Gogh' $eval->param(0, 'Van Gogh'); # Get parameter 2 my $param = $eval->param(2);
# Get the SQL::Eval::Table object referring the 'foo' table my $fooTable = $eval->table('foo');
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module implements two classes that can be used for deriving
concrete subclasses to evaluate SQL::Statement objects. The
SQL::Eval object can be thought as an abstract state engine for
executing SQL queries, the SQL::Eval::Table object can be considered
a *very* table abstraction. It implements method for fetching or
storing rows, retrieving column names and numbers and so on.
See the test.pl
script as an example for implementing a concrete
subclass.
While reading on, keep in mind that these are abstract classes, you *must* implement at least some of the methods describe below. Even more, you need not derive from SQL::Eval or SQL::Eval::Table, you just need to implement the method interface.
All methods just throw a Perl exception in case of errors.
=head2 Method interface of SQL::Eval
$eval = SQL::Eval->new(\%attr);
Blesses the hash ref \%attr into the SQL::Eval class (or a subclass).
INSERT INTO foo VALUES (?, ?);
Example:
$eval->param(0, $val); # Set parameter 0 $eval->param(0); # Get parameter 0
$eval->params($params); # Set the array $eval->params(); # Get the array
$eval->table('foo', $fooTable); # Set the 'foo' table object $eval->table('foo'); # Return the 'foo' table object
$col = $eval->column('foo', 'id'); # Return the 'id' column of # the current row in the # 'foo' table
This is equivalent and just a shorthand for
$col = $eval->table('foo')->column('id');
=head2 Method interface of SQL::Eval::Table
$eval = SQL::Eval::Table->new(\%attr);
Blesses the hash ref \%attr into the SQL::Eval::Table class (or a subclass).
$table->fetchrow()
.
Example:
$row = $table->row();
$table->fetchrow()
. Example:
$col = $table->column($colName);
$colNum = $table->column_num($colNum);
The above methods are implemented by SQL::Eval::Table. The following
methods aren't, so that they *must* be implemented by concrete
subclassed. See the test.pl
script for example.
undef
, if the last
row was already fetched. The argument $data is for private use of
the concrete subclass. Example:
$row = $table->fetch_row($data);
Note, that you may use
$row = $table->row();
for retrieving the same row again, until the next call of fetch_row
.
$table->push_row($data, $row);
$table->push_names($data, $names);
$table->seek($data, $whence, $rowNum);
Actually the current implementation is using only seek($data, 0,0)
(first row) and seek($data, 2,0)
(last row, end of file).
$table->truncate($data);
=head1 INTERNALS
The current implementation is quite simple: An SQL::Eval object is an
hash ref with only two attributes. The params
attribute is an array
ref of parameters. The tables
attribute is an hash ref of table
names (keys) and table objects (values).
SQL::Eval::Table instances are implemented as hash refs. Used attributes
are row
(the array ref of the current row), col_nums
(an hash ref
of column names as keys and column numbers as values) and col_names
,
an array ref of column names with the column numbers as indexes.
=head1 MULTITHREADING
All methods are working with instance-local data only, thus the module is reentrant and thread safe, if you either don't share handles between threads or grant serialized use.
=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
This module is Copyright (C) 1998 by
Jochen Wiedmann Am Eisteich 9 72555 Metzingen Germany
Email: joe@ispsoft.de Phone: +49 7123 14887
All rights reserved.
You may distribute this module under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.
=head1 SEE ALSO
=cut
SQL::Eval - Base for deriving evalution objects for SQL::Statement |