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A Clob
object represents the Java programming language mapping of an SQL CLOB
(Character Large Object). An SQL CLOB
is a built-in type that stores a Character Large Object as a column value in a row of a database table. Methods in the interfaces ResultSet
, CallableStatement
, and PreparedStatement
allow a programmer to access the SQL3 type CLOB
in the same way that more basic SQL types are accessed. In other words, an application using the JDBC 2.0 API uses methods such as getClob
and setClob
for a CLOB
value the same way it uses getInt
and setInt
for an INTEGER
value or getString
and setString
for a CHAR
or VARCHAR
value.
The default is for a JDBC driver to implement the Clob
interface using the SQL type LOCATOR(CLOB)
behind the scenes. A LOCATOR(CLOB)
designates an SQL CLOB
residing on a database server, and operations on the locator achieve the same results as operations on the CLOB
itself. This means that a client can operate on a Clob
instance without ever having to materialize the CLOB
data on the client machine. The driver uses LOCATOR(CLOB)
behind the scenes, making its use completely transparent to the JDBC programmer.
The standard behavior for a Clob
instance is to remain valid until the transaction in which it was created is either committed or rolled back.
The interface Clob
provides methods for getting the length of an SQL CLOB
value, for materializing the data in a CLOB
value on the client, and for searching for a substring or CLOB
object within a CLOB
value.
The following code fragment illustrates creating a Clob
object, where rs
is a ResultSet
object:
Clob clob = rs.getClob(1);
The variable clob
can now be used to operate on the CLOB
value that is stored in the first column of the result set rs
.
Programmers can invoke methods in the JDBC API on a Clob
object as if they were operating on the SQL CLOB
value it designates. However, if they want to operate on a Clob
object as an object in the Java programming language, they must first materialize the data of the CLOB
object on the client. The Clob
interface provides three methods for materializing a Clob
object as an object in the Java programming language:
getAsciiStream
materializes the CLOB
value as a byte stream containing Ascii bytes
Clob notes = rs.getClob("NOTES"); java.io.InputStream in = notes.getAsciiStream(); byte b = in.read(); // in contains the characters in the CLOB value designated by // notes as Ascii bytes; b contains the first character as an Ascii // byte
getCharacterStream
materializes the CLOB
value as a stream of Unicode characters
java.io.Reader reader = notes.getCharacterStream(); int c = Reader.read(); // c contains the first character in the CLOB that notes designates
getSubString
materializes all or part of the CLOB
value as a String
object
String substring = notes.getSubString(10, 5); // substring contains five characters, starting with the tenth // character of the CLOB value that notes designates long len = notes.length(); String substring = notes.getSubString(1, len); // substring contains all of the characters in the CLOB object that // notes designates
To store a Clob
object in the database, it is passed as a parameter to the PreparedStatement
method setClob
. For example, the following code fragment stores the Clob
object notes
by passing it as the first input parameter to the PreparedStatement
object pstmt
:
Clob notes = rs.getClob("NOTES"); PreparedStatement pstmt = con.prepareStatement( "UPDATE SALES_STATS SET COMMENTS = ? WHERE SALES > 500000"); pstmt.setClob(1, notes); pstmt.executeUpdate();
The CLOB
value designated by notes
is now stored in the table SALES_STATS
in column COMMENTS
in every row where the value in the column SALES
is greater than 500000
.
package java.sql; public interface java.sql.Clob { long length() throws SQLException; InputStream getAsciiStream() throws SQLException; Reader getCharacterStream() throws SQLException; String getSubString(long pos,
int length) throws SQLException; long position(String searchstr,
long start) throws SQLException; long position(Clob searchstr,
long start) throws SQLException; }
InputStream getAsciiStream
() throws SQLException
Materializes theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object as a stream of Ascii bytes.an
InputStream
object with all the data in theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object as Ascii bytesjava.io.InputStream in = clob.getAsciiStream(); byte b = in.read(); // in has all of the characters in the CLOB value designated by // clob as Ascii bytes; b designates the first character as an Ascii // byte
Reader getCharacterStream
() throws SQLException
Materializes theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object as a stream of Unicode characters.a
Reader
object with all the data in theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object as Unicode charactersReader read = clob.getCharacterStream(); // read has all the data in the CLOB value designated by clob // as Unicode characters
length getSubString(long pos,
int length) throws SQLException
Returns a copy of the portion of theCLOB
value represented by thisClob
object that starts at positionpos
and has up tolength
consecutive characters.
pos the position of the first char
to extract from theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object; the initial position is1
length the number of consecutive characters to be copied a
String
object containing a copy of up tolength
consecutive characters from theCLOB
value represented by thisClob
object, starting with thechar
at positionpos
String substr = clob.getSubString(1, 100); // substr contains the first 100 characters in the CLOB value // designated by clob (those in positions 1 through 100, inclusive)
long length() throws SQLExceptions
Returns the number of characters in theCLOB
value designated by thisClob
object.the length in characters of the
CLOB
value that thisClob
object representsClob clob = rs.getClob(3); long len = clob.length(); // len contains the number of characters in the CLOB value // designated by clob
long position(Clob searchstr,
long start) throws SQLException
Determines the character position at which theClob
objectsearchstr
begins within theCLOB
value that thisClob
object represents. The search begins at positionstart
.
searchstr the Clob
object for which to searchstart the position at which to begin searching; the first character is at position 1
the position at which the
Clob
objectsearchstr
begins, which will bestart
or larger if the search, starting at positionstart
, is successful;-1
otherwiseClob clob2 = rs.getClob(4); long beginning = clob.position(clob2, 1024); // if clob2 is contained in clob starting at position 1024 or later, // beginning will contain the position at which clob2 begins
long position(String searchstr,
long start) throws SQLException
Determines the position at which theString
searchstr
begins within theCLOB
value that thisClob
object represents. The search begins at positionstart
.
searchstr the string for which to search start the position at which to begin searching; the first character is at position 1
the position at which the
String
objectsearchstr
begins, which will bestart
or larger if the search, starting at positionstart
, is successful;-1
otherwiseString searchstr= clob.getSubString(5, 100); long beginning = clob.position(searchstr, 1024); // if searchstr is contained in clob from position 1024 on, beginning // will contain the position at which searchstr begins