See: Description
Class | Description |
---|---|
BatchSqlUpdate |
SqlUpdate subclass that performs batch update operations.
|
GenericSqlQuery | |
GenericStoredProcedure |
Concrete implementation making it possible to define the RDBMS stored procedures
in an application context without writing a custom Java implementation class.
|
MappingSqlQuery<T> |
Reusable query in which concrete subclasses must implement the abstract
mapRow(ResultSet, int) method to convert each row of the JDBC ResultSet
into an object.
|
MappingSqlQueryWithParameters<T> |
Reusable RDBMS query in which concrete subclasses must implement
the abstract mapRow(ResultSet, int) method to map each row of
the JDBC ResultSet into an object.
|
RdbmsOperation |
An "RDBMS operation" is a multi-threaded, reusable object representing a query,
update, or stored procedure call.
|
SqlCall |
RdbmsOperation using a JdbcTemplate and representing a SQL-based
call such as a stored procedure or a stored function.
|
SqlFunction<T> |
SQL "function" wrapper for a query that returns a single row of results.
|
SqlOperation |
Operation object representing a SQL-based operation such as a query or update,
as opposed to a stored procedure.
|
SqlQuery<T> |
Reusable operation object representing a SQL query.
|
SqlUpdate |
Reusable operation object representing a SQL update.
|
StoredProcedure |
Superclass for object abstractions of RDBMS stored procedures.
|
UpdatableSqlQuery<T> |
Reusable RDBMS query in which concrete subclasses must implement
the abstract updateRow(ResultSet, int, context) method to update each
row of the JDBC ResultSet and optionally map contents into an object.
|
This higher level of JDBC abstraction depends on the lower-level
abstraction in the org.springframework.jdbc.core
package.
Exceptions thrown are as in the org.springframework.dao
package,
meaning that code using this package does not need to implement JDBC or
RDBMS-specific error handling.
This package and related packages are discussed in Chapter 9 of Expert One-On-One J2EE Design and Development by Rod Johnson (Wrox, 2002).