Module org.hsqldb

Class JDBCCallableStatement

  • All Implemented Interfaces:
    java.lang.AutoCloseable, java.sql.CallableStatement, java.sql.PreparedStatement, java.sql.Statement, java.sql.Wrapper

    public class JDBCCallableStatement
    extends JDBCPreparedStatement
    implements java.sql.CallableStatement
    The interface used to execute SQL stored procedures. The JDBC API provides a stored procedure SQL escape syntax that allows stored procedures to be called in a standard way for all RDBMSs. This escape syntax has one form that includes a result parameter and one that does not. If used, the result parameter must be registered as an OUT parameter. The other parameters can be used for input, output or both. Parameters are referred to sequentially, by number, with the first parameter being 1.
       {?= call <procedure-name>[(<arg1>,<arg2>, ...)]}
       {call <procedure-name>[(<arg1>,<arg2>, ...)]}
     

    IN parameter values are set using the set methods inherited from PreparedStatement. The type of all OUT parameters must be registered prior to executing the stored procedure; their values are retrieved after execution via the get methods provided here.

    A CallableStatement can return one ResultSet object or multiple ResultSet objects. Multiple ResultSet objects are handled using operations inherited from Statement.

    For maximum portability, a call's ResultSet objects and update counts should be processed prior to getting the values of output parameters.

    HSQLDB-Specific Information:

    Beyond the XOpen/ODBC extended scalar functions, stored procedures are typically supported in ways that vary greatly from one DBMS implementation to the next. So, it is almost guaranteed that the code for a stored procedure written under a specific DBMS product will not work without at least some modification in the context of another vendor's product or even across a single vendor's product lines. Moving stored procedures from one DBMS product line to another almost invariably involves complex porting issues and often may not be possible at all. Be warned.

    One kind of HSQLDB stored procedures and functions is SQL/JRT, Java routines that map directly onto the static methods of compiled Java classes found on the class path of the engine at runtime. The CREATE PROCEDURE or CREATE FUNCTION statements are used in SQL to support the Java methods.

    The other kind of HSQLDB stored procedures is SQL/PSM routines that are written entirely in the SQL procedural language. Overloaded methods are supported and resolved according to the type of parameters. With procedures, OUT and IN OUT parameters are also supported.

    In addition, HSQLDB stored procedure call mechanism allows the more general HSQLDB SQL expression evaluation mechanism. This extension provides the ability to evaluate simple SQL expressions, possibly containing Java method invocations.

    With HSQLDB, executing a CALL statement that produces an opaque (OTHER) or known scalar object reference has virtually the same effect as:

     CREATE TABLE DUAL (dummy VARCHAR);
     INSERT INTO DUAL VALUES(NULL);
     SELECT <simple-expression> FROM DUAL;
     
    HSQLDB functions can return a single result set. HSQLDB procedures can return one or more result sets. Here is a very simple example of an HSQLDB stored procedure generating a user-defined result set:
     package mypackage;
    
     import java.sql.ResultSet;
     import java.sql.SQLException;
    
     class MyLibraryClass {
    
          public static ResultSet mySp() throws SQLException {
              return ctx.getConnection().createStatement().executeQuery("select * from my_table");
          }
     }
     
    (campbell-burnet@users)
    Since:
    JDK 1.1, HSQLDB 1.9.0
    Author:
    Campbell Burnet (campbell-burnet@users dot sourceforge.net), Fred Toussi (fredt@users dot sourceforge.net)
    See Also:
    JDBCConnection.prepareCall(java.lang.String), JDBCResultSet
    • Field Summary

      • Fields inherited from interface java.sql.Statement

        CLOSE_ALL_RESULTS, CLOSE_CURRENT_RESULT, EXECUTE_FAILED, KEEP_CURRENT_RESULT, NO_GENERATED_KEYS, RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS, SUCCESS_NO_INFO
    • Constructor Summary

      Constructors 
      Constructor Description
      JDBCCallableStatement​(JDBCConnection c, java.lang.String sql, int resultSetType, int resultSetConcurrency, int resultSetHoldability)
      Constructs a new JDBCCallableStatement with the specified connection and result type.
    • Method Summary

      All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods Deprecated Methods 
      Modifier and Type Method Description
      void close()
      Does the specialized work required to free this object's resources and that of its parent classes.
      void closeOnCompletion()
      Specifies that this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed.
      java.sql.ResultSet executeQuery()
      Executes the SQL query in this PreparedStatement object and returns the ResultSet object generated by the query.
      java.sql.Array getArray​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ARRAY parameter as an Array object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Array getArray​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC ARRAY parameter as an Array object in the Java programming language.
      java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC NUMERIC parameter as a java.math.BigDecimal object with as many digits to the right of the decimal point as the value contains.
      java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(int parameterIndex, int scale)
      Deprecated.
      use getBigDecimal(int parameterIndex) or getBigDecimal(String parameterName)
      java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC NUMERIC parameter as a java.math.BigDecimal object with as many digits to the right of the decimal point as the value contains.
      java.sql.Blob getBlob​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BLOB parameter as a Blob object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Blob getBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC BLOB parameter as a Blob object in the Java programming language.
      boolean getBoolean​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BIT or BOOLEAN parameter as a boolean in the Java programming language.
      boolean getBoolean​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC BIT or BOOLEAN parameter as a boolean in the Java programming language.
      byte getByte​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TINYINT parameter as a byte in the Java programming language.
      byte getByte​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC TINYINT parameter as a byte in the Java programming language.
      byte[] getBytes​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BINARY or VARBINARY parameter as an array of byte values in the Java programming language.
      byte[] getBytes​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC BINARY or VARBINARY parameter as an array of byte values in the Java programming language.
      java.io.Reader getCharacterStream​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.
      java.io.Reader getCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Clob getClob​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC CLOB parameter as a java.sql.Clob object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Clob getClob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC CLOB parameter as a Clob object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Date getDate​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object.
      java.sql.Date getDate​(int parameterIndex, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object, using the given Calendar object to construct the date.
      java.sql.Date getDate​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object.
      java.sql.Date getDate​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object, using the given Calendar object to construct the date.
      double getDouble​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DOUBLE parameter as a double in the Java programming language.
      double getDouble​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC DOUBLE parameter as a double in the Java programming language.
      float getFloat​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC FLOAT parameter as a float in the Java programming language.
      float getFloat​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC FLOAT parameter as a float in the Java programming language.
      int getInt​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC INTEGER parameter as an int in the Java programming language.
      int getInt​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC INTEGER parameter as an int in the Java programming language.
      long getLong​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BIGINT parameter as a long in the Java programming language.
      long getLong​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC BIGINT parameter as a long in the Java programming language.
      java.io.Reader getNCharacterStream​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.
      java.io.Reader getNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.NClob getNClob​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC NCLOB parameter as a java.sql.NClob object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.NClob getNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC NCLOB parameter as a java.sql.NClob object in the Java programming language.
      java.lang.String getNString​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.
      java.lang.String getNString​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of the designated NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.
      java.lang.Object getObject​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as an Object in the Java programming language.
      <T> T getObject​(int parameterIndex, java.lang.Class<T> type)
      Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterIndex and will convert from the SQL type of the parameter to the requested Java data type, if the conversion is supported.
      java.lang.Object getObject​(int parameterIndex, java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.Class<?>> map)
      Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterIndex and uses map for the custom mapping of the parameter value.
      java.lang.Object getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a parameter as an Object in the Java programming language.
      <T> T getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Class<T> type)
      Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterName and will convert from the SQL type of the parameter to the requested Java data type, if the conversion is supported.
      java.lang.Object getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.Class<?>> map)
      Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterName and uses map for the custom mapping of the parameter value.
      java.sql.Ref getRef​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC REF(<structured-type>) parameter as a Ref object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Ref getRef​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC REF(&lt;structured-type&gt;) parameter as a Ref object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.ResultSet getResultSet()
      Retrieves the current result as a ResultSet object.
      java.sql.RowId getRowId​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ROWID parameter as a java.sql.RowId object.
      java.sql.RowId getRowId​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ROWID parameter as a java.sql.RowId object.
      short getShort​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC SMALLINT parameter as a short in the Java programming language.
      short getShort​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC SMALLINT parameter as a short in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.SQLXML getSQLXML​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated SQL XML parameter as a java.sql.SQLXML object in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.SQLXML getSQLXML​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of the designated SQL XML parameter as a java.sql.SQLXML object in the Java programming language.
      java.lang.String getString​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC CHAR, VARCHAR, or LONGVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.
      java.lang.String getString​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC CHAR, VARCHAR, or LONGVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.
      java.sql.Time getTime​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object.
      java.sql.Time getTime​(int parameterIndex, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object, using the given Calendar object to construct the time.
      java.sql.Time getTime​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object.
      java.sql.Time getTime​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object, using the given Calendar object to construct the time.
      java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object.
      java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(int parameterIndex, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object, using the given Calendar object to construct the Timestamp object.
      java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object.
      java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object, using the given Calendar object to construct the Timestamp object.
      java.net.URL getURL​(int parameterIndex)
      Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATALINK parameter as a java.net.URL object.
      java.net.URL getURL​(java.lang.String parameterName)
      Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATALINK parameter as a java.net.URL object.
      boolean isCloseOnCompletion()
      Returns a value indicating whether this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, int sqlType)
      Registers the OUT parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to the JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, int sqlType, int scale)
      Registers the parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to be of JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, int sqlType, java.lang.String typeName)
      Registers the designated output parameter.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, java.sql.SQLType sqlType)
      Registers the OUT parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to the JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, java.sql.SQLType sqlType, int scale)
      Registers the parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to be of JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex, java.sql.SQLType sqlType, java.lang.String typeName)
      Registers the designated output parameter.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, int sqlType)
      Registers the OUT parameter named parameterName to the JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, int sqlType, int scale)
      Registers the parameter named parameterName to be of JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, int sqlType, java.lang.String typeName)
      Registers the designated output parameter.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.SQLType sqlType)
      Registers the OUT parameter named parameterName to the JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.SQLType sqlType, int scale)
      Registers the parameter named parameterName to be of JDBC type sqlType.
      void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.SQLType sqlType, java.lang.String typeName)
      Registers the designated output parameter.
      void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream.
      void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x, int length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes.
      void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes.
      void setBigDecimal​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.math.BigDecimal x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.math.BigDecimal value.
      void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream.
      void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x, int length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes.
      void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream x, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes.
      void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream inputStream)
      Sets the designated parameter to an InputStream object.
      void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.InputStream inputStream, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to a InputStream object.
      void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Blob x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Blob object.
      void setBoolean​(java.lang.String parameterName, boolean x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java boolean value.
      void setByte​(java.lang.String parameterName, byte x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java byte value.
      void setBytes​(java.lang.String parameterName, byte[] x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java array of bytes.
      void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object.
      void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader, int length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object, which is the given number of characters long.
      void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object, which is the given number of characters long.
      void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Clob x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Clob object.
      void setDate​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Date x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Date value using the default time zone of the virtual machine that is running the application.
      void setDate​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Date x, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Date value, using the given Calendar object.
      void setDouble​(java.lang.String parameterName, double x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java double value.
      void setFloat​(java.lang.String parameterName, float x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java float value.
      void setInt​(java.lang.String parameterName, int x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java int value.
      void setLong​(java.lang.String parameterName, long x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java long value.
      void setNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader value)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader value, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.io.Reader reader, long length)
      Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object.
      void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.NClob value)
      Sets the designated parameter to a java.sql.NClob object.
      void setNString​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.String value)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given String object.
      void setNull​(java.lang.String parameterName, int sqlType)
      Sets the designated parameter to SQL NULL.
      void setNull​(java.lang.String parameterName, int sqlType, java.lang.String typeName)
      Sets the designated parameter to SQL NULL.
      void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Object x)
      Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.
      void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Object x, int targetSqlType)
      Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.
      void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Object x, int targetSqlType, int scale)
      Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.
      void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Object x, java.sql.SQLType targetSqlType)
      Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.
      void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.Object x, java.sql.SQLType targetSqlType, int scaleOrLength)
      Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.
      void setRowId​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.RowId x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.RowId object.
      void setShort​(java.lang.String parameterName, short x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java short value.
      void setSQLXML​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.SQLXML xmlObject)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.SQLXML object.
      void setString​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.lang.String x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given Java String value.
      void setTime​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Time x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Time value.
      void setTime​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Time x, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Time value, using the given Calendar object.
      void setTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Timestamp x)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Timestamp value.
      void setTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.sql.Timestamp x, java.util.Calendar cal)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Timestamp value, using the given Calendar object.
      void setURL​(java.lang.String parameterName, java.net.URL val)
      Sets the designated parameter to the given java.net.URL object.
      boolean wasNull()
      Retrieves whether the last OUT parameter read had the value of SQL NULL.
      • Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object

        equals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait
      • Methods inherited from interface java.sql.PreparedStatement

        addBatch, clearParameters, execute, executeLargeUpdate, executeUpdate, getMetaData, getParameterMetaData, setArray, setAsciiStream, setAsciiStream, setAsciiStream, setBigDecimal, setBinaryStream, setBinaryStream, setBinaryStream, setBlob, setBlob, setBlob, setBoolean, setByte, setBytes, setCharacterStream, setCharacterStream, setCharacterStream, setClob, setClob, setClob, setDate, setDate, setDouble, setFloat, setInt, setLong, setNCharacterStream, setNCharacterStream, setNClob, setNClob, setNClob, setNString, setNull, setNull, setObject, setObject, setObject, setObject, setObject, setRef, setRowId, setShort, setSQLXML, setString, setTime, setTime, setTimestamp, setTimestamp, setUnicodeStream, setURL
      • Methods inherited from interface java.sql.Statement

        addBatch, cancel, clearBatch, clearWarnings, enquoteIdentifier, enquoteLiteral, enquoteNCharLiteral, execute, execute, execute, execute, executeBatch, executeLargeBatch, executeLargeUpdate, executeLargeUpdate, executeLargeUpdate, executeLargeUpdate, executeQuery, executeUpdate, executeUpdate, executeUpdate, executeUpdate, getConnection, getFetchDirection, getFetchSize, getGeneratedKeys, getLargeMaxRows, getLargeUpdateCount, getMaxFieldSize, getMaxRows, getMoreResults, getMoreResults, getQueryTimeout, getResultSetConcurrency, getResultSetHoldability, getResultSetType, getUpdateCount, getWarnings, isClosed, isPoolable, isSimpleIdentifier, setCursorName, setEscapeProcessing, setFetchDirection, setFetchSize, setLargeMaxRows, setMaxFieldSize, setMaxRows, setPoolable, setQueryTimeout
      • Methods inherited from interface java.sql.Wrapper

        isWrapperFor, unwrap
    • Constructor Detail

      • JDBCCallableStatement

        public JDBCCallableStatement​(JDBCConnection c,
                                     java.lang.String sql,
                                     int resultSetType,
                                     int resultSetConcurrency,
                                     int resultSetHoldability)
                              throws org.hsqldb.HsqlException,
                                     java.sql.SQLException
        Constructs a new JDBCCallableStatement with the specified connection and result type.
        Parameters:
        c - the connection on which this statement will execute
        sql - the SQL statement this object represents
        resultSetType - the type of result this statement will produce
        resultSetConcurrency - (updatability)
        resultSetHoldability - (validity beyond commit)
        Throws:
        org.hsqldb.HsqlException - if the statement is not accepted by the database
        java.sql.SQLException - if preprocessing by driver fails
    • Method Detail

      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         int sqlType)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the OUT parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to the JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        If the JDBC type expected to be returned to this output parameter is specific to this particular database, sqlType should be java.sql.Types.OTHER. The method getObject(int) retrieves the value.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature. This method can be called after a PrepareCall method. HSQLDB has already determined which parameters are OUT or INOUT parameters, therefore this method only checks and throws an exception if the parameter is not of the correct form. The data type argument is ignored

        The get method to read the value of the parameter is determined by the engine based on the data type of the parameter. Furthermore, HSQLDB supports multiple OUT and INOUT parameters for stored procedures.

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by java.sql.Types. If the parameter is of JDBC type NUMERIC or DECIMAL, the version of registerOutParameter that accepts a scale value should be used.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type
        See Also:
        Types
      • getResultSet

        public java.sql.ResultSet getResultSet()
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Description copied from class: JDBCPreparedStatement
        Retrieves the current result as a ResultSet object. This method should be called only once per result.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        Without an interceding call to executeXXX, each invocation of this method will produce a new, initialized ResultSet instance referring to the current result, if any.
        Specified by:
        getResultSet in interface java.sql.Statement
        Overrides:
        getResultSet in class JDBCPreparedStatement
        Returns:
        the current result as a ResultSet object or null if the result is an update count or there are no more results
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
        See Also:
        JDBCPreparedStatement.execute()
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         int sqlType,
                                         int scale)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to be of JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        This version of registerOutParameter should be used when the parameter is of JDBC type NUMERIC or DECIMAL.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        sqlType - the SQL type code defined by java.sql.Types.
        scale - the desired number of digits to the right of the decimal point. It must be greater than or equal to zero.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type
        See Also:
        Types
      • wasNull

        public boolean wasNull()
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves whether the last OUT parameter read had the value of SQL NULL. Note that this method should be called only after calling a getter method; otherwise, there is no value to use in determining whether it is null or not.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        wasNull in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Returns:
        true if the last parameter read was SQL NULL; false otherwise
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
      • getString

        public java.lang.String getString​(int parameterIndex)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC CHAR, VARCHAR, or LONGVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.

        For the fixed-length type JDBC CHAR, the String object returned has exactly the same value the SQL CHAR value had in the database, including any padding added by the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setString(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
      • getBoolean

        public boolean getBoolean​(int parameterIndex)
                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BIT or BOOLEAN parameter as a boolean in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBoolean in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is false.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setBoolean(java.lang.String, boolean)
      • getByte

        public byte getByte​(int parameterIndex)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TINYINT parameter as a byte in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getByte in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setByte(java.lang.String, byte)
      • getShort

        public short getShort​(int parameterIndex)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC SMALLINT parameter as a short in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getShort in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setShort(java.lang.String, short)
      • getInt

        public int getInt​(int parameterIndex)
                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC INTEGER parameter as an int in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getInt in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setInt(java.lang.String, int)
      • getLong

        public long getLong​(int parameterIndex)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BIGINT parameter as a long in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getLong in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setLong(java.lang.String, long)
      • getFloat

        public float getFloat​(int parameterIndex)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC FLOAT parameter as a float in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getFloat in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setFloat(java.lang.String, float)
      • getDouble

        public double getDouble​(int parameterIndex)
                         throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DOUBLE parameter as a double in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDouble in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setDouble(java.lang.String, double)
      • getBigDecimal

        @Deprecated
        public java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(int parameterIndex,
                                                  int scale)
                                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Deprecated.
        use getBigDecimal(int parameterIndex) or getBigDecimal(String parameterName)
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC NUMERIC parameter as a java.math.BigDecimal object with scale digits to the right of the decimal point.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBigDecimal in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        scale - the number of digits to the right of the decimal point
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        See Also:
        setBigDecimal(java.lang.String, java.math.BigDecimal)
      • getBytes

        public byte[] getBytes​(int parameterIndex)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BINARY or VARBINARY parameter as an array of byte values in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBytes in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setBytes(java.lang.String, byte[])
      • getDate

        public java.sql.Date getDate​(int parameterIndex)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setDate(java.lang.String, java.sql.Date)
      • getTime

        public java.sql.Time getTime​(int parameterIndex)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setTime(java.lang.String, java.sql.Time)
      • getTimestamp

        public java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(int parameterIndex)
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        The JDBC specification for this method is vague. HSQLDB interprets the specification as follows:
        1. If the SQL type of the column is WITH TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp object is the UTC of the SQL value without modification.
        2. If the SQL type of the column is WITHOUT TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp will represent the correct timestamp for the time zone (including daylight saving time) of the SQL session.
        Specified by:
        getTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        setTimestamp(java.lang.String, java.sql.Timestamp)
      • getObject

        public java.lang.Object getObject​(int parameterIndex)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as an Object in the Java programming language. If the value is an SQL NULL, the driver returns a Java null.

        This method returns a Java object whose type corresponds to the JDBC type that was registered for this parameter using the method registerOutParameter. By registering the target JDBC type as java.sql.Types.OTHER, this method can be used to read database-specific abstract data types.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        A java.lang.Object holding the OUT parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        See Also:
        Types, setObject(java.lang.String, java.lang.Object, int, int)
      • getBigDecimal

        public java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(int parameterIndex)
                                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC NUMERIC parameter as a java.math.BigDecimal object with as many digits to the right of the decimal point as the value contains.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBigDecimal in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value in full precision. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        setBigDecimal(java.lang.String, java.math.BigDecimal)
      • getObject

        public java.lang.Object getObject​(int parameterIndex,
                                          java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.Class<?>> map)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterIndex and uses map for the custom mapping of the parameter value.

        This method returns a Java object whose type corresponds to the JDBC type that was registered for this parameter using the method registerOutParameter. By registering the target JDBC type as java.sql.Types.OTHER, this method can be used to read database-specific abstract data types.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        map - the mapping from SQL type names to Java classes
        Returns:
        a java.lang.Object holding the OUT parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        setObject(java.lang.String, java.lang.Object, int, int)
      • getRef

        public java.sql.Ref getRef​(int parameterIndex)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC REF(<structured-type>) parameter as a Ref object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getRef in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Ref object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
      • getBlob

        public java.sql.Blob getBlob​(int parameterIndex)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC BLOB parameter as a Blob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBlob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Blob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
      • getClob

        public java.sql.Clob getClob​(int parameterIndex)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC CLOB parameter as a java.sql.Clob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Clob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
      • getArray

        public java.sql.Array getArray​(int parameterIndex)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ARRAY parameter as an Array object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getArray in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value as an Array object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
      • getDate

        public java.sql.Date getDate​(int parameterIndex,
                                     java.util.Calendar cal)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object, using the given Calendar object to construct the date. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the date taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the date
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        setDate(java.lang.String, java.sql.Date)
      • getTime

        public java.sql.Time getTime​(int parameterIndex,
                                     java.util.Calendar cal)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object, using the given Calendar object to construct the time. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the time taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the time
        Returns:
        the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        setTime(java.lang.String, java.sql.Time)
      • getTimestamp

        public java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(int parameterIndex,
                                               java.util.Calendar cal)
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object, using the given Calendar object to construct the Timestamp object. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the timestamp taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        The JDBC specification for this method is vague. HSQLDB interprets the specification as follows:
        1. If the SQL type of the column is WITH TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp object is the UTC of the SQL value without modification. In other words, the Calendar object is not used.
        2. If the SQL type of the column is WITHOUT TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp will represent the correct timestamp for the time zone (including daylight saving time) of the given Calendar object.
        3. In this case, if the cal argument is null, then the default Calendar of the JVM is used, which results in the same Object as one returned by the getTimestamp() methods without the Calendar parameter.
        Specified by:
        getTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the timestamp
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        setTimestamp(java.lang.String, java.sql.Timestamp)
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         int sqlType,
                                         java.lang.String typeName)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the designated output parameter. This version of the method registerOutParameter should be used for a user-defined or REF output parameter. Examples of user-defined types include: STRUCT, DISTINCT, JAVA_OBJECT, and named array types.

        All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        For a user-defined parameter, the fully-qualified SQL type name of the parameter should also be given, while a REF parameter requires that the fully-qualified type name of the referenced type be given. A JDBC driver that does not need the type code and type name information may ignore it. To be portable, however, applications should always provide these values for user-defined and REF parameters. Although it is intended for user-defined and REF parameters, this method may be used to register a parameter of any JDBC type. If the parameter does not have a user-defined or REF type, the typeName parameter is ignored.

        Note: When reading the value of an out parameter, you must use the getter method whose Java type corresponds to the parameter's registered SQL type.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2,...
        sqlType - a value from Types
        typeName - the fully-qualified name of an SQL structured type
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type
        Since:
        JDK 1.2
        See Also:
        Types
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         int sqlType)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the OUT parameter named parameterName to the JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        If the JDBC type expected to be returned to this output parameter is specific to this particular database, sqlType should be java.sql.Types.OTHER. The method getObject(int) retrieves the value.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by java.sql.Types. If the parameter is of JDBC type NUMERIC or DECIMAL, the version of registerOutParameter that accepts a scale value should be used.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQL 1.7.0
        See Also:
        Types
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         int sqlType,
                                         int scale)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the parameter named parameterName to be of JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        This version of registerOutParameter should be used when the parameter is of JDBC type NUMERIC or DECIMAL.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - SQL type code defined by java.sql.Types.
        scale - the desired number of digits to the right of the decimal point. It must be greater than or equal to zero.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        Types
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         int sqlType,
                                         java.lang.String typeName)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the designated output parameter. This version of the method registerOutParameter should be used for a user-named or REF output parameter. Examples of user-named types include: STRUCT, DISTINCT, JAVA_OBJECT, and named array types.

        All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        For a user-named parameter the fully-qualified SQL type name of the parameter should also be given, while a REF parameter requires that the fully-qualified type name of the referenced type be given. A JDBC driver that does not need the type code and type name information may ignore it. To be portable, however, applications should always provide these values for user-named and REF parameters. Although it is intended for user-named and REF parameters, this method may be used to register a parameter of any JDBC type. If the parameter does not have a user-named or REF type, the typeName parameter is ignored.

        Note: When reading the value of an out parameter, you must use the getXXX method whose Java type XXX corresponds to the parameter's registered SQL type.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - a value from Types
        typeName - the fully-qualified name of an SQL structured type
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if sqlType is a ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, DATALINK, JAVA_OBJECT, NCHAR, NCLOB, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR, REF, ROWID, SQLXML or STRUCT data type and the JDBC driver does not support this data type or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQL 1.7.0
        See Also:
        Types
      • getURL

        public java.net.URL getURL​(int parameterIndex)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC DATALINK parameter as a java.net.URL object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getURL in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2,...
        Returns:
        a java.net.URL object that represents the JDBC DATALINK value used as the designated parameter
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed CallableStatement, or if the URL being returned is not a valid URL on the Java platform
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setURL(java.lang.String, java.net.URL)
      • setURL

        public void setURL​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                           java.net.URL val)
                    throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.net.URL object. The driver converts this to an SQL DATALINK value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        setURL in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        val - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs; this method is called on a closed CallableStatement or if a URL is malformed
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getURL(int)
      • setNull

        public void setNull​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            int sqlType)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to SQL NULL.

        Note: You must specify the parameter's SQL type.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setNull in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - the SQL type code defined in java.sql.Types
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • setBoolean

        public void setBoolean​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                               boolean x)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java boolean value. The driver converts this to an SQL BIT or BOOLEAN value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setBoolean in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getBoolean(int)
      • setByte

        public void setByte​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            byte x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java byte value. The driver converts this to an SQL TINYINT value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setByte in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getByte(int)
      • setShort

        public void setShort​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             short x)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java short value. The driver converts this to an SQL SMALLINT value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setShort in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getShort(int)
      • setInt

        public void setInt​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                           int x)
                    throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java int value. The driver converts this to an SQL INTEGER value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setInt in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getInt(int)
      • setLong

        public void setLong​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            long x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java long value. The driver converts this to an SQL BIGINT value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setLong in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getLong(int)
      • setFloat

        public void setFloat​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             float x)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java float value. The driver converts this to an SQL FLOAT value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setFloat in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getFloat(int)
      • setDouble

        public void setDouble​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              double x)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java double value. The driver converts this to an SQL DOUBLE value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setDouble in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getDouble(int)
      • setBigDecimal

        public void setBigDecimal​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                  java.math.BigDecimal x)
                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.math.BigDecimal value. The driver converts this to an SQL NUMERIC value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setBigDecimal in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getBigDecimal(int, int)
      • setString

        public void setString​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.String x)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java String value. The driver converts this to an SQL VARCHAR or LONGVARCHAR value (depending on the argument's size relative to the driver's limits on VARCHAR values) when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getString(int)
      • setBytes

        public void setBytes​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             byte[] x)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Java array of bytes. The driver converts this to an SQL VARBINARY or LONGVARBINARY (depending on the argument's size relative to the driver's limits on VARBINARY values) when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setBytes in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getBytes(int)
      • setDate

        public void setDate​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Date x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Date value using the default time zone of the virtual machine that is running the application. The driver converts this to an SQL DATE value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getDate(int)
      • setTime

        public void setTime​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Time x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Time value. The driver converts this to an SQL TIME value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getTime(int)
      • setTimestamp

        public void setTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                 java.sql.Timestamp x)
                          throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Timestamp value. The driver converts this to an SQL TIMESTAMP value when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getTimestamp(int)
      • setAsciiStream

        public void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                   java.io.InputStream x,
                                   int length)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes. When a very large ASCII value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream. Data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from ASCII to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setAsciiStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the Java input stream that contains the ASCII parameter value
        length - the number of bytes in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • setBinaryStream

        public void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                    java.io.InputStream x,
                                    int length)
                             throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes. When a very large binary value is input to a LONGVARBINARY parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setBinaryStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the java input stream which contains the binary parameter value
        length - the number of bytes in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • setObject

        public void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.Object x,
                              int targetSqlType,
                              int scale)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.

        The given Java object will be converted to the given targetSqlType before being sent to the database. If the object has a custom mapping (is of a class implementing the interface SQLData), the JDBC driver should call the method SQLData.writeSQL to write it to the SQL data stream. If, on the other hand, the object is of a class implementing Ref, Blob, Clob, NClob, Struct, java.net.URL, or Array, the driver should pass it to the database as a value of the corresponding SQL type.

        Note that this method may be used to pass database- specific abstract data types.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the object containing the input parameter value
        targetSqlType - the SQL type (as defined in java.sql.Types) to be sent to the database. The scale argument may further qualify this type.
        scale - for java.sql.Types.DECIMAL or java.sql.Types.NUMERIC types, this is the number of digits after the decimal point. For all other types, this value will be ignored.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified targetSqlType
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        Types, getObject(int)
      • setObject

        public void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.Object x,
                              int targetSqlType)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object. This method is similar to setObject(String parameterName, Object x, int targetSqlType, int scaleOrLength), except that it assumes a scale of zero.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the object containing the input parameter value
        targetSqlType - the SQL type (as defined in java.sql.Types) to be sent to the database
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified targetSqlType
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getObject(int)
      • setObject

        public void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.Object x)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object.

        The JDBC specification specifies a standard mapping from Java Object types to SQL types. The given argument will be converted to the corresponding SQL type before being sent to the database.

        Note that this method may be used to pass database- specific abstract data types, by using a driver-specific Java type. If the object is of a class implementing the interface SQLData, the JDBC driver should call the method SQLData.writeSQL to write it to the SQL data stream. If, on the other hand, the object is of a class implementing Ref, Blob, Clob, NClob, Struct, java.net.URL, or Array, the driver should pass it to the database as a value of the corresponding SQL type.

        This method throws an exception if there is an ambiguity, for example, if the object is of a class implementing more than one of the interfaces named above.

        Note: Not all databases allow for a non-typed Null to be sent to the backend. For maximum portability, the setNull or the setObject(String parameterName, Object x, int sqlType) method should be used instead of setObject(String parameterName, Object x).

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the object containing the input parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed CallableStatement or if the given Object parameter is ambiguous
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getObject(int)
      • setCharacterStream

        public void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                       java.io.Reader reader,
                                       int length)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object, which is the given number of characters long. When a very large UNICODE value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.Reader object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from UNICODE to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        reader - the java.io.Reader object that contains the UNICODE data used as the designated parameter
        length - the number of characters in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • setDate

        public void setDate​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Date x,
                            java.util.Calendar cal)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Date value, using the given Calendar object. The driver uses the Calendar object to construct an SQL DATE value, which the driver then sends to the database. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the date taking into account a custom timezone. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone, which is that of the virtual machine running the application.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the date
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getDate(int)
      • setTime

        public void setTime​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Time x,
                            java.util.Calendar cal)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Time value, using the given Calendar object. The driver uses the Calendar object to construct an SQL TIME value, which the driver then sends to the database. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the time taking into account a custom timezone. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone, which is that of the virtual machine running the application.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the time
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getTime(int)
      • setTimestamp

        public void setTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                 java.sql.Timestamp x,
                                 java.util.Calendar cal)
                          throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Timestamp value, using the given Calendar object. The driver uses the Calendar object to construct an SQL TIMESTAMP value, which the driver then sends to the database. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the timestamp taking into account a custom timezone. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone, which is that of the virtual machine running the application.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the timestamp
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        getTimestamp(int)
      • setNull

        public void setNull​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            int sqlType,
                            java.lang.String typeName)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to SQL NULL. This version of the method setNull should be used for user-defined types and REF type parameters. Examples of user-defined types include: STRUCT, DISTINCT, JAVA_OBJECT, and named array types.

        Note: To be portable, applications must give the SQL type code and the fully-qualified SQL type name when specifying a NULL user-defined or REF parameter. In the case of a user-defined type the name is the type name of the parameter itself. For a REF parameter, the name is the type name of the referenced type.

        Although it is intended for user-defined and Ref parameters, this method may be used to set a null parameter of any JDBC type. If the parameter does not have a user-defined or REF type, the given typeName is ignored.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setNull in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - a value from java.sql.Types
        typeName - the fully-qualified name of an SQL user-defined type; ignored if the parameter is not a user-defined type or SQL REF value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • getString

        public java.lang.String getString​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC CHAR, VARCHAR, or LONGVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.

        For the fixed-length type JDBC CHAR, the String object returned has exactly the same value the SQL CHAR value had in the database, including any padding added by the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setString(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
      • getBoolean

        public boolean getBoolean​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC BIT or BOOLEAN parameter as a boolean in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBoolean in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is false.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setBoolean(java.lang.String, boolean)
      • getByte

        public byte getByte​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC TINYINT parameter as a byte in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getByte in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setByte(java.lang.String, byte)
      • getShort

        public short getShort​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC SMALLINT parameter as a short in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getShort in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setShort(java.lang.String, short)
      • getInt

        public int getInt​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC INTEGER parameter as an int in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getInt in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setInt(java.lang.String, int)
      • getLong

        public long getLong​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC BIGINT parameter as a long in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getLong in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setLong(java.lang.String, long)
      • getFloat

        public float getFloat​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC FLOAT parameter as a float in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getFloat in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setFloat(java.lang.String, float)
      • getDouble

        public double getDouble​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                         throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC DOUBLE parameter as a double in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDouble in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is 0.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setDouble(java.lang.String, double)
      • getBytes

        public byte[] getBytes​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC BINARY or VARBINARY parameter as an array of byte values in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBytes in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setBytes(java.lang.String, byte[])
      • getDate

        public java.sql.Date getDate​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setDate(java.lang.String, java.sql.Date)
      • getTime

        public java.sql.Time getTime​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setTime(java.lang.String, java.sql.Time)
      • getTimestamp

        public java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        The JDBC specification for this method is vague. HSQLDB interprets the specification as follows:
        1. If the SQL type of the column is WITH TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp object is the UTC of the SQL value without modification.
        2. If the SQL type of the column is WITHOUT TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp will represent the correct timestamp for the time zone (including daylight saving time) of the SQL session.
        Specified by:
        getTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setTimestamp(java.lang.String, java.sql.Timestamp)
      • getObject

        public java.lang.Object getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a parameter as an Object in the Java programming language. If the value is an SQL NULL, the driver returns a Java null.

        This method returns a Java object whose type corresponds to the JDBC type that was registered for this parameter using the method registerOutParameter. By registering the target JDBC type as java.sql.Types.OTHER, this method can be used to read database-specific abstract data types.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        A java.lang.Object holding the OUT parameter value.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        Types, setObject(java.lang.String, java.lang.Object, int, int)
      • getBigDecimal

        public java.math.BigDecimal getBigDecimal​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC NUMERIC parameter as a java.math.BigDecimal object with as many digits to the right of the decimal point as the value contains.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBigDecimal in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value in full precision. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setBigDecimal(java.lang.String, java.math.BigDecimal)
      • getObject

        public java.lang.Object getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                          java.util.Map<java.lang.String,​java.lang.Class<?>> map)
                                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterName and uses map for the custom mapping of the parameter value.

        This method returns a Java object whose type corresponds to the JDBC type that was registered for this parameter using the method registerOutParameter. By registering the target JDBC type as java.sql.Types.OTHER, this method can be used to read database-specific abstract data types.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        map - the mapping from SQL type names to Java classes
        Returns:
        a java.lang.Object holding the OUT parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setObject(java.lang.String, java.lang.Object, int, int)
      • getRef

        public java.sql.Ref getRef​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC REF(&lt;structured-type&gt;) parameter as a Ref object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getRef in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Ref object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • getBlob

        public java.sql.Blob getBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC BLOB parameter as a Blob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getBlob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Blob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • getClob

        public java.sql.Clob getClob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC CLOB parameter as a Clob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a Clob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • getArray

        public java.sql.Array getArray​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC ARRAY parameter as an Array object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getArray in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as an Array object in Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
      • getDate

        public java.sql.Date getDate​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                     java.util.Calendar cal)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATE parameter as a java.sql.Date object, using the given Calendar object to construct the date. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the date taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getDate in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the date
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setDate(java.lang.String, java.sql.Date)
      • getTime

        public java.sql.Time getTime​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                     java.util.Calendar cal)
                              throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIME parameter as a java.sql.Time object, using the given Calendar object to construct the time. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the time taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getTime in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the time
        Returns:
        the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setTime(java.lang.String, java.sql.Time)
      • getTimestamp

        public java.sql.Timestamp getTimestamp​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                               java.util.Calendar cal)
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC TIMESTAMP parameter as a java.sql.Timestamp object, using the given Calendar object to construct the Timestamp object. With a Calendar object, the driver can calculate the timestamp taking into account a custom timezone and locale. If no Calendar object is specified, the driver uses the default timezone and locale.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        The JDBC specification for this method is vague. HSQLDB interprets the specification as follows:
        1. If the SQL type of the column is WITH TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp object is the UTC of the SQL value without modification. In other words, the Calendar object is not used.
        2. If the SQL type of the column is WITHOUT TIME ZONE, then the UTC value of the returned java.sql.Timestamp will represent the correct timestamp for the time zone (including daylight saving time) of the given Calendar object.
        3. In this case, if the cal argument is null, then the default Calendar of the JVM is used, which results in the same Object as one returned by the getTimestamp() methods without the Calendar parameter.
        Specified by:
        getTimestamp in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        cal - the Calendar object the driver will use to construct the timestamp
        Returns:
        the parameter value. If the value is SQL NULL, the result is null.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setTimestamp(java.lang.String, java.sql.Timestamp)
      • getURL

        public java.net.URL getURL​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC DATALINK parameter as a java.net.URL object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getURL in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a java.net.URL object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed CallableStatement, or if there is a problem with the URL
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.4, HSQLDB 1.7.0
        See Also:
        setURL(java.lang.String, java.net.URL)
      • getRowId

        public java.sql.RowId getRowId​(int parameterIndex)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ROWID parameter as a java.sql.RowId object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getRowId in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2,...
        Returns:
        a RowId object that represents the JDBC ROWID value is used as the designated parameter. If the parameter contains a SQL NULL, then a null value is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getRowId

        public java.sql.RowId getRowId​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC ROWID parameter as a java.sql.RowId object.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getRowId in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        a RowId object that represents the JDBC ROWID value is used as the designated parameter. If the parameter contains a SQL NULL, then a null value is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setRowId

        public void setRowId​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             java.sql.RowId x)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.RowId object. The driver converts this to a SQL ROWID when it sends it to the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        setRowId in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNString

        public void setNString​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                               java.lang.String value)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given String object. The driver converts this to a SQL NCHAR or NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR
        Specified by:
        setNString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set
        value - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNCharacterStream

        public void setNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                        java.io.Reader value,
                                        long length)
                                 throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. The Reader reads the data till end-of-file is reached. The driver does the necessary conversion from Java character format to the national character set in the database.
        Specified by:
        setNCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set
        value - the parameter value
        length - the number of characters in the parameter data.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNClob

        public void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             java.sql.NClob value)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a java.sql.NClob object. The object implements the java.sql.NClob interface. This NClob object maps to a SQL NCLOB.
        Specified by:
        setNClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set
        value - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setClob

        public void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.io.Reader reader,
                            long length)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. The reader must contain the number of characters specified by length otherwise a SQLException will be generated when the CallableStatement is executed. This method differs from the setCharacterStream (int, Reader, int) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a CLOB. When the setCharacterStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGVARCHAR or a CLOB
        Specified by:
        setClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set
        reader - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        length - the number of characters in the parameter data.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the length specified is less than zero; a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setBlob

        public void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.io.InputStream inputStream,
                            long length)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a InputStream object. The inputstream must contain the number of characters specified by length, otherwise a SQLException will be generated when the CallableStatement is executed. This method differs from the setBinaryStream (int, InputStream, int) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a BLOB. When the setBinaryStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGVARBINARY or a BLOB
        Specified by:
        setBlob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set the second is 2, ...
        inputStream - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        length - the number of bytes in the parameter data.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the length specified is less than zero; if the number of bytes in the InputStream does not match the specified length; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNClob

        public void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             java.io.Reader reader,
                             long length)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. The reader must contain the number of characters specified by length otherwise a SQLException will be generated when the CallableStatement is executed. This method differs from the setCharacterStream (int, Reader, int) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a NCLOB. When the setCharacterStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGNVARCHAR or a NCLOB
        Specified by:
        setNClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter to be set
        reader - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        length - the number of characters in the parameter data.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the length specified is less than zero; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getNClob

        public java.sql.NClob getNClob​(int parameterIndex)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated JDBC NCLOB parameter as a java.sql.NClob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a NClob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getNClob

        public java.sql.NClob getNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of a JDBC NCLOB parameter as a java.sql.NClob object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        the parameter value as a NClob object in the Java programming language. If the value was SQL NULL, the value null is returned.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setSQLXML

        public void setSQLXML​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.sql.SQLXML xmlObject)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.SQLXML object. The driver converts this to an SQL XML value when it sends it to the database.
        Specified by:
        setSQLXML in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        xmlObject - a SQLXML object that maps an SQL XML value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs; this method is called on a closed CallableStatement or the java.xml.transform.Result, Writer or OutputStream has not been closed for the SQLXML object
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getSQLXML

        public java.sql.SQLXML getSQLXML​(int parameterIndex)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated SQL XML parameter as a java.sql.SQLXML object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getSQLXML in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - index of the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, ...
        Returns:
        a SQLXML object that maps an SQL XML value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getSQLXML

        public java.sql.SQLXML getSQLXML​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated SQL XML parameter as a java.sql.SQLXML object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getSQLXML in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        a SQLXML object that maps an SQL XML value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getNString

        public java.lang.String getNString​(int parameterIndex)
                                    throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.

        For the fixed-length type JDBC NCHAR, the String object returned has exactly the same value the SQL NCHAR value had in the database, including any padding added by the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - index of the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, ...
        Returns:
        a String object that maps an NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
        See Also:
        setNString(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
      • getNString

        public java.lang.String getNString​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                    throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR parameter as a String in the Java programming language.

        For the fixed-length type JDBC NCHAR, the String object returned has exactly the same value the SQL NCHAR value had in the database, including any padding added by the database.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNString in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        a String object that maps an NCHAR, NVARCHAR or LONGNVARCHAR value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
        See Also:
        setNString(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
      • getNCharacterStream

        public java.io.Reader getNCharacterStream​(int parameterIndex)
                                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language. It is intended for use when accessing NCHAR,NVARCHAR and LONGNVARCHAR parameters.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, ...
        Returns:
        a java.io.Reader object that contains the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the value returned is null in the Java programming language.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getNCharacterStream

        public java.io.Reader getNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                           throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language. It is intended for use when accessing NCHAR,NVARCHAR and LONGNVARCHAR parameters.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB does not yet support this feature.

        Calling this method always throws an SQLException.

        Specified by:
        getNCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        a java.io.Reader object that contains the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the value returned is null in the Java programming language
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getCharacterStream

        public java.io.Reader getCharacterStream​(int parameterIndex)
                                          throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, ...
        Returns:
        a java.io.Reader object that contains the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the value returned is null in the Java programming language.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getCharacterStream

        public java.io.Reader getCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName)
                                          throws java.sql.SQLException
        Retrieves the value of the designated parameter as a java.io.Reader object in the Java programming language.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this feature.
        Specified by:
        getCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        Returns:
        a java.io.Reader object that contains the parameter value; if the value is SQL NULL, the value returned is null in the Java programming language
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setBlob

        public void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Blob x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Blob object. The driver converts this to an SQL BLOB value when it sends it to the database.
        Specified by:
        setBlob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - a Blob object that maps an SQL BLOB value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setClob

        public void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.sql.Clob x)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given java.sql.Clob object. The driver converts this to an SQL CLOB value when it sends it to the database.
        Specified by:
        setClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - a Clob object that maps an SQL CLOB value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setAsciiStream

        public void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                   java.io.InputStream x,
                                   long length)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes. When a very large ASCII value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream. Data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from ASCII to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Specified by:
        setAsciiStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the Java input stream that contains the ASCII parameter value
        length - the number of bytes in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setBinaryStream

        public void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                    java.io.InputStream x,
                                    long length)
                             throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream, which will have the specified number of bytes. When a very large binary value is input to a LONGVARBINARY parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Specified by:
        setBinaryStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the java input stream which contains the binary parameter value
        length - the number of bytes in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setCharacterStream

        public void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                       java.io.Reader reader,
                                       long length)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object, which is the given number of characters long. When a very large UNICODE value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.Reader object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from UNICODE to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Specified by:
        setCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        reader - the java.io.Reader object that contains the UNICODE data used as the designated parameter
        length - the number of characters in the stream
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setAsciiStream

        public void setAsciiStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                   java.io.InputStream x)
                            throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream. When a very large ASCII value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream. Data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from ASCII to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setAsciiStream which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setAsciiStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the Java input stream that contains the ASCII parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setBinaryStream

        public void setBinaryStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                    java.io.InputStream x)
                             throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given input stream. When a very large binary value is input to a LONGVARBINARY parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.InputStream object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setBinaryStream which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setBinaryStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the java input stream which contains the binary parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setCharacterStream

        public void setCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                       java.io.Reader reader)
                                throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to the given Reader object. When a very large UNICODE value is input to a LONGVARCHAR parameter, it may be more practical to send it via a java.io.Reader object. The data will be read from the stream as needed until end-of-file is reached. The JDBC driver will do any necessary conversion from UNICODE to the database char format.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setCharacterStream which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        reader - the java.io.Reader object that contains the Unicode data
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNCharacterStream

        public void setNCharacterStream​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                        java.io.Reader value)
                                 throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. The Reader reads the data till end-of-file is reached. The driver does the necessary conversion from Java character format to the national character set in the database.

        Note: This stream object can either be a standard Java stream object or your own subclass that implements the standard interface.

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setNCharacterStream which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setNCharacterStream in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        value - the parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs; or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setClob

        public void setClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.io.Reader reader)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. This method differs from the setCharacterStream (int, Reader) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a CLOB. When the setCharacterStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGVARCHAR or a CLOB

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setClob which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        reader - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setBlob

        public void setBlob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                            java.io.InputStream inputStream)
                     throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to an InputStream object. This method differs from the setBinaryStream (int, InputStream) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a BLOB. When the setBinaryStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGVARBINARY or a BLOB

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setBlob which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setBlob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        inputStream - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • setNClob

        public void setNClob​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                             java.io.Reader reader)
                      throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the designated parameter to a Reader object. This method differs from the setCharacterStream (int, Reader) method because it informs the driver that the parameter value should be sent to the server as a NCLOB. When the setCharacterStream method is used, the driver may have to do extra work to determine whether the parameter data should be sent to the server as a LONGNVARCHAR or a NCLOB

        Note: Consult your JDBC driver documentation to determine if it might be more efficient to use a version of setNClob which takes a length parameter.

        Specified by:
        setNClob in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        reader - An object that contains the data to set the parameter value to.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if the driver does not support national character sets; if the driver can detect that a data conversion error could occur; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method JDK 1.6, HSQLDB 2.0
      • getObject

        public <T> T getObject​(int parameterIndex,
                               java.lang.Class<T> type)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterIndex and will convert from the SQL type of the parameter to the requested Java data type, if the conversion is supported. If the conversion is not supported or null is specified for the type, a SQLException is thrown.

        At a minimum, an implementation must support the conversions defined in Appendix B, Table B-3 and conversion of appropriate user defined SQL types to a Java type which implements SQLData, or Struct. Additional conversions may be supported and are vendor defined.

        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Type Parameters:
        T - the type of the class modeled by this Class object
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        type - Class representing the Java data type to convert the designated parameter to.
        Returns:
        an instance of type holding the OUT parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if conversion is not supported, type is null or another error occurs. The getCause() method of the exception may provide a more detailed exception, for example, if a conversion error occurs
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.7, HSQLDB 2.0.1
      • getObject

        public <T> T getObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                               java.lang.Class<T> type)
                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Returns an object representing the value of OUT parameter parameterName and will convert from the SQL type of the parameter to the requested Java data type, if the conversion is supported. If the conversion is not supported or null is specified for the type, a SQLException is thrown.

        At a minimum, an implementation must support the conversions defined in Appendix B, Table B-3 and conversion of appropriate user defined SQL types to a Java type which implements SQLData, or Struct. Additional conversions may be supported and are vendor defined.

        Specified by:
        getObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Type Parameters:
        T - the type of the class modeled by this Class object
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        type - Class representing the Java data type to convert the designated parameter to.
        Returns:
        an instance of type holding the OUT parameter value
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if conversion is not supported, type is null or another error occurs. The getCause() method of the exception may provide a more detailed exception, for example, if a conversion error occurs
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        JDK 1.7, HSQLDB 2.0.1
      • setObject

        public void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.Object x,
                              java.sql.SQLType targetSqlType,
                              int scaleOrLength)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object. If the second argument is an InputStream then the stream must contain the number of bytes specified by scaleOrLength. If the second argument is a Reader then the reader must contain the number of characters specified by scaleOrLength. If these conditions are not true the driver will generate a SQLException when the prepared statement is executed.

        The given Java object will be converted to the given targetSqlType before being sent to the database. If the object has a custom mapping (is of a class implementing the interface SQLData), the JDBC driver should call the method SQLData.writeSQL to write it to the SQL data stream. If, on the other hand, the object is of a class implementing Ref, Blob, Clob, NClob, Struct, java.net.URL, or Array, the driver should pass it to the database as a value of the corresponding SQL type.

        Note that this method may be used to pass database-specific abstract data types.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        setObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the object containing the input parameter value
        targetSqlType - the SQL type to be sent to the database. The scale argument may further qualify this type.
        scaleOrLength - for java.sql.JDBCType.DECIMAL or java.sql.JDBCType.NUMERIC types, this is the number of digits after the decimal point. For Java Object types InputStream and Reader, this is the length of the data in the stream or reader. For all other types, this value will be ignored.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement or if the Java Object specified by x is an InputStream or Reader object and the value of the scale parameter is less than zero
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified targetSqlType
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • setObject

        public void setObject​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                              java.lang.Object x,
                              java.sql.SQLType targetSqlType)
                       throws java.sql.SQLException
        Sets the value of the designated parameter with the given object. This method is similar to setObject(String parameterName, Object x, SQLType targetSqlType, int scaleOrLength), except that it assumes a scale of zero.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        setObject in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        x - the object containing the input parameter value
        targetSqlType - the SQL type to be sent to the database
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified targetSqlType
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the OUT parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to the JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        If the JDBC type expected to be returned to this output parameter is specific to this particular database, sqlType may be JDBCType.OTHER or a SQLType that is supported by the JDBC driver. The method getObject(int) retrieves the value.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter. If the parameter is of JDBC type JDBCType.NUMERIC or JDBCType.DECIMAL, the version of registerOutParameter that accepts a scale value should be used.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType,
                                         int scale)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the parameter in ordinal position parameterIndex to be of JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        This version of registerOutParameter should be used when the parameter is of JDBC type JDBCType.NUMERIC or JDBCType.DECIMAL.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2, and so on
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter.
        scale - the desired number of digits to the right of the decimal point. It must be greater than or equal to zero.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(int parameterIndex,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType,
                                         java.lang.String typeName)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the designated output parameter. This version of the method registerOutParameter should be used for a user-defined or REF output parameter. Examples of user-defined types include: STRUCT, DISTINCT, JAVA_OBJECT, and named array types.

        All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        For a user-defined parameter, the fully-qualified SQL type name of the parameter should also be given, while a REF parameter requires that the fully-qualified type name of the referenced type be given. A JDBC driver that does not need the type code and type name information may ignore it. To be portable, however, applications should always provide these values for user-defined and REF parameters. Although it is intended for user-defined and REF parameters, this method may be used to register a parameter of any JDBC type. If the parameter does not have a user-defined or REF type, the typeName parameter is ignored.

        Note: When reading the value of an out parameter, you must use the getter method whose Java type corresponds to the parameter's registered SQL type.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterIndex - the first parameter is 1, the second is 2,...
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter.
        typeName - the fully-qualified name of an SQL structured type
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if the parameterIndex is not valid; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the OUT parameter named parameterName to the JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        If the JDBC type expected to be returned to this output parameter is specific to this particular database, sqlType should be JDBCType.OTHER or a SQLType that is supported by the JDBC driver. The method getObject(int) retrieves the value.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter. If the parameter is of JDBC type JDBCType.NUMERIC or JDBCType.DECIMAL, the version of registerOutParameter that accepts a scale value should be used.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType,
                                         int scale)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the parameter named parameterName to be of JDBC type sqlType. All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        The JDBC type specified by sqlType for an OUT parameter determines the Java type that must be used in the get method to read the value of that parameter.

        This version of registerOutParameter should be used when the parameter is of JDBC type JDBCType.NUMERIC or JDBCType.DECIMAL.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter.
        scale - the desired number of digits to the right of the decimal point. It must be greater than or equal to zero.
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • registerOutParameter

        public void registerOutParameter​(java.lang.String parameterName,
                                         java.sql.SQLType sqlType,
                                         java.lang.String typeName)
                                  throws java.sql.SQLException
        Registers the designated output parameter. This version of the method registerOutParameter should be used for a user-named or REF output parameter. Examples of user-named types include: STRUCT, DISTINCT, JAVA_OBJECT, and named array types.

        All OUT parameters must be registered before a stored procedure is executed.

        For a user-named parameter the fully-qualified SQL type name of the parameter should also be given, while a REF parameter requires that the fully-qualified type name of the referenced type be given. A JDBC driver that does not need the type code and type name information may ignore it. To be portable, however, applications should always provide these values for user-named and REF parameters. Although it is intended for user-named and REF parameters, this method may be used to register a parameter of any JDBC type. If the parameter does not have a user-named or REF type, the typeName parameter is ignored.

        Note: When reading the value of an out parameter, you must use the getXXX method whose Java type XXX corresponds to the parameter's registered SQL type.

        The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException

        Specified by:
        registerOutParameter in interface java.sql.CallableStatement
        Parameters:
        parameterName - the name of the parameter
        sqlType - the JDBC type code defined by SQLType to use to register the OUT Parameter.
        typeName - the fully-qualified name of an SQL structured type
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if parameterName does not correspond to a named parameter; if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed CallableStatement
        java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support the specified sqlType or if the JDBC driver does not support this method
        Since:
        1.8
        See Also:
        JDBCType, SQLType
      • close

        public void close()
                   throws java.sql.SQLException
        Does the specialized work required to free this object's resources and that of its parent classes.
        Specified by:
        close in interface java.lang.AutoCloseable
        Specified by:
        close in interface java.sql.Statement
        Overrides:
        close in class JDBCPreparedStatement
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if a database access error occurs
      • closeOnCompletion

        public void closeOnCompletion()
                               throws java.sql.SQLException
        Specifies that this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed. If execution of the Statement does not produce any result sets, this method has no effect.

        Note: Multiple calls to closeOnCompletion do not toggle the effect on this Statement. However, a call to closeOnCompletion does effect both the subsequent execution of statements, and statements that currently have open, dependent, result sets.

        Specified by:
        closeOnCompletion in interface java.sql.Statement
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
      • isCloseOnCompletion

        public boolean isCloseOnCompletion()
                                    throws java.sql.SQLException
        Returns a value indicating whether this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed.
        Specified by:
        isCloseOnCompletion in interface java.sql.Statement
        Returns:
        true if the Statement will be closed when all of its dependent result sets are closed; false otherwise
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
      • executeQuery

        public java.sql.ResultSet executeQuery()
                                        throws java.sql.SQLException
        Executes the SQL query in this PreparedStatement object and returns the ResultSet object generated by the query.

        HSQLDB-Specific Information:

        HSQLDB supports this method for a call to a FUNCTION that returns a result. For a PROCEDURE that returns one or more results, the first result is returned.

        If the FUNCTION or PROCEDURE does not return a ResultSet, an SQLException is thrown.

        Specified by:
        executeQuery in interface java.sql.PreparedStatement
        Overrides:
        executeQuery in class JDBCPreparedStatement
        Returns:
        a ResultSet object that contains the data produced by the query; never null
        Throws:
        java.sql.SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed PreparedStatement or the SQL statement does not return a ResultSet object