OpenMS  2.7.0
Enumerations | Functions
OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper Namespace Reference

Enumerations

enum class  SqlState { SQL_ROW , SQL_DONE , SQL_ERROR }
 

Functions

template<typename T >
UInt64 clearSignBit (T)
 
template<>
UInt64 clearSignBit (UInt64 value)
 only allow UInt64 specialization More...
 
SqlState nextRow (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, SqlState current=SqlState::SQL_ROW)
 retrieves the next row from a prepared statement More...
 
template<typename ValueType >
bool extractValue (ValueType *, sqlite3_stmt *, int)
 Extracts a specific value from an SQL column. More...
 
template<>
bool extractValue< double > (double *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
template<>
bool extractValue< int > (int *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
template<>
bool extractValue< Int64 > (Int64 *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
template<>
bool extractValue< String > (String *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
template<>
bool extractValue< std::string > (std::string *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
bool extractValueIntStr (String *dst, sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 Special case where an integer should be stored in a String field. More...
 
double extractDouble (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
float extractFloat (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 convenience function; note: in SQL there is no float, just double. So this might be narrowing. More...
 
int extractInt (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
Int64 extractInt64 (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
String extractString (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
char extractChar (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 
bool extractBool (sqlite3_stmt *stmt, int pos)
 

Enumeration Type Documentation

◆ SqlState

enum SqlState
strong
Enumerator
SQL_ROW 
SQL_DONE 
SQL_ERROR 

includes SQLITE_BUSY, SQLITE_ERROR, SQLITE_MISUSE

Function Documentation

◆ clearSignBit() [1/2]

UInt64 OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::clearSignBit ( )

Sql only stores signed 64bit ints, so we remove the highest bit, because some/most of our sql-insert routines first convert to string, which might yield an uint64 which cannot be represented as int64, and sqlite would attempt to store it as double(!), which will loose precision

◆ clearSignBit() [2/2]

UInt64 OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::clearSignBit ( UInt64  value)
inline

only allow UInt64 specialization

◆ extractValue()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue ( ValueType *  ,
sqlite3_stmt *  ,
int   
)

Extracts a specific value from an SQL column.

dst Destination (where to store the value) stmt Sqlite statement object pos Column position

For example, to extract a specific integer from column 5 of an SQL statement, one can use:

sqlite3_stmt* stmt; sqlite3* db; SqliteConnector::prepareStatement(db, &stmt, select_sql); sqlite3_step(stmt);

double target; while (sqlite3_column_type(stmt, 0) != SQLITE_NULL) { extractValue<double>(&target, stmt, 5); sqlite3_step( stmt ); } sqlite3_finalize(stmt);

◆ extractValue< double >()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue< double > ( double *  dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

◆ extractValue< int >()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue< int > ( int *  dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

◆ extractValue< Int64 >()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue< Int64 > ( Int64 dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

◆ extractValue< std::string >()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue< std::string > ( std::string *  dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

◆ extractValue< String >()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValue< String > ( String dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

◆ extractValueIntStr()

bool OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::extractValueIntStr ( String dst,
sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
int  pos 
)

Special case where an integer should be stored in a String field.

◆ nextRow()

SqlState OpenMS::Internal::SqliteHelper::nextRow ( sqlite3_stmt *  stmt,
SqlState  current = SqlState::SQL_ROW 
)

retrieves the next row from a prepared statement

If you receive 'SqlState::SQL_DONE', do NOT query nextRow() again, because you might enter an infinite loop! To avoid oversights, you can pass the old return value into the function again and get an Exception which will tell you that there is buggy code!

Parameters
currentReturn value of the previous call to this function.
Returns
one of SqlState::SQL_ROW or SqlState::SQL_DONE
Exceptions
Exception::SqlOperationFailedif state would be SqlState::ERROR