Simple Database Access
The Connect
example did not do much. It simply
showed you how to connect to a database. A database connection is
useless unless you actually talk to the database. The simplest forms
of database access are SELECT
,
INSERT
, UPDATE
, and
DELETE
statements. Under the JDBC API, you use
your database Connection
instance to create
Statement
instances. A Statement
naturally represents any kind of SQL statement. Example 14.4 shows how to insert a row into a database
using a Statement
.
Example 14-4. Inserting a Row into mSQL Using a JDBC Statement Object
import java.sql.*; import java.util.*; public class Insert { // We are inserting into a table that has two columns: test_id (int) // and test_val (char(55)) // args[0] is the test_id and args[1] the test_val public static void main(String argv[]) { Connection con = null; ResourceBundle bundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle("SelectResource"); try { String url = bundle.getString("URL"); Statement stmt; Class.forName(bundle.getString("Driver")); // here is where the connection is made con = DriverManager.getConnection(url, "borg", ""); stmt = con.createStatement(); stmt.executeUpdate("INSERT INTO test (test_id, test_val) " + "VALUES(" + args[0] + ", '" + args[1] + "')"); } catch( SQLException e ) { e.printStackTrace(); } finally { if( con != null ) { try { con.close(); } catch( Exception e ) { } } } } }
If this were a real application, we would of course verified that the
user entered an INT
for the
test_id
, that it was not ...
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