Oracle Objects for OLE
Release 9.2

Part Number A95895-01
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OraDynaset Object

See Also
Properties
Methods

Description

An OraDynaset object permits browsing and updating of data created from a SQL SELECT statement.

Remarks

An OraDynaset object represents the result set of a SQL SELECT query or a PL/SQL cursor variable returned from a stored procedure or function. It is essentially a client-side scrollable and updatable cursor that allows for browsing the set of rows generated by the query it executes. It is created by the CreateDynaset or CreateCustomDynaset method of an OraDatabase interface. An OraDynaset object can be used to scroll result sets that contain instances of Relational as well as Object-Relational columns such as (VARRAYs, Nested Tables, Objects, REFs, and LOBs and BFILEs).

This object provides transparent mirroring of database operations, such as updates. When data is updated via the Update method, the local mirror image of the query is updated so that the data appears to have been changed without reevaluating the query. The same procedure is used automatically when records are added to the dynaset. Integrity checking is performed to ensure that the mirrored image of the data always matches the actual data present on the Oracle database. This integrity checking is performed only when necessary (such as just before updates occur).

During create and refresh, OraDynaset objects automatically bind all relevant, enabled, input parameters to the specified SQL statement, using the parameter names as placeholders in the SQL statement. This can simplify dynamic query building and increase the efficiency of multiple queries using the same SQL statement with varying WHERE clauses.

When you use Oracle Objects for OLE, locks are not placed on data until an Edit method is executed. The Edit method attempts to obtain a lock using "SELECT ... FOR UPDATE" on the current record of the dynaset. This is done as late as possible to minimize the time that locks are placed on the records. The Edit method can fail for several reasons:

· The SQL query violates the Oracle SQL updatability rules. For example: using calculated columns or table joins.

· The user does not have the privileges needed to obtain a lock.

· The record has been locked already by another user. Note: the OpenDatabase method has an option so that you can decide whether to wait on locks.

For more information, see "SELECT ... FOR UPDATE".


 
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