OTL 4.0, Example 593 (otl_datetime)

This example demonstrates simple INSERT and SELECT with EDB DATEs and otl_datetime.

Source Code

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

#include <stdio.h>
#define OTL_ODBC_ENTERPRISEDB // Compile OTL 4.0/EnterpriseDB-ODBC
// Uncomment the #define below when used in Linux / Unix
//#define OTL_ODBC_UNIX
#include <otlv4.h> // include the OTL 4.0 header file

otl_connect db; // connect object

void insert(void)
// insert rows into table
{
otl_stream o(50, // buffer size
"insert into test_tab2 values(:f1<int>,:f2<timestamp>)",
// SQL statement
db // connect object
);

otl_datetime tm;

for(int i=1;i<=10;++i){
tm.year=2008;
tm.month=10;
tm.day=19;
tm.hour=23;
tm.minute=12;
tm.second=12;
o<<i<<tm;
}
}

void select(void)
{
otl_stream i(50, // buffer size
"select * from test_tab2 where f2=:f2<timestamp>",
// SELECT statement
db // connect object
);
// create select stream

int f1;
otl_datetime tm,f2;

tm.year=2008;
tm.month=10;
tm.day=19;
tm.hour=23;
tm.minute=12;
tm.second=12;

i<<tm; // assigning :f2 = tm
// SELECT automatically executes when all input variables are
// assigned. First portion of out rows is fetched to the buffer

while(!i.eof()){ // while not end-of-data
i>>f1>>f2;
cout<<"f1="<<f1<<", f2="<<f2.month<<"/"<<f2.day<<"/"
<<f2.year<<" "<<f2.hour<<":"<<f2.minute<<":"
<<f2.second<<endl;
}

}
int main()
{
otl_connect::otl_initialize(); // initialize ODBC environment
try{

db.rlogon("scott/tiger@edbsql"); // connect to EDB

otl_cursor::direct_exec
(
db,
"drop table test_tab2",
otl_exception::disabled // disable OTL exceptions
); // drop table

otl_cursor::direct_exec
(
db,
"create table test_tab2(f1 int, f2 date)"
); // create table

insert(); // insert records into table
select(); // select records from table

}

catch(otl_exception& p){ // intercept OTL exceptions
cerr<<p.msg<<endl; // print out error message
cerr<<p.stm_text<<endl; // print out SQL that caused the error
cerr<<p.var_info<<endl; // print out the variable that caused the error
}

db.logoff(); // disconnect from EDB

return 0;

}

Output

f1=1, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=2, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=3, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=4, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=5, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=6, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=7, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=8, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=9, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12
f1=10, f2=10/19/2008 23:12:12

Examples Contents Go Home

Copyright © 1996-2024, Sergei Kuchin, email: skuchin@gmail.com, skuchin@gmail.com .

Permission to use, copy, modify and redistribute this document for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.