1

I'm doing update method in my DB helper class. But I can't resolve where i've done a mistake. There is no errors in log, but my field in table doesn't update.

public void updateJSON(long id, String newString) {
    ContentValues dataToInsert = new ContentValues();
    dataToInsert.put("cityJSON", newString);
    String where = "id=?";
    String[] whereArgs = new String[]{String.valueOf(id)};
    this.db.update(TABLE_NAME, dataToInsert, where, whereArgs); 
}

I'm transferring json string (with commas, brackets etc) and ID of the field.

3
  • 2
    Are you sure that there's already a registry with this id in the table? Dec 7, 2012 at 11:34
  • @FlávioFaria yes, I'm sure :)
    – user1834249
    Dec 7, 2012 at 11:35
  • Are you sure the column is called id? Normally on Android it's _id. Dec 7, 2012 at 12:13

4 Answers 4

0

instead of

String[] whereArgs = new String[]{String.valueOf(id)};

try

String[] whereArgs = { Long.valueOf(id).toString() };

that works for me.

3
  • @njzk2: whereArgs is a array of String. it gets initially populated with the String representation of the variable id (which is a long). note that i had to change the variable from a long to a String.
    – David M
    Dec 7, 2012 at 13:31
  • Yes, but i don't see how String.valueOf(long) is different from Long.toString(), mostly since the doc says : "String valueOf(long l) (...) The representation is exactly the one returned by the Long.toString method of one argument."
    – njzk2
    Dec 7, 2012 at 13:34
  • @njzk2: basically i looked at my code (that works) against their code (which doesn't) and posted the diff. i would now love to see both in the debugger and i think it would be obvious. or not. ;-)
    – David M
    Dec 7, 2012 at 13:42
0

Maybe you want to try this code: String mString = Long.toString(id);

0
0

I think use this code,

this.db.update(TABLE_NAME, dataToInsert, COLUMNNAME + "=?" ,
            new String[]{String.valueOf(id)});
0

db.update(...) method returns the number of rows affected. You can show this value in log. If number of rows that was affected equals zero :

  1. maybe there is something wrong with row names?
  2. maybe db declared as readableDatabase instead of writableDatabase? i mean

SQLiteDatabase db = getReadableDatabase();

instead of getWritableDatabase()?

EDITED:

You can write helper function just to be 100% sure that row (with id that you need) is actually exists in database:

public boolean isItemExistsInDB( int yourId){
    String selectQuery = "SELECT  * FROM " + 
                         TABLE_NAME+ " 
                         WHERE " + " id = '" + yourId+ "'";

    SQLiteDatabase db = this.getWritableDatabase();
    Cursor cursor = db.rawQuery(selectQuery, null);

    //count of rows with "id=yourId"
    int count= cursor.getCount();

    Log.d(getClass().getSimpleName(), "count="+count);

    if(count>0){
        return true;
    }
    else{
         //there is no item with "id=yourId"
        return false;
    }
}
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  • OpenHelper openHelper = new OpenHelper(this.context); this.db = openHelper.getWritableDatabase();
    – user1834249
    Dec 7, 2012 at 11:59
  • And yes, it returns zero rows. But there can't be mistake with row id. The mistake is somewhere about the query..
    – user1834249
    Dec 7, 2012 at 12:04

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