I've seen this line in a sample application for using a commercial JDBC driver:
Class.forName("name.of.a.jcdb.driver")
The return value is not used.
What purpose does this line serve?
|
I've seen this line in a sample application for using a commercial JDBC driver:
The return value is not used. What purpose does this line serve? |
|||||||
|
|
It performs a static loading of that class. So anything in the |
|||||||
|
|
In your specific example, the JDBC driver class contains a static intializer that registers the driver will the DriverManager. |
|||
|
|
|
This is used in particular for JDBC drivers. The JDBC driver class has a static initializer block that registers the class with the JDBC DriverManager, so that DriverManager knows about the driver when you later open a database connection. In a newer version of JDBC (JDBC 3.0, I think) this is not necessary anymore, a different mechanism is used by DriverManager to find JDBC drivers. edit - This page explains in detail how loading a JDBC driver works and how the driver registers itself with the DriverManager (the old way). |
|||||||||
|
|
In the case of JDBC drivers the static initializer of the requested class will register the driver with JDBC’s DriverManager so that getting a connection for a driver-specific URL works. |
|||
|
|
|
Maybe some code snippet will help. This is from Sun's JDBC-ODBC bridge driver,
the This used to be the only way to register the driver. JDBC 4.0 introduced a new service registration mechanism so you don't need to do this anymore with newer JDBC 4.0 compliant drivers. |
|||
|
|