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I have an array of ids which i want to loop over inside the update query. I have tried with couple of ways but got some errors.

hql = """UPDATE items
                 SET nOrder = CASE id
                """
        //l1 is the list of ids.
        for(int i = 0; i <= l1.size(); i++) {
            hql += "\n WHEN ${l1[i]} THEN ${i}"
        }
        hql += "\n END"
        hql += "\n WHERE id IN (:id)"
        Items.executeUpdate(hql,[id: l1])

even i have tried like this got the same error.

  for(int i = 0; i <= l1.size(); i++) {
            Items.executeQuery("UPDATE Items SET nOrder = CASE id WHEN ${l1[i]} THEN ${i}  END WHERE id IN (:id)",[id: l1])
}

error message.

expecting "then", found ',' near line 1, column 61 [UPDATE org.items SET nOrder = CASE id WHEN 2,1 THEN 0 END WHERE id IN (:id)]

can anyone let me know what I am doing wrong in it ?

3
  • i<=l1.size() looks very odd
    – cfrick
    Oct 1, 2014 at 10:25
  • is there better way to count the records ? Oct 1, 2014 at 13:07
  • 1
    the <= is the odd part here. usually size() returns the size, so a for loop from 0 on would need i<x.size().
    – cfrick
    Oct 1, 2014 at 13:11

1 Answer 1

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You are building SQL from (user provided?) strings, which is a horrible idea. The error there boils down to: WHEN 2,1 THEN 0, which is invalid SQL (note the , there). You are most probably have some float stored as string in ${l1[i]} or running with a locale, where digits are separated with ,, etc. You should use the param replacement (like you already do for :id) also in all the other places (no ${l1[i]} and $i). E.g.:

l1.eachWithIndex{ id, order ->
    Items.executeQuery("UPDATE Items SET nOrder=:order WHERE id=:id",[id:id, order:order])
}
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  • heree i am trying to loop over an array of ids which are stored in l1. And also I am updating list of multiple records and I am passing list of ids in where clause. will you please tell me why id, order ? Oct 1, 2014 at 13:35
  • This code is simply an example. If you want the case ... then behaviour, you will most likely have to build a map. The key here is not using ${} text replacements within SQL statements.
    – cfrick
    Oct 1, 2014 at 14:57

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