Shifting the cursor forth and back to determine the amount of rows is not the normal JDBC practice. The normal JDBC practice is to map the ResultSet to a List of value objects each representing a table row entity and then just use the List methods to determine if there are any rows.
For example:
List<User> users = userDAO.list();
if (users.isEmpty()) {
// It is empty!
if (users.size() == 1) {
// It has only one row!
} else {
// It has more than one row!
}
where the list() method look like as follows:
public List<User> list() throws SQLException {
Connection connection = null;
Statement statement = null;
ResultSet resultSet = null;
List<User> users = new ArrayList<User>();
try {
connection = database.getConnection();
statement = connection.createStatement();
resultSet = statement.executeQuery(SQL_LIST);
while (resultSet.next()) {
User user = new User();
user.setId(resultSet.getLong("id"));
user.setName(resultSet.getString("name"));
// ...
users.add(user);
}
} finally {
if (resultSet != null) try { resultSet.close(); } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
if (statement != null) try { statement.close(); } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
if (connection != null) try { connection.close(); } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
}
return users;
}
Also see this answer for other JDBC examples.
first(). Which exception is thrown? It may be throwing one because you're already usedgetRow(), or it may be throwing one because your driver doesn't support this method, in which case Colin's solution is more likely to work for you. – jasonmp85 May 30 '10 at 14:33