This is my situation, I have two basic POJO's which I've given a simple hibernate mapping :

Person
  - PersonId
  - Name
  - Books

Book
  - Code
  - Description

My SQL Query returns rows that look like this :

PERSONID NAME       CODE DESCRIPTION
-------- ---------- ---- -----------
1        BEN        1234 BOOK 1
1        BEN        5678 BOOK 2
2        JOHN       9012 BOOK 3

My hibernate query looks like this :

session.createSQLQuery("select personid, name, code, description from person_books")  
       .addEntity("person", Person.class)
       .addJoin("book", "person.books")
       .list();

This is per section : 18.1.3 of the hibernate doco : http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/core/3.6/reference/en-US/html/querysql.html#d0e17464

What I expect to get in my list is 2 Person Objects with the contained book objects in the collection of books :

List
 |- Ben
 |   |- Book 1
 |   '- Book 2
 '- John
     '- Book 3

What I am actually seeing is this :

List
 |- Object[]
 |   |- Ben
 |   |   |- Book 1
 |   |   '- Book 2
 |   '- Book 1
 |- Object[]
 |   |- Ben
 |   |   |- Book 1
 |   |   '- Book 2
 |   '- Book 2
 '- Object[]
     |- John
     |   '- Book 3
     '- Book 3

Does anyone know if it's possible to get what I want using this method?

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4 Answers

The following works for me:

session.createSQLQuery("select p.*, b.* from person p, book b where <complicated join>").
.addEntity("person", Person.class).addJoin("book", "person.books").list();

This returns an Object[] containing a list of Person, each of which contains a list of Books. It does this in a single SQL select. I think your problem is that you don't specifically alias person to anything.

EDIT: The method returns an Object[], but the array is populated with Person instances, and only Person instances.

If Hibernate doesn't understand how to map to your classes or if it can't understand how to map the join, it will return a list of objects. Make sure you only have one Person/Book combination on each line.

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What I was expecting was a list of Person, not a list of Object[] with duplicates of people, when they own more than one book. See my answer for the link to the hibernate jira bug report. – Ben Aug 26 '11 at 2:03
Sorry, to make myself clear, the method returns an Object[], but the array is populated with Person, and only Person. I don't have any books in there. – Matthew Farwell Aug 26 '11 at 7:15
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Should your query be on the person table instead of person_books?

session.createSQLQuery("select * from person")  
   .addEntity("person", Person.class)
   .addJoin("book", "person.books")
   .list();
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I have simplified this example for the sake of being concise. In my actual usage "person_books" is a complicated query, hibernate has no way of getting the information for a "book" without me providing it in the query. I am retrieving a large number of rows for Person and would prefer to not have to perform an extra query to find the Books for every Person. If I can't find a solution I will probably be using this method but just skipping over rows where the Person doesn't change. – Ben Aug 25 '11 at 8:26
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up vote 0 down vote accepted

https://hibernate.onjira.com/browse/HHH-2831

This behaviour is caused by a known bug. Doh, should have searched harder!

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AFAIK, it is not possible to get a "merged" entity back from a SQL query. You will get back only an object array. What I did in this situation was that I created a new constructor for my merged entity that took an array of objects as it's argument. Then I constructed that manually.

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