15

After running an sql query of the form:

SELECT table_name.column_name FROM table_name,table_name2,etc... WHERE condition1,condition2,etc...,

I get the following error, which does not shut down my program:

requesting column name with table name -- table_name.column_name

A google search for this error phrase led me to android.database.sqlite.SQLiteCursor line 314

A few lines above line 314 there is a comment that this code is a response to bug 903852. But I can't seem to find this bug on google.

So this is a two part question:

  1. Is it wrong to name the column name with the table in SQL? (I was under the impression that this was a best practice)
  2. How do I find Android bug report 903852 so that I can understand what the issue is? (googling Android bug 903852 doesn't work)
3

4 Answers 4

11

In my case, the problem was solved when I used

select table_name.column_name as column_name_alt WHERE ....

and later, in my CursorAdapter, referred to it in the string array only as column_name_alt.

Hope this helps.

1
7

So I ran into this problem while creating a Cursor that would be passed to a SimpleCursorAdapter. Turns out that while it's OK to prefix your 'query' columns String[], the subsequent String[] from argument that's passed to the SimpleCursorAdapter constructor does not need to be prefixed in order for the Adapter to map your result set correctly.

0
3

I got the same issue few days back and solved the issue using an alternative method. Previously I used the following method to set the cursor to point the column.

String sqlStatement = "SELECT supplierid,suppliercode,suppliername FROM supplierinfo WHERE suppliername  LIKE '%"+query+"%' ";
        cursor = db.rawQuery(sqlStatement,null);
        if (cursor != null && cursor.getCount() > 0){
            if (cursor.moveToFirst()){
                do {
                    int supplierId = cursor.getInt( 0);
                    String supplierCode = cursor.getString(cursor.getColumnIndex( "suppliercode" )) != null ? cursor.getString( cursor.getColumnIndex( "suppliercode" ) ) : "";
                    String supplierName = cursor.getString(cursor.getColumnIndex( "suppliername" )) != null ? cursor.getString( cursor.getColumnIndex( "suppliername" ) ) : "";
                    supplierInfo =  new SupplierInfo();
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierID( supplierId );
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierCode( supplierCode );
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierName( supplierName );
                    supplierInfoList.add(supplierInfo);
                } while (cursor.moveToNext());
            }

After I changed this into the following method it worked for me.

String sqlStatement = "SELECT supplierid,suppliercode,suppliername FROM supplierinfo WHERE suppliername  LIKE '%"+query+"%' ";
        cursor = db.rawQuery(sqlStatement,null);
        if (cursor != null && cursor.getCount() > 0){
            if (cursor.moveToFirst()){
                do {
                    int supplierId = cursor.getInt( 0);
                    String supplierCode = cursor.getString(1) != null ? cursor.getString( 1 ) : "";
                    String supplierName = cursor.getString(2) != null ? cursor.getString( 2 ) : "";
                    supplierInfo =  new SupplierInfo();
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierID( supplierId );
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierCode( supplierCode );
                    supplierInfo.setSupplierName( supplierName );
                    supplierInfoList.add(supplierInfo);
                } while (cursor.moveToNext());
            }
1
  • For those who don't want to compare the two blocks of code word by word, the difference seems to be hard-coding the column index argument to getString() instead of using getColumnIndex(). That doesn't sound like the solution to the stated question.
    – LarsH
    Nov 7, 2019 at 2:51
0

I have found that the best practice is to surround all table names and condition values with single quotes! [I was getting 'unknown column name' errors in android even when the query worked in my stand-alone sqlite manager.]

1
  • This answer doesn't seem to be related to the question. The OP isn't talking about an "unknown column name" error.
    – LarsH
    Aug 8, 2019 at 17:22

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