I am reading the JavaDocs for Connection#prepareCall
:
sql - an SQL statement that may contain one or more '?' parameter placeholders. Typically this statement is specified using JDBC call escape syntax.
According to this popular mkyong JDBC tutorial, I see the method executed like so:
String insertStoreProc = "{call insertDBUSER(?,?,?,?)}";
callableStatement = dbConnection.prepareCall(insertStoreProc);
I am wondering:
- Why is the string encapsulated in curly braces (
{ ... }
)? - Why does
call
proceed the name of the procedure?
Most importantly: is { call <nameOfProcedure> }
the correct syntax for executing all stored procedures across all JDBC drivers? Or is { call ... }
specific to a particular type of driver?
Are there variations of this procedure invocation syntax? For instance, are there scenarios/drivers where one might pass "{ execute <nameOfProcedure> }"
into the prepareCall
method? Is there documentation on any of this?
Update:
According to CallableStatement
, JDBC offers 2 valid syntaxes for calling procs in a standard way, across all drivers:
{?= call <procedure-name>[(<arg1>,<arg2>, ...)]}
And:
{call <procedure-name>[(<arg1>,<arg2>, ...)]}
But it is still unclear as to when to use either (that is: when to preprend call
with ?=
).
java.sql.CallableStatement
, where all these questions are answered.?=
. Thanks again!RETURN
, and it could have OUT parameters. The return value from a stored procedure is different from theResultSet
(s) it could maintain opened when being called, but this is database engine specific. JDBC provides the most generic way to access to the database engine, but it depends on the database engine and on the JDBC driver implementation the support of all the features, specific vendor features or being an incomplete database engine.