5

With SQLite, user defined SQL functions can easily be added using the C api or PHP. But is it also possible using Java or Groovy?

4 Answers 4

12

Since the question is about solution in Java or Groovy, someone can look here for Java solution (just like i did)

Below you can see simple function that validates, if provided dates are in same day:

public class IsSameDay extends Function {

    @Override
    protected void xFunc() throws SQLException {
        if (args() != 2) {
            throw new SQLException("IsSameDay(date1,date2): Invalid argument count. Requires 2, but found " + args());
        }
        try {
            DateTime t1 = DateTime.parse(value_text(0).replace(" ", "T"));
            DateTime t2 = DateTime.parse(value_text(1).replace(" ", "T"));
            if (t1.getYear() == t2.getYear() && t1.getDayOfYear() == t2.getDayOfYear()) {
                result(1);
            } else {
                result(0);
            }
        } catch (Exception exception) {
            throw new SQLDataException("IsSameDay(date1,date2): One of Arguments is invalid: " + exception.getLocalizedMessage());
        }
    }
}

and if someone needs to do an aggregation function, then might find this example useful:

public class MyMax extends Function.Aggregate {

    private long buff = 0;

    public MyMax() {
    }

    @Override
    protected void xStep() throws SQLException {
        long current = value_long(0);
        if (current > buff) {
            buff = current;
        }

    }

    @Override
    protected void xFinal() throws SQLException {
        result(buff);
    }
}

accumulator works because in each query MyMax instantion is cloned, so start value can be provided when instantiating object.

at the end example showing how to attach functions:

Function.create(c, IsSameDay.class.getSimpleName(), new IsSameDay());
Function.create(c, MyMax.class.getSimpleName(), new MyMax());

Hope that someone will find it useful.

9

It turns out writing a user defined function is actually quite easy using SQLiteJDBC. Here's a Groovy example:

@GrabConfig(systemClassLoader=true)
@Grab('org.xerial:sqlite-jdbc:3.6.16')
import org.sqlite.*
import java.sql.*

db = groovy.sql.Sql.newInstance("jdbc:sqlite::memory:","org.sqlite.JDBC")

// a distance function using the spherical law of cosines
Function.create(db.getConnection(), "distance", new Function() {
    protected void xFunc() throws SQLException {
        def lat1 = value_double(0)
        def lon1 = value_double(1)
        def lat2 = value_double(2)
        def lon2 = value_double(3)

        double theta = lon1 - lon2;
        double dist = (Math.sin(deg2rad(lat1)) * Math.sin(deg2rad(lat2))) + 
            (Math.cos(deg2rad(lat1)) * Math.cos(deg2rad(lat2)) * Math.cos(deg2rad(theta)))
        dist = Math.acos(dist)
        dist = rad2deg(dist)
        dist = dist * 60 * 1.1515
        dist = dist * 1.609344
        result(dist);
    }

    def deg2rad(deg) {
      deg * Math.PI / 180.0
    }

    def rad2deg(rad) {
      rad * 180.0 / Math.PI
    }
})

db.execute("CREATE TABLE city(name, lat, lon)")
db.execute("INSERT INTO city(name, lat, lon) VALUES('New York City', 40.7143, -74.0060)")
db.execute("INSERT INTO city(name, lat, lon) VALUES('San Francisco', 37.7749, -122.4194)")
db.execute("INSERT INTO city(name, lat, lon) VALUES('Paris', 48.8567, 2.3510)")
db.execute("INSERT INTO city(name, lat, lon) VALUES('Cologne', 50.9407, 6.9599)")

db.eachRow("SELECT a.name as a, b.name as b, distance(a.lat, a.lon, b.lat, b.lon) as d FROM city a, city b WHERE a.name != b.name ORDER BY d;") {
    println "Distance from ${it.a} to ${it.b}: ${it.d}km"
}
0

I think, this is a simple way to create custom function,

Class.forName("org.sqlite.JDBC");
Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:sqlite:");
Function.create(conn, "myFunc", new Function() {
           protected void xFunc() {
               System.out.println("myFunc called!");
           }
       });        
conn.createStatement().execute("select myFunc();");
0

Simple way to create a function which accepts arguments and return result:

        Function.create(conn, "addNS", new Function() {
            @Override
            protected void xFunc() {
                System.out.println("myFunc called!");
                String arg1;
                try {
                    arg1 = value_text(0);
                    System.out.println("function arg1:"+arg1);
                    result("NS-"+arg1);
                } catch (SQLException e) {
                    e.printStackTrace();
                }
            }
        },  1, Function.FLAG_DETERMINISTIC);

        rs = conn.createStatement().executeQuery("select addNS('xyz');");
        while(rs.next()) {
            String val = rs.getString(1);
            System.out.println("Function return val : " + val);
        }

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.