Struct odbc_api::parameter::VarChar [−][src]
pub struct VarChar<B> { /* fields omitted */ }Binds a byte array as Variadic sized character data. It can not be used for columnar bulk fetches, but if the buffer type is stack allocated it can be utilized in row wise bulk fetches.
Meaningful instantiations of this type are:
self::VarCharSlice- immutable borrowed parameter.self::VarCharSliceMut- mutable borrowed input / output parameterself::VarCharArray- stack allocated owned input / output parameterself::VarCharBox- heap allocated owned input /output parameter
Implementations
impl<B> VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]
impl<B> VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]pub fn from_buffer(buffer: B, indicator: Indicator) -> Self[src]
Creates a new instance from an existing buffer. Should the indicator be NoTotal or indicate
a length longer than buffer, the last element in the buffer must be nul (\0).
pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> Option<&[u8]>[src]
Returns the binary representation of the string, excluding the terminating zero or None in
case the indicator is NULL_DATA.
pub fn is_complete(&self) -> bool[src]
Call this method to ensure that the entire field content did fit into the buffer. If you
retrieve a field using crate::CursorRow::get_data, you can repeat the call until this
method is false to read all the data.
use odbc_api::{CursorRow, parameter::VarCharArray, Error, handles::Statement}; fn process_large_text<S: Statement>( col_index: u16, row: &mut CursorRow<S> ) -> Result<(), Error>{ let mut buf = VarCharArray::<512>::NULL; row.get_data(col_index, &mut buf)?; while !buf.is_complete() { // Process bytes in stream without allocation. We can assume repeated calls to // get_data do not return `None` since it would have done so on the first call. process_text_slice(buf.as_bytes().unwrap()); } Ok(()) } fn process_text_slice(text: &[u8]) { /*...*/}
pub fn indicator(&self) -> Indicator[src]
Read access to the underlying ODBC indicator. After data has been fetched the indicator
value is set to the length the buffer should have had, excluding the terminating zero. It
may also be NULL_DATA to indicate NULL or NO_TOTAL which tells us the data source
does not know how big the buffer must be to hold the complete value. NO_TOTAL implies that
the content of the current buffer is valid up to its maximum capacity.
impl<B> VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]
impl<B> VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]pub fn hide_truncation(&mut self)[src]
Call this method to reset the indicator to a value which matches the length returned by the
Self::as_bytes method. This is useful if you want to insert values into the database
despite the fact, that they might have been truncated. Otherwise the behaviour of databases
in this situation is driver specific. Some drivers insert up to the terminating zero, others
detect the truncation and throw an error.
impl<'a> VarChar<&'a [u8]>[src]
impl<'a> VarChar<&'a [u8]>[src]pub const NULL: Self[src]
Indicates missing data
pub fn new(value: &'a [u8]) -> Self[src]
Constructs a new VarChar containing the text in the specified buffer.
Caveat: This constructor is going to create a truncated value in case the input slice ends
with nul. Should you want to insert an actual string those payload ends with nul into
the database you need a buffer one byte longer than the string. You can instantiate such a
value using Self::from_buffer.
Trait Implementations
impl<B> CData for VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]
impl<B> CData for VarChar<B> where
B: Borrow<[u8]>, [src]fn cdata_type(&self) -> CDataType[src]
fn indicator_ptr(&self) -> *const isize[src]
fn value_ptr(&self) -> *const c_void[src]
fn buffer_length(&self) -> isize[src]
impl<B> CDataMut for VarChar<B> where
B: BorrowMut<[u8]>, [src]
impl<B> CDataMut for VarChar<B> where
B: BorrowMut<[u8]>, [src]fn mut_indicator_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut isize[src]
fn mut_value_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut c_void[src]
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<B> RefUnwindSafe for VarChar<B> where
B: RefUnwindSafe,
impl<B> RefUnwindSafe for VarChar<B> where
B: RefUnwindSafe, impl<B> UnwindSafe for VarChar<B> where
B: UnwindSafe,
impl<B> UnwindSafe for VarChar<B> where
B: UnwindSafe,