Struct rusqlite::Statement [−][src]
pub struct Statement<'conn> { /* fields omitted */ }
A prepared statement.
Implementations
impl Statement<'_>
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pub fn column_names(&self) -> Vec<&str>
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Get all the column names in the result set of the prepared statement.
If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling this method.
pub fn column_count(&self) -> usize
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Return the number of columns in the result set returned by the prepared statement.
If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling this method.
pub fn column_name(&self, col: usize) -> Result<&str>
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Returns the name assigned to a particular column in the result set returned by the prepared statement.
If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling this method.
Failure
Returns an Error::InvalidColumnIndex
if idx
is outside the valid
column range for this row.
Panics when column name is not valid UTF-8.
pub fn column_index(&self, name: &str) -> Result<usize>
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Returns the column index in the result set for a given column name.
If there is no AS clause then the name of the column is unspecified and may change from one release of SQLite to the next.
If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling this method.
Failure
Will return an Error::InvalidColumnName
when there is no column with
the specified name
.
pub fn columns(&self) -> Vec<Column<'_>>
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Returns a slice describing the columns of the result of the query.
If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling this method.
impl Statement<'_>
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pub fn execute<P: Params>(&mut self, params: P) -> Result<usize>
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Execute the prepared statement.
On success, returns the number of rows that were changed or inserted or
deleted (via sqlite3_changes
).
Example
Use with positional parameters
fn update_rows(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("UPDATE foo SET bar = 'baz' WHERE qux = ?")?; // The `rusqlite::params!` macro is mostly useful when the parameters do not // all have the same type, or if there are more than 32 parameters // at once. stmt.execute(params![1i32])?; // However, it's not required, many cases are fine as: stmt.execute(&[&2i32])?; // Or even: stmt.execute([2i32])?; Ok(()) }
Use with named parameters
fn insert(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("INSERT INTO test (key, value) VALUES (:key, :value)")?; // The `rusqlite::named_params!` macro (like `params!`) is useful for heterogeneous // sets of parameters (where all parameters are not the same type), or for queries // with many (more than 32) statically known parameters. stmt.execute(named_params!{ ":key": "one", ":val": 2 })?; // However, named parameters can also be passed like: stmt.execute(&[(":key", "three"), (":val", "four")])?; // Or even: (note that a &T is required for the value type, currently) stmt.execute(&[(":key", &100), (":val", &200)])?; Ok(()) }
Use without parameters
fn delete_all(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("DELETE FROM users")?; stmt.execute([])?; Ok(()) }
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails, the executed statement
returns rows (in which case query
should be used instead), or the
underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn execute_named(&mut self, params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)]) -> Result<usize>
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You can use execute
with named params now.
Execute the prepared statement with named parameter(s).
Note: This function is deprecated in favor of Statement::execute
,
which can now take named parameters directly.
If any parameters that were in the prepared statement are not included
in params
, they will continue to use the most-recently bound value
from a previous call to execute_named
, or NULL
if they have never
been bound.
On success, returns the number of rows that were changed or inserted or
deleted (via sqlite3_changes
).
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails, the executed statement
returns rows (in which case query
should be used instead), or the
underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn insert<P: Params>(&mut self, params: P) -> Result<i64>
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Execute an INSERT and return the ROWID.
Note
This function is a convenience wrapper around
execute()
intended for queries that insert a
single item. It is possible to misuse this function in a way that it
cannot detect, such as by calling it on a statement which updates
a single item rather than inserting one. Please don’t do that.
Failure
Will return Err
if no row is inserted or many rows are inserted.
pub fn query<P: Params>(&mut self, params: P) -> Result<Rows<'_>>
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Execute the prepared statement, returning a handle to the resulting rows.
Due to lifetime restricts, the rows handle returned by query
does not
implement the Iterator
trait. Consider using
query_map
or query_and_then
instead, which do.
Example
Use without parameters
fn get_names(conn: &Connection) -> Result<Vec<String>> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT name FROM people")?; let mut rows = stmt.query([])?; let mut names = Vec::new(); while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { names.push(row.get(0)?); } Ok(names) }
Use with positional parameters
fn query(conn: &Connection, name: &str) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test where name = ?")?; let mut rows = stmt.query(rusqlite::params![name])?; while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { // ... } Ok(()) }
Or, equivalently (but without the params!
macro).
fn query(conn: &Connection, name: &str) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test where name = ?")?; let mut rows = stmt.query([name])?; while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { // ... } Ok(()) }
Use with named parameters
fn query(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test where name = :name")?; let mut rows = stmt.query(&[(":name", "one")])?; while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { // ... } Ok(()) }
Note, the named_params!
macro is provided for syntactic convenience,
and so the above example could also be written as:
fn query(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test where name = :name")?; let mut rows = stmt.query(named_params!{ ":name": "one" })?; while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { // ... } Ok(()) }
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn query_named(&mut self, params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)]) -> Result<Rows<'_>>
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You can use query
with named params now.
Execute the prepared statement with named parameter(s), returning a handle for the resulting rows.
Note: This function is deprecated in favor of Statement::query
,
which can now take named parameters directly.
If any parameters that were in the prepared statement are not included
in params
, they will continue to use the most-recently bound value
from a previous call to query_named
, or NULL
if they have never been
bound.
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn query_map<T, P, F>(
&mut self,
params: P,
f: F
) -> Result<MappedRows<'_, F>> where
P: Params,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
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&mut self,
params: P,
f: F
) -> Result<MappedRows<'_, F>> where
P: Params,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
Executes the prepared statement and maps a function over the resulting rows, returning an iterator over the mapped function results.
f
is used to tranform the streaming iterator into a standard
iterator.
This is equivalent to stmt.query(params)?.mapped(f)
.
Example
Use with positional params
fn get_names(conn: &Connection) -> Result<Vec<String>> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT name FROM people")?; let rows = stmt.query_map([], |row| row.get(0))?; let mut names = Vec::new(); for name_result in rows { names.push(name_result?); } Ok(names) }
Use with named params
fn get_names(conn: &Connection) -> Result<Vec<String>> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT name FROM people WHERE id = :id")?; let rows = stmt.query_map(&[(":id", &"one")], |row| row.get(0))?; let mut names = Vec::new(); for name_result in rows { names.push(name_result?); } Ok(names) }
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn query_map_named<T, F>(
&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<MappedRows<'_, F>> where
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
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&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<MappedRows<'_, F>> where
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
You can use query_map
with named params now.
Execute the prepared statement with named parameter(s), returning an iterator over the result of calling the mapping function over the query’s rows.
Note: This function is deprecated in favor of Statement::query_map
,
which can now take named parameters directly.
If any parameters that were in the prepared statement
are not included in params
, they will continue to use the
most-recently bound value from a previous call to query_named
,
or NULL
if they have never been bound.
f
is used to tranform the streaming iterator into a standard
iterator.
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn query_and_then<T, E, P, F>(
&mut self,
params: P,
f: F
) -> Result<AndThenRows<'_, F>> where
P: Params,
E: From<Error>,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T, E>,
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&mut self,
params: P,
f: F
) -> Result<AndThenRows<'_, F>> where
P: Params,
E: From<Error>,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T, E>,
Executes the prepared statement and maps a function over the resulting
rows, where the function returns a Result
with Error
type
implementing std::convert::From<Error>
(so errors can be unified).
This is equivalent to stmt.query(params)?.and_then(f)
.
Example
Use with named params
struct Person { name: String, }; fn name_to_person(name: String) -> Result<Person> { // ... check for valid name Ok(Person { name: name }) } fn get_names(conn: &Connection) -> Result<Vec<Person>> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT name FROM people WHERE id = :id")?; let rows = stmt.query_and_then(&[(":id", "one")], |row| name_to_person(row.get(0)?))?; let mut persons = Vec::new(); for person_result in rows { persons.push(person_result?); } Ok(persons) }
Use with positional params
fn get_names(conn: &Connection) -> Result<Vec<String>> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT name FROM people WHERE id = ?")?; let rows = stmt.query_and_then(["one"], |row| row.get::<_, String>(0))?; let mut persons = Vec::new(); for person_result in rows { persons.push(person_result?); } Ok(persons) }
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn query_and_then_named<T, E, F>(
&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<AndThenRows<'_, F>> where
E: From<Error>,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T, E>,
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&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<AndThenRows<'_, F>> where
E: From<Error>,
F: FnMut(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T, E>,
You can use query_and_then
with named params now.
Execute the prepared statement with named parameter(s), returning an iterator over the result of calling the mapping function over the query’s rows.
Note: This function is deprecated in favor of
Statement::query_and_then
, which can now take named parameters
directly.
If any parameters that were in the prepared statement are not included
in params
, they will continue to use the most-recently bound value
from a previous call to query_named
, or NULL
if they have never been
bound.
Failure
Will return Err
if binding parameters fails.
pub fn exists<P: Params>(&mut self, params: P) -> Result<bool>
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Return true
if a query in the SQL statement it executes returns one
or more rows and false
if the SQL returns an empty set.
pub fn query_row<T, P, F>(&mut self, params: P, f: F) -> Result<T> where
P: Params,
F: FnOnce(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
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P: Params,
F: FnOnce(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
Convenience method to execute a query that is expected to return a single row.
If the query returns more than one row, all rows except the first are ignored.
Returns Err(QueryReturnedNoRows)
if no results are returned. If the
query truly is optional, you can call
.optional()
on the result of
this to get a Result<Option<T>>
(requires that the trait
rusqlite::OptionalExtension
is imported).
Failure
Will return Err
if the underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn query_row_named<T, F>(
&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<T> where
F: FnOnce(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
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&mut self,
params: &[(&str, &dyn ToSql)],
f: F
) -> Result<T> where
F: FnOnce(&Row<'_>) -> Result<T>,
You can use query_row
with named params now.
Convenience method to execute a query with named parameter(s) that is expected to return a single row.
Note: This function is deprecated in favor of
Statement::query_and_then
, which can now take named parameters
directly.
If the query returns more than one row, all rows except the first are ignored.
Returns Err(QueryReturnedNoRows)
if no results are returned. If the
query truly is optional, you can call
.optional()
on the result of
this to get a Result<Option<T>>
(requires that the trait
rusqlite::OptionalExtension
is imported).
Failure
Will return Err
if sql
cannot be converted to a C-compatible string
or if the underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn finalize(self) -> Result<()>
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Consumes the statement.
Functionally equivalent to the Drop
implementation, but allows
callers to see any errors that occur.
Failure
Will return Err
if the underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn parameter_index(&self, name: &str) -> Result<Option<usize>>
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Return the (one-based) index of an SQL parameter given its name.
Note that the initial “:” or “$” or “@” or “?” used to specify the parameter is included as part of the name.
fn example(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = :example")?; let index = stmt.parameter_index(":example")?; assert_eq!(index, Some(1)); Ok(()) }
Failure
Will return Err if name
is invalid. Will return Ok(None) if the name
is valid but not a bound parameter of this statement.
pub fn parameter_count(&self) -> usize
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Return the number of parameters that can be bound to this statement.
pub fn raw_bind_parameter<T: ToSql>(
&mut self,
one_based_col_index: usize,
param: T
) -> Result<()>
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&mut self,
one_based_col_index: usize,
param: T
) -> Result<()>
Low level API to directly bind a parameter to a given index.
Note that the index is one-based, that is, the first parameter index is
1 and not 0. This is consistent with the SQLite API and the values given
to parameters bound as ?NNN
.
The valid values for one_based_col_index
begin at 1
, and end at
Statement::parameter_count
, inclusive.
Caveats
This should not generally be used, but is available for special cases such as:
- binding parameters where a gap exists.
- binding named and positional parameters in the same query.
- separating parameter binding from query execution.
Statements that have had their parameters bound this way should be
queried or executed by Statement::raw_query
or
Statement::raw_execute
. Other functions are not guaranteed to work.
Example
fn query(conn: &Connection) -> Result<()> { let mut stmt = conn.prepare("SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = :name AND value > ?2")?; let name_index = stmt.parameter_index(":name")?.expect("No such parameter"); stmt.raw_bind_parameter(name_index, "foo")?; stmt.raw_bind_parameter(2, 100)?; let mut rows = stmt.raw_query(); while let Some(row) = rows.next()? { // ... } Ok(()) }
pub fn raw_execute(&mut self) -> Result<usize>
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Low level API to execute a statement given that all parameters were
bound explicitly with the Statement::raw_bind_parameter
API.
Caveats
Any unbound parameters will have NULL
as their value.
This should not generally be used outside of special cases, and
functions in the Statement::execute
family should be preferred.
Failure
Will return Err
if the executed statement returns rows (in which case
query
should be used instead), or the underlying SQLite call fails.
pub fn raw_query(&mut self) -> Rows<'_>
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Low level API to get Rows
for this query given that all parameters
were bound explicitly with the Statement::raw_bind_parameter
API.
Caveats
Any unbound parameters will have NULL
as their value.
This should not generally be used outside of special cases, and
functions in the Statement::query
family should be preferred.
Note that if the SQL does not return results, Statement::raw_execute
should be used instead.
pub fn expanded_sql(&self) -> Option<String>
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Returns a string containing the SQL text of prepared statement with bound parameters expanded.
pub fn get_status(&self, status: StatementStatus) -> i32
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Get the value for one of the status counters for this statement.
pub fn reset_status(&self, status: StatementStatus) -> i32
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Reset the value of one of the status counters for this statement, returning the value it had before resetting.
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<'conn> !RefUnwindSafe for Statement<'conn>
impl<'conn> !Send for Statement<'conn>
impl<'conn> !Sync for Statement<'conn>
impl<'conn> Unpin for Statement<'conn>
impl<'conn> !UnwindSafe for Statement<'conn>
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> Any for T where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
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T: 'static + ?Sized,
impl<T> Borrow<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
pub fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
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impl<T> From<T> for T
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impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where
U: From<T>,
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U: From<T>,
impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T where
U: Into<T>,
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U: Into<T>,
type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
pub fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T where
U: TryFrom<T>,
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U: TryFrom<T>,