Field (ADO/WFC Syntax)

Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects (ADO)

Field (ADO/WFC Syntax)

package com.ms.wfc.data

Methods

public void appendChunk(byte[] bytes)
public void appendChunk(char[] chars)
public void appendChunk(String chars)
public byte[] getByteChunk(int len)
public char[] getCharChunk(int len)
public String getStringChunk(int len)

Properties

public int getActualSize()
public int getAttributes()
public void setAttributes(int pl)
public com.ms.com.IUnknown getDataFormat()
public void setDataFormat(com.ms.com.IUnknown format)

(For more information, see the Microsoft Visual J++ WFC Reference documentation for the com.ms.wfc.data.IDataFormat interface.)

public int getDefinedSize()
public void setDefinedSize(int pl)
public String getName()
public int getNumericScale()
public void setNumericScale(byte pbNumericScale)
public Variant getOriginalValue()
public int getPrecision()
public void setPrecision(byte pbPrecision)
public int getType()
public void setType(int pDataType)
public Variant getUnderlyingValue()
public Variant getValue()
public void setValue(Variant value)
public AdoProperties getProperties()

Field Accessor Methods

The Value property of a Field object gets or sets the content of that object. The content is represented as a VARIANT, a type of object that can be assigned a value and any of several data types.

ADO/WFC implements the Value property with the getValue method, which returns a VARIANT object; and the setValue method, which takes a VARIANT as an argument. VARIANTs are highly efficient in certain languages, such as Microsoft Visual Basic. However, you can attain better performance in Microsoft Visual J++ by using native Java data types.

In addition to the Value property, ADO/WFC provides accessor methods that use Java data types to get and set the content of Field objects. Most of these methods have names of the form getDataType or setDataType.

There are two noteworthy exceptions: One of the getObject methods returns an object coerced into a specified class. There is no getNull property; instead, there is an isNull property that returns a Boolean value indicating whether the field is null.

public native boolean getBoolean();
public void setBoolean(boolean v)
public native byte getByte();
public void setByte(byte v)
public native byte[] getBytes();
public void setBytes(byte[] v)
public native double getDouble();
public void setDouble(double v)
public native float getFloat();
public void setFloat(float v)
public native int getInt();
public void setInt(int v)
public native long getLong();
public void setLong(long v)
public native short getShort();
public void setShort(short v)
public native String getString();
public void setString(String v)
public native boolean isNull();
public void setNull()
public Object getObject()
public Object getObject(Class c)
public void setObject(Object value)