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Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
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CentOS 2.1AS

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DBD::ADO(3pm)


DBD::ADO

DBD::ADO

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
Connection
Functions support
Enhanced DBI Methods
Warnings
ADO
AUTHORS
SEE ALSO

NAME

DBD::ADO − A DBI driver for Microsoft ADO (Active Data Objects)

SYNOPSIS

  use DBI;
  $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:ADO:dsn", $user, $passwd);
        Options in the connect string:
        dbi:ADO:dsn;CommandTimeout=60 (your number)
        dbi:ADO:dsn;ConnectTimeout=60 (your number)
        or include both ConnectTimeout and CommandTimeout.
        The dsn may be a standard ODBC dsn or a dsn-less.
        See the ADO documentation for more information on
        the dsn-less connection.
  # See the DBI module documentation for full details

DESCRIPTION

The DBD::ADO module supports ADO access on a Win32 machine. DBD::ADO is written to support the standard DBI interface to data sources.

Connection

  $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:ADO:dsn", $user, $passwd, $attribs);
        Connection supports dsn and dsn-less calls.
        $dbh = DBI->connect( "dbi:ADO:File Name=oracle.udl",
                $user, $passwd, {RaiseError => [0⎪1], PrintError => [0⎪1],
                AutoCommit => [0⎪1]});
        In addition the following attributes may be set in the connect string:
                Attributes
                CommandTimeout
                ConnectionString
                ConnectionTimeout
                CursorLocation
                DefaultDatabase
                IsolationLevel
                Mode
                Provider

        WARNING: The application is responsible for passing the correct
        information when setting any of these attributes.

Functions support

        Using the standard DBI function call
                $dbh->func( arguments, ’function name’)
        You may access the following functions: (case sensitave)
                OpenSchema
        All functions return a valid statement handle upon success.
                OpenSchema supports the following arguments:
                        Any valid ADO Schema name such as
                        adSchemaCatalogs
                        adSchemaIndexes
                        adSchemaProviderTypes

                        example:
                        my $sth = $dbh->func( ’adSchemaProviderTypes’, ’OpenSchema’ );

Enhanced DBI Methods

table_info

Warning: This method is experimental and may change or disappear.

        $sth = $dbh->table_info(\%attr);

        $sth = $dbh->table_info({
                TABLE_TYPE => ’VIEW’,
                ADO_Columns => 1,
                Trim_Catalog => 0,
                Filter => q{TABLE_NAME LIKE ’C%’},
        });

Returns an active statement handle that can be used to fetch information about tables and views that exist in the database. By default the handle contains the columns described in the DBI documentation:

        TABLE_CAT, TABLE_SCHEM, TABLE_NAME, TABLE_TYPE, REMARKS

ADO_Columns

Additional ADO-only fields will be included if the ADO_Columns attribute is set to true:

        %attr = (ADO_Columns => 1);

Trim_Catalog

Some ADO providers include path info in the TABLE_CAT column. This information will be trimmed if the Trim_Catalog attribute is set to true:

        %attr = (Trim_Catalog => 1);

Criteria

The ADO driver allows column criteria to be specified. In this way the record set can be restricted, for example, to only include tables of type ’ VIEW ’:

        %attr = (TABLE_TYPE => ’VIEW’)

You can add criteria for any of the following columns:

        TABLE_CAT, TABLE_SCHEM, TABLE_NAME, TABLE_TYPE

Filter

The ADO driver also allows the recordset to be filtered on a Criteria string: a string made up of one or more individual clauses concatenated with AND or OR operators.

        %attr = (Filter => q{TABLE_TYPE LIKE ’SYSTEM%’})

The criteria string is made up of clauses in the form FieldName-Operator-Value. This is more flexible than using column criteria in that the filter allows a number of operators:

        <, >, <=, >=, <>, =, or LIKE

The Fieldname must be one of the ADO TABLES Rowset’ column names:

        TABLE_CATALOG, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_NAME, TABLE_TYPE, DESCRIPTION,
        TABLE_GUID, TABLE_PROPID, DATE_CREATED, DATE_MODIFIED

Value is the value with which you will compare the field values (for example, ’Smith’, #8/24/95#, 12.345, or $50.00). Use single quotes with strings and pound signs (#) with dates. For numbers, you can use decimal points, dollar signs, and scientific notation. If Operator is LIKE , Value can use wildcards. Only the asterisk (*) and percent sign (%) wild cards are allowed, and they must be the last character in the string. Value cannot be null.

tables

Warning: This method is experimental and may change or disappear.

        @names = $dbh->tables(\%attr);

Returns a list of table and view names. Accepts any of the attributes described in the the table_info manpage method:

        @names = $dbh->tables({ TABLE_TYPE => ’VIEW’ });

Warnings

        Support for type_info_all is supported, however, you’re not using
        a true OLE DB provider (using the MS OLE DB -> ODBC), the first
        hash may not be the "best" solution for the data type.
        adSchemaProviderTypes does provide for a "best match" column, however
        the MS OLE DB -> ODBC provider does not support the best match.
        Currently the types are sorted by DATA_TYPE BEST_MATCH IS_LONG ...

ADO

It is strongly recommended that you use the latest version of ADO (2.1 at the time this was written). You can download it from:

  http://www.microsoft.com/Data/download.htm

AUTHORS

Phlip and Tim Bunce. With many thanks to Jan Dubois, Jochen Wiedmann and Thomas Lowery for additions, debuggery and general help.

SEE ALSO

ADO Reference book: ADO 2.0 Programmer’s Reference, David Sussman and Alex Homer, Wrox, ISBN 1−861001−83−5. If there’s anything better please let me know.

http://www.able-consulting.com/tech.htm



DBD::ADO(3pm)