- All Superinterfaces:
Attachable
,AttachableQueryPart
,CreateTableFinalStep
,DDLQuery
,Flow.Publisher<Integer>
,Publisher<Integer>
,org.reactivestreams.Publisher<Integer>
,Query
,QueryPart
,RowCountQuery
,Serializable
,Statement
- All Known Subinterfaces:
CreateTableAsStep
,CreateTableCommentStep
,CreateTableElementListStep
,CreateTableOnCommitStep
,CreateTableWithDataStep
CREATE TABLE
statement.
Referencing XYZ*Step
types directly from client code
It is usually not recommended to reference any XYZ*Step
types
directly from client code, or assign them to local variables. When writing
dynamic SQL, creating a statement's components dynamically, and passing them
to the DSL API statically is usually a better choice. See the manual's
section about dynamic SQL for details: https://www.jooq.org/doc/latest/manual/sql-building/dynamic-sql.
Drawbacks of referencing the XYZ*Step
types directly:
- They're operating on mutable implementations (as of jOOQ 3.x)
- They're less composable and not easy to get right when dynamic SQL gets complex
- They're less readable
- They might have binary incompatible changes between minor releases
-
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescription@NotNull CreateTableFinalStep
Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.@NotNull CreateTableFinalStep
Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.@NotNull CreateTableFinalStep
Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.@NotNull CreateTableFinalStep
Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.Methods inherited from interface org.jooq.Attachable
attach, configuration, detach
Methods inherited from interface org.jooq.AttachableQueryPart
getBindValues, getParam, getParams, getSQL, getSQL
Methods inherited from interface org.reactivestreams.Publisher
subscribe
Methods inherited from interface org.jooq.Query
bind, bind, cancel, execute, executeAsync, executeAsync, isExecutable, keepStatement, poolable, queryTimeout
-
Method Details
-
storage
Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.Add vendor-specific storage clauses to the
CREATE TABLE
statement.Storage clauses will always be appended to the end of everything else that jOOQ renders, including possibly other storage clauses, such as
CreateTableOnCommitStep.onCommitDeleteRows()
or similar clauses. If custom storage clauses should be mixed with jOOQ-provided storage clauses, it is recommended not to use the jOOQ API and use the custom clause API for all storage clauses instead.Storage clauses will be separated from previous elements by a separator (whitespace or newline) to ensure syntactic integrity.
Example usage:
DSL.using(configuration) .createTable("t") .column(field("i", SQLDataType.INTEGER)) .storage("TABLESPACE my_tablespace") .execute();
NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses! One way to escape literals is to use
DSL.name(String...)
and similar methods Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
- See Also:
-
storage
@Support @PlainSQL @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @NotNull CreateTableFinalStep storage(@SQL String storage, QueryPart... parts) Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.Add vendor-specific storage clauses to the
CREATE TABLE
statement.Storage clauses will always be appended to the end of everything else that jOOQ renders, including possibly other storage clauses, such as
CreateTableOnCommitStep.onCommitDeleteRows()
or similar clauses. If custom storage clauses should be mixed with jOOQ-provided storage clauses, it is recommended not to use the jOOQ API and use the custom clause API for all storage clauses instead.Storage clauses will be separated from previous elements by a separator (whitespace or newline) to ensure syntactic integrity.
Example usage:
DSL.using(configuration) .createTable("t") .column(field("i", SQLDataType.INTEGER)) .storage("TABLESPACE my_tablespace") .execute();
NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses! One way to escape literals is to use
DSL.name(String...)
and similar methods Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
- See Also:
-
storage
@Support @PlainSQL @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @NotNull CreateTableFinalStep storage(@SQL String storage, Object... bindings) Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.Add vendor-specific storage clauses to the
CREATE TABLE
statement.Storage clauses will always be appended to the end of everything else that jOOQ renders, including possibly other storage clauses, such as
CreateTableOnCommitStep.onCommitDeleteRows()
or similar clauses. If custom storage clauses should be mixed with jOOQ-provided storage clauses, it is recommended not to use the jOOQ API and use the custom clause API for all storage clauses instead.Storage clauses will be separated from previous elements by a separator (whitespace or newline) to ensure syntactic integrity.
Example usage:
DSL.using(configuration) .createTable("t") .column(field("i", SQLDataType.INTEGER)) .storage("TABLESPACE my_tablespace") .execute();
NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses! One way to escape literals is to use
DSL.name(String...)
and similar methods Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
- See Also:
-
storage
@Support @PlainSQL @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @NotNull CreateTableFinalStep storage(@SQL String storage) Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.Add vendor-specific storage clauses to the
CREATE TABLE
statement.Storage clauses will always be appended to the end of everything else that jOOQ renders, including possibly other storage clauses, such as
CreateTableOnCommitStep.onCommitDeleteRows()
or similar clauses. If custom storage clauses should be mixed with jOOQ-provided storage clauses, it is recommended not to use the jOOQ API and use the custom clause API for all storage clauses instead.Storage clauses will be separated from previous elements by a separator (whitespace or newline) to ensure syntactic integrity.
Example usage:
DSL.using(configuration) .createTable("t") .column(field("i", SQLDataType.INTEGER)) .storage("TABLESPACE my_tablespace") .execute();
NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses! One way to escape literals is to use
DSL.name(String...)
and similar methods Add theSTORAGE
clause to theCREATE TABLE
statement.NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
- See Also:
-