Provides information on prepared dynamic SQL statements.
Syntax:
>>---EXEC SQL-----DESCRIBE---.----------------------.----->
+---SELECT LIST FOR----+
+---BIND VARIABLES FOR-+
>--prepared_stmt_name---INTO---:sqlda_struct---END-EXEC--><
Parameters:
prepared_stmt_name
|
The name of a prepared SQL SELECT statement or QUERY ODBC statement.
|
:
sqlda_struct
|
A host variable that specifies the output SQLDA data structure to be populated. The colon is optional to provide compatibility with other embedded SQL implementations.
|
Example:
EXEC SQL INCLUDE SQLDA END-EXEC
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION END-EXEC
01 statement pic x(80).
EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION END-EXEC
EXEC SQL
DECLARE C1 CURSOR FOR stmt1
END-EXEC
move "select * from dept" into statement
move 20 to sqln
$IF P64 SET
compute sqldabc = 16 + 56 * sqln
$ELSE
compute sqldabc = 16 + 44 * sqln
$END
EXEC SQL
PREPARE stmt1 FROM :statement
END-EXEC
EXEC SQL
DESCRIBE stmt1 INTO :sqlda
END-EXEC
* The data structure "sqlda" now contains a description
* of the dynamic SQL statement.
EXEC SQL
OPEN C1
END-EXEC
* Complete the SQLDA, by adding buffer addresses and lengths
EXEC SQL
FETCH C1 USING DESCRIPTOR :sqlda
END-EXEC
Comments:
This statement populates the specified SQLDA data structure with the data type, length, and column name of each column returned by the specified prepared statement.
If neither SELECT LIST FOR or BIND VARIABLES FOR is specified, SELECT LIST is used by default. If BIND VARIABLES FOR is specified, information about input parameters is returned in the SQLDA rather than information about results columns.
The DESCRIBE statement inserts the number of columns into the sqld field of the SQLDA structure. If a non-select statement was prepared, sqld is set to 0. Before DESCRIBE is called, the following fields in the SQLDA data structure must be initialised by the application:
If sqln is set to 0, no column descriptor entries are constructed, but sqld is set to the number of entries required. The DESCRIBE statement works in a similar way to a PREPARE statement with an INTO clause.
By default, the SQL types for date, time and timestamp are respectively DATE-RECORD, TIME-RECORD and TIMESTAMP-RECORD. When you use the BEHAVIOR=OPTIMIZED option for the SQL Compiler directive, OpenESQL mimics the DB2 on the mainframe for these data types, providing character strings (i.e., PIC X(n)) instead of the standard, default record constructs.