Module org.jooq
Package org.jooq

Interface SelectSeekStep18<R extends Record,T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7,T8,T9,T10,T11,T12,T13,T14,T15,T16,T17,T18>

All Superinterfaces:
Attachable, AttachableQueryPart, AutoCloseable, FieldLike, Fields, Flow.Publisher<R>, Iterable<R>, Publisher<R>, org.reactivestreams.Publisher<R>, Query, QueryPart, ResultQuery<R>, Select<R>, SelectCorrelatedSubqueryStep<R>, SelectFinalStep<R>, SelectForStep<R>, SelectForUpdateStep<R>, SelectLimitStep<R>, SelectOptionStep<R>, SelectUnionStep<R>, Serializable, Statement, TableLike<R>

public interface SelectSeekStep18<R extends Record,T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7,T8,T9,T10,T11,T12,T13,T14,T15,T16,T17,T18> extends SelectLimitStep<R>
This type is used for the Select's DSL API when selecting generic Record types.

Example:


 -- get all authors' first and last names, and the number
 -- of books they've written in German, if they have written
 -- more than five books in German in the last three years
 -- (from 2011), and sort those authors by last names
 -- limiting results to the second and third row

   SELECT T_AUTHOR.FIRST_NAME, T_AUTHOR.LAST_NAME, COUNT(*)
     FROM T_AUTHOR
     JOIN T_BOOK ON T_AUTHOR.ID = T_BOOK.AUTHOR_ID
    WHERE T_BOOK.LANGUAGE = 'DE'
      AND T_BOOK.PUBLISHED > '2008-01-01'
 GROUP BY T_AUTHOR.FIRST_NAME, T_AUTHOR.LAST_NAME
   HAVING COUNT(*) > 5
 ORDER BY T_AUTHOR.LAST_NAME ASC NULLS FIRST
    LIMIT 2
   OFFSET 1
      FOR UPDATE
       OF FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME
       NO WAIT
 
Its equivalent in jOOQ

 create.select(TAuthor.FIRST_NAME, TAuthor.LAST_NAME, create.count())
       .from(T_AUTHOR)
       .join(T_BOOK).on(TBook.AUTHOR_ID.equal(TAuthor.ID))
       .where(TBook.LANGUAGE.equal("DE"))
       .and(TBook.PUBLISHED.greaterThan(parseDate('2008-01-01')))
       .groupBy(TAuthor.FIRST_NAME, TAuthor.LAST_NAME)
       .having(create.count().greaterThan(5))
       .orderBy(TAuthor.LAST_NAME.asc().nullsFirst())
       .limit(2)
       .offset(1)
       .forUpdate()
       .of(TAuthor.FIRST_NAME, TAuthor.LAST_NAME)
       .noWait();
 
Refer to the manual for more details
Author:
Lukas Eder
  • Method Details

    • seek

      @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seek(T1 t1, T2 t2, T3 t3, T4 t4, T5 t5, T6 t6, T7 t7, T8 t8, T9 t9, T10 t10, T11 t11, T12 t12, T13 t13, T14 t14, T15 t15, T16 t16, T17 t17, T18 t18)
      Add a synthetic SEEK AFTER clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK AFTER clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK AFTER clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK AFTER clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seek(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) > (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id > 3) OR (id = 3 AND code > 'abc')
       

      The SEEK AFTER method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also:
    • seek

      @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seek(Field<T1> field1, Field<T2> field2, Field<T3> field3, Field<T4> field4, Field<T5> field5, Field<T6> field6, Field<T7> field7, Field<T8> field8, Field<T9> field9, Field<T10> field10, Field<T11> field11, Field<T12> field12, Field<T13> field13, Field<T14> field14, Field<T15> field15, Field<T16> field16, Field<T17> field17, Field<T18> field18)
      Add a synthetic SEEK AFTER clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK AFTER clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK AFTER clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK AFTER clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seek(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) > (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id > 3) OR (id = 3 AND code > 'abc')
       

      The SEEK AFTER method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also:
    • seekAfter

      @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seekAfter(T1 t1, T2 t2, T3 t3, T4 t4, T5 t5, T6 t6, T7 t7, T8 t8, T9 t9, T10 t10, T11 t11, T12 t12, T13 t13, T14 t14, T15 t15, T16 t16, T17 t17, T18 t18)
      Add a synthetic SEEK AFTER clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK AFTER clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK AFTER clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK AFTER clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seekAfter(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) > (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id > 3) OR (id = 3 AND code > 'abc')
       

      The SEEK AFTER method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also:
    • seekAfter

      @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seekAfter(Field<T1> field1, Field<T2> field2, Field<T3> field3, Field<T4> field4, Field<T5> field5, Field<T6> field6, Field<T7> field7, Field<T8> field8, Field<T9> field9, Field<T10> field10, Field<T11> field11, Field<T12> field12, Field<T13> field13, Field<T14> field14, Field<T15> field15, Field<T16> field16, Field<T17> field17, Field<T18> field18)
      Add a synthetic SEEK AFTER clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK AFTER clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK AFTER clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK AFTER clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seekAfter(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) > (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id > 3) OR (id = 3 AND code > 'abc')
       

      The SEEK AFTER method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also:
    • seekBefore

      @Deprecated @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seekBefore(T1 t1, T2 t2, T3 t3, T4 t4, T5 t5, T6 t6, T7 t7, T8 t8, T9 t9, T10 t10, T11 t11, T12 t12, T13 t13, T14 t14, T15 t15, T16 t16, T17 t17, T18 t18)
      Deprecated.
      - [#7461] - SEEK BEFORE is not implemented correctly
      Add a synthetic SEEK BEFORE clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK BEFORE clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK BEFORE clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK BEFORE clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seekBefore(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) < (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id < 3) OR (id = 3 AND code < 'abc')
       

      The SEEK BEFORE method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also:
    • seekBefore

      @Deprecated @NotNull @CheckReturnValue @Support @NotNull SelectSeekLimitStep<R> seekBefore(Field<T1> field1, Field<T2> field2, Field<T3> field3, Field<T4> field4, Field<T5> field5, Field<T6> field6, Field<T7> field7, Field<T8> field8, Field<T9> field9, Field<T10> field10, Field<T11> field11, Field<T12> field12, Field<T13> field13, Field<T14> field14, Field<T15> field15, Field<T16> field16, Field<T17> field17, Field<T18> field18)
      Deprecated.
      - [#7461] - SEEK BEFORE is not implemented correctly
      Add a synthetic SEEK BEFORE clause to the query.

      The synthetic SEEK BEFORE clause is an alternative way to specify an OFFSET, and thus to perform paging in a SQL query. This can be advantageous for two reasons:

      1. The SQL generated from the SEEK BEFORE clause is a regular predicate, which can be used by query plan optimisers to choose an appropriate index. The SQL standard OFFSET clause will need to skip N rows in memory.
      2. The SEEK BEFORE clause is stable with respect to new data being inserted or data being deleted while paging through pages.

      Example:

      
       DSL.using(configuration)
          .selectFrom(TABLE)
          .orderBy(ID, CODE)
          .seekBefore(3, "abc")
          .fetch();
       

      The above query will render the following SQL statement:

      
       SELECT table.col1, table.col2, ... FROM table
       WHERE (id, code) < (3, 'abc')
       ORDER BY id ASC, code ASC
       

      The actual row value expression predicate may be expanded into this equivalent predicate:

      
       WHERE (id < 3) OR (id = 3 AND code < 'abc')
       

      The SEEK BEFORE method currently does not support seeking NULL values, or operating with NULLS FIRST, NULLS LAST clauses in the ORDER BY clause.

      See Also: