- All Superinterfaces:
- Attachable,- AttachableQueryPart,- AutoCloseable,- Delete<R>,- Flow.Publisher<Integer>,- Publisher<Integer>,- org.reactivestreams.Publisher<Integer>,- Query,- QueryPart,- RowCountQuery,- Serializable,- Statement
- All Known Subinterfaces:
- DeleteConditionStep<R>,- DeleteLimitStep<R>,- DeleteOrderByStep<R>,- DeleteReturningStep<R>,- DeleteUsingStep<R>,- DeleteWhereStep<R>
@Deprecated(forRemoval=true,
            since="3.15")
public interface DeleteFinalStep<R extends Record>
extends Delete<R>
Deprecated, for removal: This API element is subject to removal in a future version.
- [#11329] - 3.15.0 - This type will be removed in the future. Do not reference it directly
This type is used for the Referencing 
 
Delete's DSL API.
 
 Example: 
 DSLContext create = DSL.using(configuration);
 create.delete(table)
       .where(field1.greaterThan(100))
       .execute();
 
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
- Author:
- Lukas Eder
- 
Method SummaryMethods inherited from interface org.jooq.Attachableattach, configuration, detachMethods inherited from interface org.jooq.AttachableQueryPartgetBindValues, getParam, getParams, getSQL, getSQLMethods inherited from interface org.reactivestreams.PublishersubscribeMethods inherited from interface org.jooq.Querybind, bind, cancel, close, execute, executeAsync, executeAsync, isExecutable, keepStatement, poolable, queryTimeout