On 08/19/2010 12:10 PM, vtkstef wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a simple table foo with a column guid of data type uuid
>
> if I execute the following query
>
> select guid from foo where guid = '849b3d72-1400-44f1-
> a965-1f4648475589'
>
> the query returns fine
>
> but if I parameterize the query as this
>
> select guid from foo where guid = ?
>
> and I set the the parameter using setString(1, '849b3d72-1400-44f1-
> a965-1f4648475589')
>
> the query bombs with the following:
>
> [Error Code: 0, SQL State: 42883] ERROR: operator does not exist:
> uuid = character varying
>
> I understand I need to use setObject(), or that I could explicitly
> cast it (select guid from foo where guid = ?::uuid) but I don't
> understand why harcoding a string works, and sending a string
> parameter does not
When you give the SQL parser a string literal, it knows that it might have to
convert to the column type, and at that can only do so for column types that
define a conversion for string literals. When you give the parser a parameter
to a prepared statement, you are adding the feature of strong type safety.
You are actually depending on the parser to reject inputs of the wrong type.
For it to accept a string value for the parameter would be a violation of that
trust.
--
Lew