Thread: Obtaining precision and scale of NUMERIC types

Obtaining precision and scale of NUMERIC types

From
"Donald J. Armstrong"
Date:

Greetings,

 

My first post.

 

I am attempting to describe the table “donnie” from JDBC and I’m unable to determine the precision and scale of numeric types.  I’ve tried the stable and beta versions of the JDBC driver and receive same behavior.  

 

DB version string

PostgreSQL 7.2.3 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC gcc (GCC) 3.2 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)

 

I’m using the following code…

 

    try {

      DatabaseMetaData dbms = basicCon.driverConnection.getMetaData();

      ResultSet columnNames;

      columnNames = dbms.getColumns(null, null, "donnie", null);

 

        while (columnNames.next()) {

          System.out.print(columnNames.getString("COLUMN_NAME") + " ");

 

          switch (columnNames.getInt("DATA_TYPE")) {

            case java.sql.Types.INTEGER:

              System.out.print("INTEGER");

              break;

            case java.sql.Types.VARCHAR:

              System.out.print("VARCHAR (");

              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ")");

              break;

            case java.sql.Types.NUMERIC:

              System.out.print("NUMERIC (");

              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ",");

              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("DECIMAL_DIGITS") + ")");

              break;

          }

 

          System.out.println("");

        }

 

    } catch (SQLException e) {

      System.out.print(e);

    }

  }

 

The output from the java program

a INTEGER

b VARCHAR (100)

c NUMERIC (65535,65535)

d NUMERIC (0,0)

The description from pgsql

               Table "donnie"

 Column |          Type             | Modifiers

--------+------------------------+-----------

 a      | integer                       |

 b      | character varying(100) |

 c      | numeric(7,3)               |

 d      | numeric(12,4)             |

 

Any help?

Donnie

Re: Obtaining precision and scale of NUMERIC types

From
Kris Jurka
Date:
Attached is patch to fix this problem.  The driver was using the wrong
column from it's query to determine the size and digits of the result.

Kris Jurka

On Thu, 6 Feb 2003, Donald J. Armstrong wrote:

> Greetings,
>
> My first post.
>
> I am attempting to describe the table "donnie" from JDBC and I'm unable
> to determine the precision and scale of numeric types.  I've tried the
> stable and beta versions of the JDBC driver and receive same behavior.
>
> DB version string
> PostgreSQL 7.2.3 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC gcc (GCC) 3.2
> 20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)
>
> I'm using the following code...
>
>     try {
>       DatabaseMetaData dbms = basicCon.driverConnection.getMetaData();
>       ResultSet columnNames;
>       columnNames = dbms.getColumns(null, null, "donnie", null);
>
>         while (columnNames.next()) {
>           System.out.print(columnNames.getString("COLUMN_NAME") + " ");
>
>           switch (columnNames.getInt("DATA_TYPE")) {
>             case java.sql.Types.INTEGER:
>               System.out.print("INTEGER");
>               break;
>             case java.sql.Types.VARCHAR:
>               System.out.print("VARCHAR (");
>               System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ")");
>               break;
>             case java.sql.Types.NUMERIC:
>               System.out.print("NUMERIC (");
>               System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ",");
>               System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("DECIMAL_DIGITS") +
> ")");
>               break;
>           }
>
>           System.out.println("");
>         }
>
>     } catch (SQLException e) {
>       System.out.print(e);
>     }
>   }
>
> The output from the java program
> a INTEGER
> b VARCHAR (100)
> c NUMERIC (65535,65535)
> d NUMERIC (0,0)
> The description from pgsql
>                Table "donnie"
>  Column |          Type             | Modifiers
> --------+------------------------+-----------
>  a      | integer                       |
>  b      | character varying(100) |
>  c      | numeric(7,3)               |
>  d      | numeric(12,4)             |
>
> Any help?
> Donnie
>

Attachment

Re: Obtaining precision and scale of NUMERIC types

From
Barry Lind
Date:
Patch applied by Dave to cvs head.

--Barry


Kris Jurka wrote:
> Attached is patch to fix this problem.  The driver was using the wrong
> column from it's query to determine the size and digits of the result.
>
> Kris Jurka
>
> On Thu, 6 Feb 2003, Donald J. Armstrong wrote:
>
>
>>Greetings,
>>
>>My first post.
>>
>>I am attempting to describe the table "donnie" from JDBC and I'm unable
>>to determine the precision and scale of numeric types.  I've tried the
>>stable and beta versions of the JDBC driver and receive same behavior.
>>
>>DB version string
>>PostgreSQL 7.2.3 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC gcc (GCC) 3.2
>>20020903 (Red Hat Linux 8.0 3.2-7)
>>
>>I'm using the following code...
>>
>>    try {
>>      DatabaseMetaData dbms = basicCon.driverConnection.getMetaData();
>>      ResultSet columnNames;
>>      columnNames = dbms.getColumns(null, null, "donnie", null);
>>
>>        while (columnNames.next()) {
>>          System.out.print(columnNames.getString("COLUMN_NAME") + " ");
>>
>>          switch (columnNames.getInt("DATA_TYPE")) {
>>            case java.sql.Types.INTEGER:
>>              System.out.print("INTEGER");
>>              break;
>>            case java.sql.Types.VARCHAR:
>>              System.out.print("VARCHAR (");
>>              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ")");
>>              break;
>>            case java.sql.Types.NUMERIC:
>>              System.out.print("NUMERIC (");
>>              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("COLUMN_SIZE") + ",");
>>              System.out.print(columnNames.getInt("DECIMAL_DIGITS") +
>>")");
>>              break;
>>          }
>>
>>          System.out.println("");
>>        }
>>
>>    } catch (SQLException e) {
>>      System.out.print(e);
>>    }
>>  }
>>
>>The output from the java program
>>a INTEGER
>>b VARCHAR (100)
>>c NUMERIC (65535,65535)
>>d NUMERIC (0,0)
>>The description from pgsql
>>               Table "donnie"
>> Column |          Type             | Modifiers
>>--------+------------------------+-----------
>> a      | integer                       |
>> b      | character varying(100) |
>> c      | numeric(7,3)               |
>> d      | numeric(12,4)             |
>>
>>Any help?
>>Donnie
>>
>>
>>
>>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>Index: src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java
>>===================================================================
>>RCS file:
/projects/cvsroot/pgsql-server/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java,v
>>retrieving revision 1.16
>>diff -c -r1.16 AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java
>>*** src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java    2003/02/04 09:20:08    1.16
>>--- src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/AbstractJdbc1DatabaseMetaData.java    2003/02/06 18:44:17
>>***************
>>*** 2352,2358 ****
>>              }
>>              else if (pgType.equals("numeric") || pgType.equals("decimal"))
>>              {
>>!                 int attypmod = rs.getInt(8) - VARHDRSZ;
>>                  tuple[6] = Integer.toString( ( attypmod >> 16 ) & 0xffff ).getBytes();
>>                  tuple[8] = Integer.toString(attypmod & 0xffff).getBytes();
>>                  tuple[9] = "10".getBytes();
>>--- 2352,2358 ----
>>              }
>>              else if (pgType.equals("numeric") || pgType.equals("decimal"))
>>              {
>>!                 int attypmod = rs.getInt("atttypmod") - VARHDRSZ;
>>                  tuple[6] = Integer.toString( ( attypmod >> 16 ) & 0xffff ).getBytes();
>>                  tuple[8] = Integer.toString(attypmod & 0xffff).getBytes();
>>                  tuple[9] = "10".getBytes();
>>
>>
>>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>>---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
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