In my situation, I am querying a database for a specific return (in this case registration information based on a username).
//Build SQL String and Query Database.
if(formValid){
try {
SQL = "SELECT * FROM users WHERE username=? AND email=?";
Collections.addAll(fields, username, email);
results = services.DataService.getData(SQL, fields);
if (!results.next()){
errMessages.add("User account not found.");
} else {
user = new User();
user.fillUser(results); //Is it ok to pass ResultSet Around?
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
services.DataService.closeDataObjects(); //Does this close the ResultSet I passed to fillUser?
}
}
So once I query the database, if a result is found I create a new User object and populate it with the data I received from the database. I used to do all of this directly in the method that I was pulling the resultset into, but I realized I was doing a lot of redundant coding throughout my project so I moved it all into one central method that lives in the actual User bean.
public void fillUser(ResultSet data) throws SQLException{
setUserId(data.getInt("id"));
setFirstName(data.getString("first_name"));
setLastName(data.getString("last_name"));
setUsername(data.getString("username"));
setType(data.getString("type"));
setEmail(data.getString("email"));
}
I have done a few tests and from what I can determine, because I close the original resultset in the finally block of the query, the resultset that I pass into the fillUser method also gets closed. Or am I wrong and am I seriously leaking data? This is actually the second time I pass a resultset (so its two instances of one) because the block I use to query my database is
public static ResultSet getData(String SQL, ArrayList fields) throws SQLException {
try{
connection = Database.getConnection();
preparedStatement = connection.prepareStatement(SQL);
for(int i=0; i<fields.size(); i++){
Integer num = i + 1;
Object item = fields.get(i);
if(item instanceof String){
preparedStatement.setString(num, (String) item); //Array item is String.
} else if (item instanceof Integer){
preparedStatement.setInt(num, (Integer) item); //Array item is Integer.
}
}
resultSet = preparedStatement.executeQuery();
return resultSet;
}finally{
}
}
All of these code snippets live in separate classes and are reused multiple times throughout my project. Is it ok to pass a resultset around like this, or should I be attempting another method? My goal is to reduce the codes redundancy, but i'm not sure if i'm going about it in a legal manner.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…