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jOOQ Masterclass

jOOQ Masterclass

By : Anghel Leonard
4.6 (5)
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jOOQ Masterclass

jOOQ Masterclass

4.6 (5)
By: Anghel Leonard

Overview of this book

jOOQ is an excellent query builder framework that allows you to emulate database-specific SQL statements using a fluent, intuitive, and flexible DSL API. jOOQ is fully capable of handling the most complex SQL in more than 30 different database dialects. jOOQ Masterclass covers jOOQ from beginner to expert level using examples (for MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, and Oracle) that show you how jOOQ is a mature and complete solution for implementing the persistence layer. You’ll learn how to use jOOQ in Spring Boot apps as a replacement for SpringTemplate and Spring Data JPA. Next, you’ll unleash jOOQ type-safe queries and CRUD operations via jOOQ’s records, converters, bindings, types, mappers, multi-tenancy, logging, and testing. Later, the book shows you how to use jOOQ to exploit powerful SQL features such as UDTs, embeddable types, embedded keys, and more. As you progress, you’ll cover trending topics such as identifiers, batching, lazy loading, pagination, and HTTP long conversations. For implementation purposes, the jOOQ examples explained in this book are written in the Spring Boot context for Maven/Gradle against MySQL, Postgres, SQL Server, and Oracle. By the end of this book, you’ll be a jOOQ power user capable of integrating jOOQ in the most modern and sophisticated apps including enterprise apps, microservices, and so on.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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1
Part 1: jOOQ as a Query Builder, SQL Executor, and Code Generator
4
Part 2: jOOQ and Queries
11
Part 3: jOOQ and More Queries
16
Part 4: jOOQ and Advanced SQL
22
Part 5: Fine-tuning jOOQ, Logging, and Testing

Exporting data

Exporting (or formatting) data is achievable via the org.jooq.Formattable API. jOOQ exposes a suite of format() and formatFoo() methods that can be used to format Result and Cursor (remember fetchLazy() from Chapter 8, Fetching and Mapping) as text, JSON, XML, CSV, XML, charts, and INSERT statements. As you can see in the documentation, all these methods come in different flavors capable of exporting data into a string or a file via the Java OutputStream or Writer APIs.

Exporting as text

I'm sure that you have already seen in your console output something similar to the following:

Figure 10.1 – Tabular text data

This textual tabular representation can be achieved via the format() method. A flavor of this method takes an integer argument representing the maximum number of records to include in the formatted result (by default, jOOQ logs just the first five records of the result formatted via jOOQ's text export, but we can...

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