org.jooq.DeleteWhereStep Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*
* Other licenses:
* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Commercial licenses for this work are available. These replace the above
* Apache-2.0 and offer limited warranties, support, maintenance, and commercial
* database integrations.
*
* For more information, please visit: https://www.jooq.org/legal/licensing
*
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*/
package org.jooq;
import org.jetbrains.annotations.*;
import java.util.Collection;
import org.jooq.impl.DSL;
/**
* This type is used for the {@link Delete}'s DSL API.
*
* Example:
* DSLContext create = DSL.using(configuration);
*
* create.delete(table)
* .where(field1.greaterThan(100))
* .execute();
*
*
*
Referencing XYZ*Step
types directly from client code
*
* It is usually not recommended to reference any XYZ*Step
types
* directly from client code, or assign them to local variables. When writing
* dynamic SQL, creating a statement's components dynamically, and passing them
* to the DSL API statically is usually a better choice. See the manual's
* section about dynamic SQL for details: https://www.jooq.org/doc/latest/manual/sql-building/dynamic-sql.
*
* Drawbacks of referencing the XYZ*Step
types directly:
*
* - They're operating on mutable implementations (as of jOOQ 3.x)
* - They're less composable and not easy to get right when dynamic SQL gets
* complex
* - They're less readable
* - They might have binary incompatible changes between minor releases
*
*
* @author Lukas Eder
*/
public interface DeleteWhereStep extends DeleteOrderByStep {
/**
* Add conditions to the query, connecting them with each other with
* {@link Operator#AND}.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep where(Condition condition);
/**
* Add conditions to the query, connecting them with each other with
* {@link Operator#AND}.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep where(Condition... conditions);
/**
* Add conditions to the query, connecting them with each other with
* {@link Operator#AND}.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep where(Collection extends Condition> conditions);
/**
* Add conditions to the query.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep where(Field condition);
/**
* Add conditions to the query.
*
* NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must
* guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of
* malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or
* escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
*
* @see DSL#condition(SQL)
* @see SQL
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
@PlainSQL
DeleteConditionStep where(SQL sql);
/**
* Add conditions to the query.
*
* NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must
* guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of
* malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or
* escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
*
* @see DSL#condition(String)
* @see SQL
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
@PlainSQL
DeleteConditionStep where(String sql);
/**
* Add conditions to the query.
*
* NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must
* guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of
* malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or
* escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
*
* @see DSL#condition(String, Object...)
* @see DSL#sql(String, Object...)
* @see SQL
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
@PlainSQL
DeleteConditionStep where(String sql, Object... bindings);
/**
* Add conditions to the query.
*
* NOTE: When inserting plain SQL into jOOQ objects, you must
* guarantee syntax integrity. You may also create the possibility of
* malicious SQL injection. Be sure to properly use bind variables and/or
* escape literals when concatenated into SQL clauses!
*
* @see DSL#condition(String, QueryPart...)
* @see DSL#sql(String, QueryPart...)
* @see SQL
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
@PlainSQL
DeleteConditionStep where(String sql, QueryPart... parts);
/**
* Add an EXISTS clause to the query.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep whereExists(Select> select);
/**
* Add a NOT EXISTS clause to the query.
*/
@NotNull @CheckReturnValue
@Support
DeleteConditionStep whereNotExists(Select> select);
}