Example Queries
The following queries are from the
Player
entity of theRosterApp
application, which is documented in Chapter 26.Simple Queries
If you are unfamiliar with the query language, these simple queries are a good place to start.
A Basic Select Query
Data retrieved: All players.
Description: The
FROM
clause declares an identification variable namedp
, omitting the optional keywordAS
. If theAS
keyword were included, the clause would be written as follows:The
Player
element is the abstract schema name of thePlayer
entity.See also: Identification Variables
Eliminating Duplicate Values
Data retrieved: The players with the position specified by the query's parameter.
Description: The
DISTINCT
keyword eliminates duplicate values.The
WHERE
clause restricts the players retrieved by checking theirposition
, a persistent field of thePlayer
entity. The?1
element denotes the input parameter of the query.See also: Input Parameters, The DISTINCT Keyword
Using Named Parameters
Data retrieved: The players having the specified positions and names.
Description: The
position
andname
elements are persistent fields of thePlayer
entity. TheWHERE
clause compares the values of these fields with the named parameters of the query, set using theQuery.setNamedParameter
method. The query language denotes a named input parameter using colon (:
) followed by an identifier. The first input parameter is:position
, the second is:name
.Queries That Navigate to Related Entities
In the query language, an expression can traverse (or navigate) to related entities. These expressions are the primary difference between the Java Persistence query language and SQL. Queries navigates to related entities, whereas SQL joins tables.
A Simple Query With Relationships
Data retrieved: All players who belong to a team.
Description: The
FROM
clause declares two identification variables:p
andt
. Thep
variable represents thePlayer
entity, and thet
variable represents the relatedTeam
entity. The declaration fort
references the previously declaredp
variable. TheIN
keyword signifies thatteams
is a collection of related entities. Thep.teams
expression navigates from aPlayer
to its relatedTeam
. The period in thep.teams
expression is the navigation operator.You may also use the
JOIN
statement to write the same query:This query could also be rewritten as:
Navigating to Single-Valued Relationship Fields
Use the
JOIN
clause statement to navigate to a single-valued relationship field:In this example, the query will return all teams that are in either soccer or football leagues.
Traversing Relationships with an Input Parameter
Data retrieved: The players whose teams belong to the specified city.
Description: This query is similar to the previous example, but it adds an input parameter. The AS keyword in the
FROM
clause is optional. In theWHERE
clause, the period preceding the persistent variablecity
is a delimiter, not a navigation operator. Strictly speaking, expressions can navigate to relationship fields (related entities), but not to persistent fields. To access a persistent field, an expression uses the period as a delimiter.Expressions cannot navigate beyond (or further qualify) relationship fields that are collections. In the syntax of an expression, a collection-valued field is a terminal symbol. Because the
teams
field is a collection, theWHERE
clause cannot specifyp.teams.city
--an illegal expression.See also: Path Expressions
Traversing Multiple Relationships
Data retrieved: The players that belong to the specified league.
Description: The expressions in this query navigate over two relationships. The
p.teams
expression navigates thePlayer
-Team
relationship, and thet.league
expression navigates theTeam-League
relationship.In the other examples, the input parameters are
String
objects, but in this example the parameter is an object whose type is aLeague
. This type matches theleague
relationship field in the comparison expression of theWHERE
clause.Navigating According to Related Fields
Data retrieved: The players who participate in the specified sport.
Description: The
sport
persistent field belongs to theLeague
entity. To reach thesport
field, the query must first navigate from thePlayer
entity toTeam
(p.teams
) and then fromTeam
to theLeague
entity (t.league
). Because theleague
relationship field is not a collection, it can be followed by thesport
persistent field.Queries with Other Conditional Expressions
Every
WHERE
clause must specify a conditional expression, of which there are several kinds. In the previous examples, the conditional expressions are comparison expressions that test for equality. The following examples demonstrate some of the other kinds of conditional expressions. For descriptions of all conditional expressions, see the section WHERE Clause.The LIKE Expression
Data retrieved: All players whose names begin with "Mich."
Description: The
LIKE
expression uses wildcard characters to search for strings that match the wildcard pattern. In this case, the query uses theLIKE
expression and the%
wildcard to find all players whose names begin with the string "Mich." For example, "Michael" and "Michelle" both match the wildcard pattern.See also: LIKE Expressions
The IS NULL Expression
Data retrieved: All teams not associated with a league.
Description: The
IS NULL
expression can be used to check if a relationship has been set between two entities. In this case, the query checks to see if the teams are associated with any leagues, and returns the teams that do not have a league.See also: NULL Comparison Expressions, NULL Values
The IS EMPTY Expression
Data retrieved: All players who do not belong to a team.
Description: The
teams
relationship field of thePlayer
entity is a collection. If a player does not belong to a team, then theteams
collection is empty and the conditional expression isTRUE
.See also: Empty Collection Comparison Expressions
The BETWEEN Expression
Data retrieved: The players whose salaries fall within the range of the specified salaries.
Description: This
BETWEEN
expression has three arithmetic expressions: a persistent field (p.salary
) and the two input parameters (:lowerSalary
and:higherSalary
). The following expression is equivalent to theBETWEEN
expression:See also: BETWEEN Expressions
Comparison Operators
Data retrieved: All players whose salaries are higher than the salary of the player with the specified name.
Description: The
FROM
clause declares two identification variables (p1
andp2
) of the same type (Player
). Two identification variables are needed because theWHERE
clause compares the salary of one player (p2
) with that of the other players (p1
).See also: Identification Variables
Bulk Updates and Deletes
The following examples show how to use the
UPDATE
andDELETE
expressions in queries.UPDATE
andDELETE
operate on multiple entities according to the condition or conditions set in theWHERE
clause. TheWHERE
clause inUPDATE
andDELETE
queries follows the same rules asSELECT
queries.Update Queries
Description: This query sets the status of a set of players to
inactive
if the player's last game was longer than the date specified ininactiveThresholdDate
.Delete Queries
Description: This query deletes all inactive players who are not on a team.