Dynamic-management structure
If you do not know the number or data types of values sent to or received from the database server, use a dynamic-management structure. A dynamic-management structure allows you to pass a variable-length list of data to the database server, or receive a variable-length list of data from it.
To execute dynamic SQL statements with unknown columns, you can
use either of the following dynamic-management structures in your program:
- A system-descriptor area is a language-independent data structure that is the X/Open standard. You allocate and manipulate it with the SQL statements ALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR, GET DESCRIPTOR, SET DESCRIPTOR, and DEALLOCATE DESCRIPTOR.
- The sqlda structure is a C-language data structure that
you manipulate with the same types of C-language statements that you
would use to allocate and manipulate other C structures (areas that
have the struct data type).
Because this method uses a C-language structure within SQL statements, it is language-dependent and does not conform to X/Open standards.
For a given dynamic SQL statement, the dynamic-management structure
can hold any of the following information:
- The number of unknown columns in the statement
- For each unknown value, the data type and length, space for the data, and information about any associated indicator variable (its data type, length, and data)
The program can then use this information to determine a host variable of appropriate length and type to hold the value.