Oracle® Objects for OLE Developer's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) for Microsoft Windows Part Number E17727-03 |
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Returns the SnapshotID
.
Read and write at run time.
SnapshotID = OraDynaset.Snapshot
The SnapshotID
represents the snapshot from which this dynaset was created. It can be thought of as a timestamp. It can be passed into other CreateDynaset
method calls to cause them to be created using data from the same point in time as the original dynaset.
The Snapshot
property can be set with the value of another Snapshot
. That new snapshot is used during the next Refresh
operation when the query is reexecuted. The Snapshot
property always returns the SnapshotID
on which this OraDynaset
object was based, not any other SnapshotID
set through the snapshot property.
The SnapshotID
becomes invalid after a certain amount of time; that amount of time is dependent on the amount of activity and the configuration of the database. When this happens, you get a Snapshot
too
old
error message. For more information about snapshots, see the Oracle Database Concepts.
This SnapshotID
represents the point in time when this dynaset was created. Changes to this dynaset (Edit
, Delete
, and AddNew
operations) is not reflected in additional dynasets created using this SnapshotID
because they occurred after that point in time.
SnapshotID
objects are only meaningful for SELECT
statements where the tables referenced are real database tables, as opposed to pseudo tables such as DUAL
.
One valuable use of the SnapshotID
is to calculate the number of rows in a table without using the RecordCount
property which causes every row to be fetched. See "Example: Counting Rows in a Dynaset".
Object
Example: Using the SnapShot Property
This example shows the use of the SnapShot
property.
Dim OraSession As OraSession Dim OraDatabase As OraDatabase Dim OraDynaset1 As OraDynaset Dim OraDynaset2 As OraDynaset Dim SnapshotID as SnapshotID 'Create the OraSession Object. Set OraSession = CreateObject("OracleInProcServer.XOraSession") 'Create the OraDatabase Object by opening a connection to Oracle. Set OraDatabase = OraSession.OpenDatabase("ExampleDb", "scott/tiger", 0&) 'ALLEN's JOB is initially SALESMAN OraDatabase.ExecuteSql("Update EMP set JOB = 'SALESMAN' where ENAME = 'ALLEN'") 'Create initial OraDynaset Object. Set OraDynaset1 = OraDatabase.CreateDynaset("select empno, ename," & _ "job from emp", 0&) MsgBox "OraDynaset1 -- Value of JOB is " & OraDynaset1.Fields("JOB").Value 'Change Allen's JOB OraDatabase.ExecuteSql("Update EMP set JOB = 'CLERK' where ENAME = 'ALLEN'") 'This SnapshotID represents the point in time in which OraDynaset1 was created Set SnapshotID = OraDynaset1.Snapshot 'Create OraDynaset2 from the same point in time as OraDynaset1 Set OraDynaset2 = OraDatabase.CreateDynaset("select JOB from EMP" & _ "where ENAME = 'ALLEN'", 0&, SnapshotID) MsgBox "OraDynaset2 -- Value of JOB from point of time of OraDynaset1 is " & _ OraDynaset2.Fields("JOB").Value 'We set the snapshot to NULL which will get us current point in time. OraDynaset2.Snapshot = Null 'We refresh it and it will get us the data from the current point in time OraDynaset2.Refresh MsgBox "OraDynaset2 -- Value of JOB from current point of time is " & _ OraDynaset2.Fields("JOB").Value 'And back again to the old point in time -- OraDynaset2.Snapshot = SnapshotID OraDynaset2.Refresh MsgBox "OraDynaset2 -- Value of JOB from point of time of OraDynaset1 is " & _ OraDynaset2.Fields("JOB").Value
Example: Counting Rows in a Dynaset
This example counts the number of rows in a dynaset without using the RecordCount
property, which fetches every row. Note that the record count this returns cannot take into account any AddNew
or Delete
operations, making the information meaningful only immediately after the dynaset is created
Dim OraSession As OraSession Dim OraDatabase As OraDatabase Dim OraDynaset As OraDynaset Dim OraDynCount As OraDynaset Dim SnapshotID as SnapshotID 'Create the OraSession Object. Set OraSession = CreateObject("OracleInProcServer.XOraSession") 'Create the OraDatabase Object by opening a connection to Oracle. Set OraDatabase = OraSession.OpenDatabase("ExampleDb", "scott/tiger", 0&) 'Create the Dynaset Set OraDynaset = OraDatabase.CreateDynaset("select * from emp", 0&) Set SnapshotID = OraDynaset.Snapshot 'Use the snapshot for count query to guarantee the same point in time Set OraDynCount = OraDatabase.CreateDynaset("select count(*) NUMROWS" & _ "from emp", 0&, SnapshotID) MsgBox "Number of rows in the table is " & OraDynCount.Fields("NUMROWS").Value