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FluentJPA provides fluent API for writing type-safe Object Oriented SQL queries with JPA. See examples from the sidebar.
This is an "entry-point" method to the FluentJPA. It accepts a Java lambda and translates it to SQL query. There are few conventions:
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Lambda parameters must be entity types. This way we declare the table references to be used in this query. Like in SQL, if there is a self join, there will be 2 parameters of the same entity type. For example:
FluentQuery query = FluentJPA.SQL((Staff emp, Staff manager, Store store) -> { // returns store name, employee first name and its manager first name // ordered by store and manager SELECT(store.getName(), emp.getFirstName(), manager.getFirstName()); FROM(emp).JOIN(manager).ON(emp.getManager() == manager) .JOIN(store).ON(emp.getStore() == store); ORDER(BY(emp.getStore()), BY(emp.getManager())); });
- In Java entity represents SQL Table or more generally a column set
- Having entities as parameters makes clear which tables this query works on
- Of course you never need to call this lambda - you only pass it to FluentJPA
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Every time, where SQL expects a table reference (e.g.
FROM
), an entity should be passed. FluentJPA will read the required Table information via JPA annotations. -
FluentJPA translates Lambda's body SQL clauses (written in Java) in the same order as they appear. Thus the content of the sample above is translated to exactly 3 lines:
SELECT t2.store_name, t0.first_name, t1.first_name FROM staffs AS t0 INNER JOIN staffs AS t1 ON (t0.manager_id = t1.staff_id) INNER JOIN stores AS t2 ON (t0.store_id = t2.store_id) ORDER BY t0.store_id, t0.manager_id
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Finally, call
FluentQuery.createQuery()
to get a standard JPA Query instance (see JPA Integration for details):TypedQuery<X> typedQuery = query.createQuery(entityManager, <X>.class); // execute the query typedQuery.getResultList(); // or getSingleResult() / executeUpdate()
- Translation: FluentJPA reads the Java Byte Code from the .class files in runtime and translates it to SQL.
- SQL mapping: FluentJPA looks for special annotations on the methods. If found, it generates SQL-style "method call" for them. See Extensibility for more details.
FluentSQL declares most of the standard SQL DML including extensions provided by the 4 most popular databases, see static imports. Explore examples of Basic/Advanced SQL DML Statements from the sidebar
- All functions mapped to SQL counterparts follow SQL naming convention - capitals with underscores as delimiters.
- All the helper functions follow standard Java naming convention. They are either Library methods or Directives.
Most of the Java language is supported, see Java Language Support
FluentJPA lets you create SQL with the same coding quality standards as rest of your code
Getting Started
- Introduction
- Setup
- Data Types
- Entities & Tuples
- Sub Queries
- JPA Integration
- Java Language Support
- Directives
- Library
- Returning Results
- JPA Repositories
Examples
Basic SQL DML Statements
Advanced SQL DML Statements
- Common Table Expressions (WITH Clause)
- Window Functions (OVER Clause)
- Aggregate Expressions
- MERGE
- Temporal Tables
Advanced Topics