FDO DataValue Type Conversions
Overview
There are a number of places in core FDO and Provider source code where data values are converted from one type to another. These data values include property values for features and property constraint values. Also, as various FDO client applications are written, some of them may also need to do data type conversion.
One current example is the FdoIDescribeSchema implementation for the RDBMS providers, which extracts check constraints from SQL expressions obtained from the RDBMS, and converts them into FDO Property Value Constraints. These constraints contain data values that represent ranges or lists of allowed values. The data types determined by the expression parser do not always exactly match the data type for the property that owns the constraint. When the types differ, the data values are converted to the property's data type.
Data value type conversions are not always trivial and the supporting runtime functions sometimes differ between Win32 and Linux (e.g. converting between string and int64). Implementing these conversions in different places leads to the following problems:
- there is no consistent handling of type conversions. For example, different parts of FDO might handle overflows (value is not valid for the destination type) differently
- code duplication. More expensive maintenance if the same fix has to be applied in multiple places (this can easily happen when the type conversion code is cloned to different places)
- more difficult for developers to find the type conversion functions currently available, since these can be in various places
Data values are encapsulated in the FdoDataValue class and its derivations. There is a derivation for each data type supported by FDO. Example data types include various integer types (8bit, 16bit, 32bit, 64bit), string and datetime.
The FdoDataValue class effectively provides this type conversion now, by supporting the conversion from strings to other data types and vice-versa. For example, a double can be converted to an int32 by converting it to a string and then to an int32. However, providing a more direct conversion, without converting to and from strings, would provide better performance. It also allows very large or small values to be converted more accurately.
It is also possible to convert between various numeric types through simple casting. However, this leads to source code with sizeable switch statements when converting between two arbitrary types.
This document looks at encapsulating data type conversions in new API functions on the FdoDataValue class.
API Changes
Direct conversion from a source to a destination type will be supported by adding Create functions to each destination type, which take a value of the source type as a parameter.
Main Functions
The following functions will be added:
FDO_API static FdoDataValue* FdoDataValue::Create( FdoDataType dataType, FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoBooleanValue* FdoBooleanValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoByteValue* FdoByteValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoDecimalValue* FdoDecimalValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoDoubleValue* FdoDoubleValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoInt16Value* FdoInt16Value::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoInt32Value* FdoInt32Value::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoInt64Value* FdoInt64Value::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoSingleValue* FdoSingleValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false ); FDO_API static FdoSingleValue* FdoCLOBValue::Create( FdoDataValue* src, FdoBoolean shift = true, FdoBoolean truncate = false, FdoBoolean nullIfIncompatible = false );
where:
dataType – specifies the destination type. This parameter is only specified for FdoDataValue::Create(). For the other functions, the destination type is determined by the return type.
src – specifies the source type and value. It is converted to an FdoDataValue of the destination type.
shift – determines what happens if conversion would cause the value to change. This can happen when converting between numeric types and the destination type does not have enough precision to hold the value as is (e.g convert 1.9 from Double to Int32 ). Applicable only when both source and destination types are one of Byte, Decimal, Double, Int16, Int32, Int64 or Single:
true: shift the value by rounding it to the precision allowed by the destination type
false: throw an exception
truncate – determines what happens if the value is outside the valid range for the destination type (e.g. convert 1000000 from !FdoInt32Value to !FdoInt16Value). Applicable only when both source and destination types are one of Boolean, Byte, Decimal, Double, Int16, Int32, Int64 or Single:
true: truncate the value to:
the maximum value for the destination type if the input value is greater than the maximum value
the minimum value for the destination type if the input value is less than the minimum value
false: throw an exception
When the source type is numeric and the destination type is Boolean, the behaviour differs from the above and is as follows:
true: convert 0 to false and other values to true
false: convert 0 to false and 1 to true. Throw an exception for other values
nullIfIncompatible – determines what happens if the source and destination types are incompatible (e.g. pass FdoDataTimeValue as src to FdoBoolean::Create()):
true: returns a null FdoDataValue (FdoDataValue::IsNull() = true)
Note that the pointer returned is not null, the FdoDataValue returned has its null flag set
false: throw an exception.
See the chart in the attached document for information on which pairs of types are compatible and which are incompatible.
There are no new functions for converting from other types to Strings. This can already be done by the FdoDataValue::ToString() function.
Supporting Functions
The following function will be added:
FDO_API FdoInt64 FdoStringP::ToInt64()
which converts a string to int64 value, and
FDO_API FdoStringP::FdoStringP( FdoInt64 value )
to convert an int64 to string. These functions hide the Win32 and Linux specific differences in doing these conversions.
Type Compatibility
See attached document: 'FDO DataValue Conversion Compatibility.pdf'
Issues
Should an FdoStringValue::Create ( FdoDataValue*, etc. ) function be added? It would make the API more consistent but provides limited added value over FdoStringValue::Create( FdoString* ). For example, the following code could make use of this function:
FdoPtr<FdoInt32Value> val1 = FdoInt32::Create( 1234 ); FdoPtr<FdoStringValue> val2 = FdoStringValue::Create( val1 );
However, the above can currently be done by:
FdoPtr<FdoInt32Value> val1 = FdoInt32::Create( 1234 ); FdoPtr<FdoStringValue> val2 = FdoStringValue::Create( val1->ToString() );
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- FDO DataValue Conversion Compatibility.pdf (14.2 KB ) - added by 17 years ago.
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