PostgreSQL JDBC: Querying Data
Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to query data from a table in the PostgreSQL database using JDBC API.
Steps for querying data
To query data from a table using JDBC, you follow these steps:
- Establish a database connection to the PostgreSQL server.
- Create an instance of the
Statement
orPreparedStatement
object. - Execute a statement to get a
ResultSet
object. - Process the
ResultSet
object. - Close the
Statement
&Connection
object by calling theirclose()
method.
If you use the try-with-resources statement, you don’t need to explicitly call the close()
method of the Statement
or Connection
object. It will automatically close these objects.
1) Establishing a database connection
Use the getConnection()
method of the DriverManager
class to establish a connection to the PostgreSQL server.
return DriverManager.getConnection(url, user, password);
We’ll use the DB
class created in the connecting to the PostgreSQL server to connect to the PostgreSQL server.
2) Creating a Statement object
In JDBC, a Statement
object represents an SQL statement.
- First, create a
Statement
object from theConnection
object. - Then, execute the
Statement
object to get aResultSet
object that represents a database result set.
JDBC offers three types of Statement
objects:
Statement
: use the Statement to implement a simple SQL statement that has no parameters.PreparedStatement
: is the subclass of theStatement
class, which allows you to bind parameters to the SQL statement.CallableStatement
: extends thePreparedStatement
class that can execute a stored procedure.
3) Executing a query
To execute a query, you use one of the following methods of the Statement
object:
execute()
: Return true if the first object of the query is aResultSet
object. You can get theResultSet
by calling the methodgetResultSet()
.executeQuery()
: Return only oneResultSet
object.executeUpdate()
: Return the number of rows affected by the statement. Typically, you use this method for executing the INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE statement.
4) Processing the ResultSet
Once having a ResultSet
object, you use a while loop to iterate over the result in the result set:
while (rs.next()) {
// ...
}
5) Closing a database connection
To close a Statement
or Connection
object, you call the close()
method explicitly in the finally
clause of the try...catch...finally
statement. This ensures that the resources are closed properly even if any exception occurs.
Starting from JDBC 4.1, you can use a try-with-resources statement to close ResultSet
, Statement
, and Connection
objects automatically.
Querying data examples
Let’s explore some examples of querying data from a table using JDBC.
1) Querying all rows from the products table
Define a new function findAll() in the ProductDB class to retrieve all rows from the products table:
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class ProductDB {
public static List<Product> findAll() {
var products = new ArrayList<Product>();
var sql = "SELECT id, name, price FROM products ORDER BY name";
try (var conn = DB.connect();
var stmt = conn.createStatement()) {
var rs = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
while (rs.next()) {
var product = new Product(
rs.getInt("id"),
rs.getString("name"),
rs.getDouble("price"));
products.add(product);
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return products;
}
// ...
}
How it works.
First, initialize an ArrayList
to store the returned products.
var products = new ArrayList<Product>();
Second, construct a query that retrieves all rows from the products
table:
var sql = "SELECT id, name, price FROM products ORDER BY name";
Third, open a database connection and create a Statement
object:
try (var conn = DB.connect();
var stmt = conn.createStatement()) {
// ..
The try-with-resources will automatically close the Statement
and Connection
objects.
Fourth, execute the SELECT
statement by calling the executeQuery()
method:
var rs = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
Fifth, iterate over the result set, initialize the Product
object, and add it to the products
list:
while (rs.next()) {
var product = new Product(
rs.getInt("id"),
rs.getString("name"),
rs.getDouble("price")
);
products.add(product);
}
Finally, return the products list:
return products;
The following shows how to use the findAll() method of the ProductDB class to retrieve all data from the products table and display each in the standard output:
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
var products = ProductDB.findAll();
for (var product: products) {
System.out.println(product);
}
}
}
Output:
Product{id=5, name='Bluetooth Headphones', price=199.0}
Product{id=8, name='Car Mount', price=29.98}
Product{id=1, name='Phone Case', price=19.99}
Product{id=6, name='Phone Stand', price=24.99}
Product{id=2, name='Power Bank', price=19.99}
Product{id=7, name='Ring Holder', price=39.99}
Product{id=3, name='Screen Protector', price=29.99}
Product{id=9, name='Selfie Stick', price=29.99}
Product{id=10, name='Smartwatch', price=399.97}
Product{id=4, name='Wireless Charger', price=35.99}
2) Querying data with parameters
The following defines a method called findById() to find the product by id:
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class ProductDB {
public static Product findById(int id){
var sql = "SELECT id, name, price FROM products WHERE id=?";
try (var conn = DB.connect();
var pstmt = conn.prepareStatement(sql)) {
pstmt.setInt(1, id);
var rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
if (rs.next()) {
return new Product(
rs.getInt("id"),
rs.getString("name"),
rs.getDouble("price")
);
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
// ...
}
How it works.
First, construct a SELECT that selects a product by id and use the question mark (?) as the placeholder:
var sql = "SELECT id, name, price FROM products WHERE id=?";
Second, open a connection to the database and create a PreparedStatement
object:
try (var conn = DB.connect();
var pstmt = conn.prepareStatement(sql)) {
//...
Third, bind the id to the statement:
pstmt.setInt(1, id);
Fourth, execute the statement using the executeQuery()
method of the PreparedStatement object:
var rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
Fifth, process the result set if the row with specified id exists and return the Product object:
if (rs.next()) {
return new Product(
rs.getInt("id"),
rs.getString("name"),
rs.getDouble("price")
);
}
The following shows how to use the findById()
in the main()
method of the Main() class to retrieve the product with id 1 from the products
table:
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
var p = ProductDB.findById(1);
if(p != null){
System.out.println(p);
}
}
}
Output:
Product{id=1, name='Phone Case', price=19.99}
Summary
- Use the
executeQuery()
method of theStatement
orPreparedStatement
object to retrieve data from a table.