Supported SQL Server datatypes

The SQL Native Client database interface supports the datatypes listed in the following table. 

Binary

Real

Bit

SmallDateTime

Character (fewer than 255 characters)

SmallInt

DateTime

SmallMoney

Decimal

Text

Float

Timestamp

Identity

TinyInt

Image

VarBinary(max)

Int

VarBinary(n)

Money

VarChar(max)

Numeric

VarChar(n)

NVarChar(max)

XML

NVarChar(n)

 


The XML datatype is a built-in datatype in SQL Server 2005 that enables you to store XML documents and fragments in a SQL Server database. The XML datatype maps to the PowerScript String datatype. You can use this datatype as a column type when you create a table, as a variable, parameter, or function return type, and with CAST and CONVERT functions.

Additional datatypes are supported for SQL Server 2008. For more information, see Support for new datatypes in SQL Server 2008.

Datatype conversion

When you retrieve or update columns, PowerBuilder converts data appropriately between the Microsoft SQL Server datatype and the PowerScript datatype. Keep in mind, however, that similarly or identically named SQL Server and PowerScript datatypes do not necessarily have the same definitions.

For information about the definitions of PowerScript datatypes, see Datatypes in PowerScript Reference.

In SQL Server 2005, the VarChar(max), NVarChar(max), and VarBinary(max) datatypes store very large values (up to 2^31 bytes). The VarChar(max) and NVarChar(max) datatypes map to the PowerScript String datatype and the VarBinary(max) datatype maps to the PowerScript Blob datatype. You can use these datatypes to obtain metadata, define new columns, and query data from the columns. You can also use them to pipeline data.

Working with large data values

For large data values of datatypes Text, NText, Image, Varchar(max), NVarchar(max), VarBinary(max), and XML, the SNC interface supports reading data directly from the database using an embedded SQL statement.

Example 1:

select image_col into :blob_var from mytable where key_col = 1;

Example 2:

declare cur cursor for select id, image_col from mytable;
open cur;
fetch cur into :id_var, :blob_var;

If the result set contains a large datatype of type Text or Varchar(max), using ANSI encoding, you must set a maximum size for each large value using the PBMaxBlobSize database parameter. For other large datatypes, there is no limitation on the size of the data. The SNC interface retrieves all the data from the database if there is sufficient memory.

The SNC interface supports inserting and updating values of large datatypes using embedded SQL INSERT and UPDATE statements. You must set the DisableBind database parameter to 0 to enable the SNC interface to bind large data values. For example:

Insert into mytable (id, blob_col) values(1, :blob_var);
Update mytable set blob_col = :blob_var where id = 1;