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Recordset: Working with Large Data Items (ODBC)

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This article applies to both the MFC ODBC classes and the MFC DAO classes.

****Note   ****If you’re using the MFC DAO classes, manage your large data items with class rather than class . If you're using the MFC ODBC classes with bulk row fetching, use CLongBinary rather than CByteArray. For more information about bulk row fetching, see the article Recordset: Fetching Records in Bulk (ODBC).

Suppose your database can store large pieces of data, such as bitmaps (employee photographs, maps, pictures of products, OLE objects, and so on). This kind of data is often referred to as a Binary Large Object (or BLOB) because:

  • Each field value is large.

  • Unlike numbers and other simple data types, it has no predictable size.

  • The data is formless from the perspective of your program.

This article explains what support the database classes provide for working with such objects.

Managing Large Objects

Recordsets have two ways to solve the special difficulty of managing binary large objects. You can use class , or you can use class . In general, CByteArray is the preferred way to manage large binary data.

CByteArray requires more overhead than CLongBinary but is more capable, as described in The CByteArray Class. CLongBinary is described briefly in The CLongBinary Class.

For detailed information about using CByteArray to work with large data items, see .

The CByteArray Class

CByteArray is one of the MFC collection classes. A CByteArray object stores a dynamic array of bytes — the array can grow if needed. The class provides fast access by index, as with built-in C++ arrays. CByteArray objects can be serialized and dumped for diagnostic purposes. The class supplies member functions for getting and setting specified bytes, inserting and appending bytes, and removing one byte or all bytes. These facilities make parsing the binary data easier. For example, if the binary object is an OLE object, you might have to work through some header bytes to reach the actual object.

Using CByteArray in Recordsets

By giving a field data member of your recordset the type CByteArray, you provide a fixed base from which RFX can manage the transfer of such an object between your recordset and the data source and through which you can manipulate the data inside the object. RFX needs a specific site for retrieved data, and you need a way to access the underlying data.

For detailed information about using CByteArray to work with large data items, see .

The CLongBinary Class

A object is a simple shell around an HGLOBAL handle to a block of storage allocated on the heap. When it binds a table column containing a binary large object, RFX allocates the HGLOBAL handle when it needs to transfer the data to the recordset and stores the handle in the CLongBinary field of the recordset.

In turn, you use the HGLOBAL handle, m_hData, to work with the data itself, operating on it as you would on any handle data. This is where adds capabilities.

****Caution   CLongBinary objects can’t be used as parameters in function calls. In addition, their implementation, which calls ::SQLGetData, necessarily slows scrolling performance for a scrollable snapshot. This may also be true when you use an ::SQLGetData call yourself to retrieve dynamic schema columns.

See Also   Recordset: Obtaining SUMs and Other Aggregate Results (ODBC), Record Field Exchange