public static class Select.Where extends BuiltStatement
WHERE clause of a SELECT statement.idempotent, NULL_PAYLOAD_VALUE| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| Select | allowFiltering()Adds an  ALLOW FILTERINGdirective to theSELECTstatement thisWHEREclause is part of. | 
| Select.Where | and(Clause clause)Adds the provided clause to this  WHEREclause. | 
| Statement | disableTracing()Disables tracing for this query. | 
| Statement | enableTracing()Enables tracing for this query. | 
| ConsistencyLevel | getConsistencyLevel()The consistency level for this query. | 
| String | getKeyspace()Returns the keyspace this query operates on. | 
| String | getQueryString(CodecRegistry codecRegistry)Returns the query string for this statement. | 
| RetryPolicy | getRetryPolicy()Returns the retry policy sets for this query, if any. | 
| ByteBuffer | getRoutingKey(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion,
             CodecRegistry codecRegistry)Returns the routing key (in binary raw form) to use for token aware routing of this query. | 
| ByteBuffer[] | getValues(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion,
         CodecRegistry codecRegistry)The positional values to use for this statement. | 
| Select | groupBy(Object... columns)Adds a  GROUP BYclause to this statement. | 
| boolean | hasValues()Whether or not this statement has values, that is if  getValueswill returnnullor not. | 
| boolean | isTracing()Returns whether tracing is enabled for this query or not. | 
| Select | limit(BindMarker limit)Adds a bind marker for the  LIMITclause to theSELECTstatement thisWHEREclause is part of. | 
| Select | limit(int limit)Adds a  LIMITclause to theSELECTstatement thisWHEREclause is part
 of. | 
| Select | orderBy(Ordering... orderings)Adds an ORDER BY clause to the  SELECTstatement thisWHEREclause if part of. | 
| Select | perPartitionLimit(BindMarker limit)Adds a bind marker for the  PER PARTITION LIMITclause to theSELECTstatement
 thisWHEREclause is part of. | 
| Select | perPartitionLimit(int perPartitionLimit)Adds a  PER PARTITION LIMITclause to theSELECTstatement thisWHEREclause is part of. | 
| Statement | setConsistencyLevel(ConsistencyLevel consistency)Sets the consistency level for the query. | 
| RegularStatement | setForceNoValues(boolean forceNoValues)Allows to force this builder to not generate values (through its  getValues()method). | 
| Statement | setRetryPolicy(RetryPolicy policy)Sets the retry policy to use for this query. | 
| String | toString()Returns this statement as a CQL query string. | 
escapeId, getNamedValues, getObject, getObject, hasValues, isIdempotent, usesNamedValuesgetQueryString, requestSizeInBytesgetDefaultTimestamp, getFetchSize, getHost, getLastHost, getNowInSeconds, getOutgoingPayload, getPartitioner, getReadTimeoutMillis, getSerialConsistencyLevel, isBatchIdempotent, isLWT, setDefaultTimestamp, setFetchSize, setHost, setIdempotent, setLastHost, setNowInSeconds, setOutgoingPayload, setPagingState, setPagingState, setPagingStateUnsafe, setReadTimeoutMillis, setSerialConsistencyLevelpublic Select.Where and(Clause clause)
WHERE clause.clause - the clause to add.WHERE clause.public Select orderBy(Ordering... orderings)
SELECT statement this WHERE clause if part of.orderings - the orderings to add.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalStateException - if an ORDER BY clause has already been provided.public Select groupBy(Object... columns)
GROUP BY clause to this statement.
 Note: support for GROUP BY clause is only available from Cassandra 3.10 onwards.
columns - the columns to group by.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalStateException - if a GROUP BY clause has already been provided.public Select limit(int limit)
LIMIT clause to the SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part
 of.limit - the limit to set.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalArgumentException - if limit <= 0.IllegalStateException - if a LIMIT clause has already been provided.public Select limit(BindMarker limit)
LIMIT clause to the SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.limit - the bind marker to use as limit.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalStateException - if a LIMIT clause has already been provided.public Select perPartitionLimit(int perPartitionLimit)
PER PARTITION LIMIT clause to the SELECT statement this WHERE
 clause is part of.
 Note: support for PER PARTITION LIMIT clause is only available from Cassandra 3.6
 onwards.
perPartitionLimit - the limit to set per partition.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalArgumentException - if perPartitionLimit <= 0.IllegalStateException - if a PER PARTITION LIMIT clause has already been
     provided.IllegalStateException - if this statement is a SELECT DISTINCT statement.public Select perPartitionLimit(BindMarker limit)
PER PARTITION LIMIT clause to the SELECT statement
 this WHERE clause is part of.
 Note: support for PER PARTITION LIMIT clause is only available from Cassandra 3.6
 onwards.
limit - the bind marker to use as limit per partition.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.IllegalStateException - if a PER PARTITION LIMIT clause has already been
     provided.IllegalStateException - if this statement is a SELECT DISTINCT statement.public Select allowFiltering()
ALLOW FILTERING directive to the SELECT statement this WHERE
 clause is part of.SELECT statement this WHERE clause is part of.public String getQueryString(CodecRegistry codecRegistry)
RegularStatementIt is important to note that the query string is merely a CQL representation of this
 statement, but it does not convey all the information stored in Statement
 objects.
 
For example, Statement objects carry numerous protocol-level settings, such as the
 consistency level to use, or the idempotence flag, among others. None of these settings will be
 included in the resulting query string.
 
Similarly, if values have been set on this statement because it has bind markers, these values will not appear in the resulting query string.
Note: the consistency level was conveyed at CQL level in older versions of the CQL grammar, but since CASSANDRA-4734 it is now a protocol-level setting and consequently does not appear in the query string.
getQueryString in class BuiltStatementcodecRegistry - the codec registry that will be used if the actual implementation needs to
     serialize Java objects in the process of generating the query. Note that it might be
     possible to use the no-arg RegularStatement.getQueryString() depending on the type of statement
     this is called on.RegularStatement.getQueryString()public ByteBuffer getRoutingKey(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion, CodecRegistry codecRegistry)
StatementThe routing key is optional in that implementers are free to return null. The
 routing key is an hint used for token-aware routing (see TokenAwarePolicy), and if provided should correspond to the
 binary value for the query partition key. However, not providing a routing key never causes a
 query to fail and if the load balancing policy used is not token aware, then the routing key
 can be safely ignored.
getRoutingKey in class BuiltStatementprotocolVersion - the protocol version that will be used if the actual implementation
     needs to serialize something to compute the key.codecRegistry - the codec registry that will be used if the actual implementation needs to
     serialize something to compute this key.null.public String getKeyspace()
StatementNote that not all query specify on which keyspace they operate on, and so this method can
 always return null. Firstly, some queries do not operate inside a keyspace: keyspace
 creation, USE queries, user creation, etc. Secondly, even query that operate within a
 keyspace do not have to specify said keyspace directly, in which case the currently logged in
 keyspace (the one set through a USE query (or through the use of Cluster.connect(String))). Lastly, as for the routing key, this keyspace information is only a
 hint for token-aware routing (since replica placement depend on the replication strategy in use
 which is a per-keyspace property) and having this method return null (or even a bogus
 keyspace name) will never cause the query to fail.
getKeyspace in class BuiltStatementnull.public RegularStatement setForceNoValues(boolean forceNoValues)
BuiltStatementgetValues() method).
 By default (and unless the protocol version 1 is in use, see below) and for performance
 reasons, the query builder will not serialize all values provided to strings. This means that
 BuiltStatement.getQueryString(CodecRegistry) may return a query string with bind markers (where and
 when is at the discretion of the builder) and BuiltStatement.getValues(com.datastax.driver.core.ProtocolVersion, com.datastax.driver.core.CodecRegistry) will return the binary values
 for those markers. This method allows to force the builder to not generate binary values but
 rather to inline them all in the query string. In practice, this means that if you call setForceNoValues(true), you are guaranteed that getValues() will return null
 and that the string returned by getQueryString() will contain no other bind markers
 than the ones specified by the user.
 
If the native protocol version 1 is in use, the driver will default to not generating values
 since those are not supported by that version of the protocol. In practice, the driver will
 automatically call this method with true as argument prior to execution. Hence, calling
 this method when the protocol version 1 is in use is basically a no-op.
 
Note that this method is mainly useful for debugging purpose. In general, the default behavior should be the correct and most efficient one.
setForceNoValues in class BuiltStatementforceNoValues - whether or not this builder may generate values.public Statement setConsistencyLevel(ConsistencyLevel consistency)
StatementsetConsistencyLevel in class Statementconsistency - the consistency level to set.Statement object.public ConsistencyLevel getConsistencyLevel()
StatementgetConsistencyLevel in class Statementnull if no consistency level has been
     specified (through setConsistencyLevel). In the latter case, the default
     consistency level will be used.public Statement enableTracing()
StatementBy default (that is unless you call this method), tracing is not enabled.
enableTracing in class StatementStatement object.public Statement disableTracing()
StatementdisableTracing in class StatementStatement object.public boolean isTracing()
Statementpublic Statement setRetryPolicy(RetryPolicy policy)
StatementThe default retry policy, if this method is not called, is the one returned by Policies.getRetryPolicy() in the cluster configuration. This
 method is thus only useful in case you want to punctually override the default policy for this
 request.
setRetryPolicy in class Statementpolicy - the retry policy to use for this query.Statement object.public RetryPolicy getRetryPolicy()
StatementgetRetryPolicy in class Statementnull if no query specific
     retry policy has been set through Statement.setRetryPolicy(com.datastax.driver.core.policies.RetryPolicy) (in which case the Cluster retry
     policy will apply if necessary).public ByteBuffer[] getValues(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion, CodecRegistry codecRegistry)
RegularStatementA statement can use either positional or named values, but not both. So if this method
 returns a non-null result, RegularStatement.getNamedValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry) will return
 null.
 
Values for a RegularStatement (i.e. if either method does not return null) are not
 supported with the native protocol version 1: you will get an UnsupportedProtocolVersionException when submitting one if version 1 of the protocol is in use
 (i.e. if you've forced version 1 through Cluster.Builder.withProtocolVersion(com.datastax.driver.core.ProtocolVersion) or you use
 Cassandra 1.2).
getValues in class BuiltStatementprotocolVersion - the protocol version that will be used to serialize the values.codecRegistry - the codec registry that will be used to serialize the values.SimpleStatement(String, Object...)public boolean hasValues()
RegularStatementgetValues will return null
 or not.
 This method calls RegularStatement.hasValues(CodecRegistry) with ProtocolVersion.NEWEST_SUPPORTED. Whether you should use this or the other variant depends on
 the type of statement this is called on:
 
SimpleStatement or SchemaStatement, the codec registry isn't
       actually needed, so it's always safe to use this method;
   BuiltStatement you can use this method if you use no custom codecs, or if
       your custom codecs are registered with the default registry. Otherwise, use the other
       method and provide the registry that contains your codecs (see BuiltStatement for
       more explanations on why this is so);
   BatchStatement, use the first rule if it contains no built statements, or
       the second rule otherwise.
 hasValues in class RegularStatementfalse if RegularStatement.getValues(com.datastax.driver.core.ProtocolVersion, com.datastax.driver.core.CodecRegistry) returns null, true otherwise.public String toString()
RegularStatementIt is important to note that the query string is merely a CQL representation of this
 statement, but it does not convey all the information stored in Statement
 objects.
 
See the javadocs of RegularStatement.getQueryString() for more information.
toString in class BuiltStatementRegularStatement.getQueryString()Copyright © 2012–2025. All rights reserved.