Notice: This Wiki is now read only and edits are no longer possible. Please see: https://gitlab.eclipse.org/eclipsefdn/helpdesk/-/wikis/Wiki-shutdown-plan for the plan.
Difference between revisions of "Introduction to Object-Relational Data Type Descriptors (ELUG)"
m |
m |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
Using object-relational data type descriptors in a relational project, you can configure object-relational data type mappings to these special object-relational data type database data types (see [[Introduction%20to%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Mappings%20(ELUG)#Object-Relational Data Type Mapping Types|Object-Relational Data Type Mapping Types]]). | Using object-relational data type descriptors in a relational project, you can configure object-relational data type mappings to these special object-relational data type database data types (see [[Introduction%20to%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Mappings%20(ELUG)#Object-Relational Data Type Mapping Types|Object-Relational Data Type Mapping Types]]). | ||
− | For more information, see: | + | For more information, see the following: |
* [[Creating%20an%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Descriptor%20(ELUG)|Creating an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor]] | * [[Creating%20an%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Descriptor%20(ELUG)|Creating an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor]] | ||
* [[Configuring%20an%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Descriptor%20(ELUG)|Configuring an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor]] | * [[Configuring%20an%20Object-Relational%20Data%20Type%20Descriptor%20(ELUG)|Configuring an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor]] |
Revision as of 12:29, 8 January 2008
This section provides an overview of object-relational data type descriptors.
For information on descriptor concepts and features common to more than one type of EclipseLink descriptors, see Introduction to Descriptors.
The object-relational data type paradigm extends traditional relational databases to include object-oriented functions. Oracle, IBM DB2, Informix, and other DBMS databases allow users to store, access, and use complex data in more sophisticated ways.The object-relational data type standard is an evolving standard concerned mainly with extending the database data structures and SQL (SQL 3).
Object-relational data type descriptors describe Java objects that you map to special relational database types that correspond more closely to object types. Using these special object-relational data type database types can simplify mapping objects to relational database tables. Not all relational databases support these special object-relational data type database types.
Using object-relational data type descriptors in a relational project, you can configure object-relational data type mappings to these special object-relational data type database data types (see Object-Relational Data Type Mapping Types).
For more information, see the following:
- Creating an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor
- Configuring an Object-Relational Data Type Descriptor