
'Declaration Public Structure TdIntervalMinute Inherits System.ValueType Implements System.Data.SqlTypes.INullable, System.IComparable, System.IComparable(Of TdIntervalMinute), System.IConvertible, System.IEquatable(Of TdIntervalMinute), System.IFormattable, System.Xml.Serialization.IXmlSerializable
'Usage Dim instance As TdIntervalMinute
public struct TdIntervalMinute : System.ValueType, System.Data.SqlTypes.INullable, System.IComparable, System.IComparable<TdIntervalMinute>, System.IConvertible, System.IEquatable<TdIntervalMinute>, System.IFormattable, System.Xml.Serialization.IXmlSerializable
public value class TdIntervalMinute : public System.ValueType, System.Data.SqlTypes.INullable, System.IComparable, System.IComparable<TdIntervalMinute>, System.IConvertible, System.IEquatable<TdIntervalMinute>, System.IFormattable, System.Xml.Serialization.IXmlSerializable
TdIntervalMinute is a .NET Data Provider for Teradata specific type, designed to support a SQL Interval Minute data type.
The TdIntervalMinute supports the Teradata Interval Minute (precision) data type where precision indicates the number of digits in the minutes (from 1 - 4).
The interval value must be specified in the following format :
[sign][minutes]
Below is the description of each format item.
Format Item | Description |
---|---|
sign | Optional - . Defaults as space character (+). |
minutes | Required number of minutes (one to four digits in length). |
.NET does not have a system type that directly corresponds to the SQL Interval Minute data type. The .NET Data Provider for Teradata Version 13.0 version and prior versions map Interval Minute to System.String. With version 13.1 of the provider, TdIntervalMinute is available to retrieve and manipulate data of type Interval Minute.
The range of values for each TdIntervalMinute precision is as follows:
Type and Precision | Minimum | Maximum |
---|---|---|
TdIntervalMinute(1) |
-'9' |
'9' |
TdIntervalMinute(2) |
-'99' |
'99' |
TdIntervalMinute(3) |
-'999' |
'999' |
TdIntervalMinute(4) |
-'9999' |
'9999' |
TdIntervalMinute also supports TdIntervalMinute.Null. This is a very important feature. An application is no longer required to call TdDataReader.IsDBNull before invoking the corresponding TdDataReader "Get" method. This will improve overall performance.
A TdIntervalMinute structure allows arithmetic, comparision and conversion operations to be performed.
A TdIntervalMinute may also be specified as an in, out, or in/out parameter to a stored procedure. In order to maintain backward compatibility with previous versions of the provider (release 13.0 and prior), a Connection String Attribute TdConnectionStringBuilder.EnableTdIntervals has been added. When the EnableTdIntervals attribute is true
, TdParameter.ProviderSpecificValue will return the data as the provider specific type of TdIntervalMinute. When EnableTdIntervals is false
, TdParameter.ProviderSpecificValue will return the data as a .NET Framework Library data type of String.
The TdParameter.Value will also return the .NET Framework Library data type of System.String when EnableTdIntervals is false
to maintain backward compatibility. The TdParameter.Value will return a .NET Framework data type of TimeSpan when EnableTdIntervals is true
.
For more information on the Teradata Interval Minute data type please see 'SQL Data Types and Literals' manual.
The following example shows how to retrieve a TdIntervalSecond, modify the interval, and then update the table.
Public void IntervalExample(TdCommand cmd, Int32 task) { cmd.Parameters.Clear(); cmd.CommandText = "SELECT StartDate, StartTime, TaskLen " + "FROM Schedule " + "WHERE Task = ?"; cmd.CommandType = CommandType.Text; cmd.Parameters.Add(null, TdType.Integer, 4, ParameterDirection.Input, true, 0, 0, null, DataRowVersion.Default, task); Int32 row = 0; TdDate [] startDate; TdTimestamp [] startTime; TdIntervalSecond [] taskLen; using (TdDataReader dr = cmd.ExecuteReader()) { startDate = new TdDate[dr.RecordsReturned]; startTime = new TdTimestamp[dr.RecordsReturned]; taskLen = new TdIntervalSecond [dr.RecordsReturned]; // Specifying an interval of 2 hours, 5 minutes // with an second precision of 4 TdIntervalSecond leaseReturnExtension = new TdIntervalSecond(125, 4); while (dr.Read()) { // Retrieving the dates startDate[row] = dr.GetTdDate(0); startTime[row] = dr.GetTimestamp(1); taskLen[row] = dr.GetTdIntervalMinute(2); // Adding extension to the lease return startTime[row] = startTime[row] + leaseReturnExtension; // Adding extension to the lease length; taskLen[row] = taskLen[row] + leaseReturnExtension; row++; } } cmd.Parameters.Clear(); cmd.CommandText = "UPDATE Schedule " + "SET StartTime = ?, TaskLen = ? " + "WHERE Task = ?"; cmd.Parameters.Add(null, TdType.Timestamp, 0, ParameterDirection.Input, true, 0, 0, null, DataRowVersion.Default, null); cmd.Parameters.Add(null, TdType.IntervalMinute, 0, ParameterDirection.Input, true, 0, 0, null, DataRowVersion.Default, null); cmd.Parameters.Add(null, TdType.Integer, 4, ParameterDirection.Input, true, 0, 0, null, DataRowVersion.Default, task); row--; while(row >= 0) { cmd.Parameters[0].Value = startTime[row]; cmd.Parameters[1].Value = taskLen[row]; cmd.Parameters[2].Value = task; cmd.ExecuteNonQuery(); row--; } }
System.Object
System.ValueType
Teradata.Client.Provider.TdIntervalMinute
Target Platforms: Windows 8.1, Windows 10, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019
TdIntervalMinute Members
Teradata.Client.Provider Namespace
EnableTdIntervals Property
Interval Connection String Attribute
Enabling Provider Specific Types
Provider Specific Type: Interval Type Overview