In some cases it is necessary to build SQL-expressions dynamically under program control.
The function
sql-operation
returns the SQL expression for an operator applied to its arguments. It also supports building SQL expressions which contain arbitrary SQL functions using the pseudo operators
sql-function
,
sql-operator
and
sql-boolean-operator
. For examples see
sql-operation
in the
LispWorks Reference Manual
.
The function
sql-expression
makes an SQL expression from the given keywords. This is equivalent to the first and third uses of the
[]
syntax as discussed in The "[...]" Syntax.
The function
sql-operator
returns the Lisp symbol for an SQL operator.
The function
sql
makes SQL out of the arguments supplied. Each argument to
sql
is turned into SQL and then the
args
are concatenated with a single space between each pair. A Lisp string maps to the same characters enclosed between single quotes (this corresponds to an SQL string constant).
nil
maps to
"NULL"
, that is, an SQL null value. Symbols and numbers map to strings. A list maps to a parenthesised, comma-separated expression. A vector maps to a comma-separated expression, which allows the easy generation of SQL lists that require no parentheses such as table lists in select statements.
The rules for the conversion via
sql
are fully specified in the
LispWorks Reference Manual
.