ODBC Driver for Microsoft Excel

Build 24.0.8963

Parameterized Statements

The following code example shows how to bind parameters to create parameterized statements.

Single-Use Statements

The query method accepts an additional array parameter for binding query parameters to values.

db.open("...", (err) => {
     db.query(
        "SELECT RowId, LastName FROM Sheet WHERE FirstName = ?",
        ["Bob"],
        (err, rows, moreRows) => {
        for (var i = 0; i < rows.length; i++) {
            console.log("RowId = " + rows["RowId"]);
            console.log("LastName = " + rows["LastName"]);
        }

        if (!moreRows) {
            console.log("All rows have been processed");
        }
    });
});

Reusable Statements

The prepare method creates prepared ODBCStatement objects, which can be re-used across multiple execute and executeNonQuery calls.

When you execute an ODBCStatement, your callback receives an ODBCResult object which is used to fetch results. It can be used to fetch all results at once into an array, or it can fetch rows one at a time.

db.open("...", (err) => {
    db.prepare(
        "SELECT RowId, LastName FROM Sheet WHERE FirstName = ?",
        (err, stmt) => {
        function printData(result, done) {
            result.fetch((err, row) => {
                if (row === null) done();

                console.log("RowId = " + row["RowId"]);
                console.log("LastName = " + row["LastName"]);
                printData(result);
            }
        }

        stmt.executeQuery("Bob 1", (err, result) => {
            printData(result, () => {
                stmt.executeQuery("Bob 2", (err, result) => {
                    printData(result);
                });
            });
        });
    });
});

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Build 24.0.8963