SQLDescribeCol
For executed statements, the SQL Server Native Client ODBC driver does not need to query the server to describe columns in a result set. In this case, SQLDescribeCol
does not cause a server roundtrip. Like SQLColAttribute, calling SQLDescribeCol
on prepared but not executed statements generates a server roundtrip.
When a Transact-SQL statement or statement batch returns multiple result row sets, it is possible for a column, referenced by ordinal, to originate in a separate table or to refer to an entirely different column in the result set. SQLDescribeCol
should be called for each set. When the result set changes, the application should rebind data values prior to fetching row results. For more information about handling multiple result set returns, see SQLMoreResults.
Column attributes are reported for only the first result set when multiple result sets are generated by a prepared batch of SQL statements.
For large value data types, the value returned in DataTypePtr is SQL_VARCHAR, SQL_VARBINARY, or SQL_NVARCHAR. A value of SQL_SS_LENGTH_UNLIMITED in ColumnSizePtr indicates that the size is "unlimited".
Improvements in the database engine starting with SQL Server 2012 allow SQLDescribeCol to obtain more accurate descriptions of the expected results. These more accurate results may differ from the values returned by SQLDescribeCol in previous versions of SQL Server. For more information, see Metadata Discovery.
SQLDescribeCol Support for Enhanced Date and Time Features
The values returned for date/time types are as follows:
DataTypePtr | ColumnSizePtr | DecimalDigitsPtr | |
---|---|---|---|
datetime | SQL_TYPE_TIMESTAMP | 23 | 3 |
smalldatetime | SQL_TYPE_TIMESTAMP | 16 | 0 |
date | SQL_TYPE_DATE | 10 | 0 |
time | SQL_SS_TIME2 | 8, 10..16 | 0..7 |
datetime2 | SQL_TYPE_TIMESTAMP | 19, 21..27 | 0..7 |
datetimeoffset | SQL_SS_TIMESTAMPOFFSET | 26, 28..34 | 0..7 |
For more information, see Date and Time Improvements (ODBC).
SQLDescribeCol Support for Large CLR UDTs
SQLDescribeCol
supports large CLR user-defined types (UDTs). For more information, see Large CLR User-Defined Types (ODBC).