Bookmarks (ODBC)
A bookmark is a value used to identify a row of data. The meaning of the bookmark value is known only to the driver or data source. For example, it might be as simple as a row number or as complex as a disk address. Bookmarks in ODBC are a bit different from bookmarks in real books. In a real book, the reader places a bookmark at a specific page and then looks for that bookmark to return to the page. In ODBC, the application requests a bookmark for a particular row, stores it, and passes it back to the cursor to return to the row. Thus, bookmarks in ODBC are similar to a reader writing down a page number, remembering it, and then looking up the page again.
To determine a driver's support of bookmarks, an application calls SQLGetInfo with the SQL_BOOKMARK_PERSISTENCE option. The bits in this value describe what operations bookmarks survive, such as whether bookmarks are still valid after the cursor is closed.
This section contains the following topics.
Feedback
https://aka.ms/ContentUserFeedback.
Binnenkort beschikbaar: In de loop van 2024 zullen we GitHub-problemen geleidelijk uitfaseren als het feedbackmechanisme voor inhoud en deze vervangen door een nieuw feedbacksysteem. Zie voor meer informatie:Feedback verzenden en weergeven voor