I’m developing an Android application and i’m using a Sqlite database to store some bitmaps. I want some images to be automatically inserted when the user installs the application.
I’m using the SQLiteOpenHelper class like this:
public class DatabaseHelper extends SQLiteOpenHelper {
...
DatabaseHelper(Context context, String nameOfDB, int version, String[] scriptSQLCreate,
String scriptSQLDelete) {
super(context, nameOfDB, null, version);
this.scriptSQLCreate = scriptSQLCreate;
this.scriptSQLDelete = scriptSQLDelete;
}
@Override
public void onCreate(SQLiteDatabase db) {
int numScripts = scriptSQLCreate.length;
for(int i = 0; i<numScripts; i++){
Log.i(TAG,"Creating database, executing script " + i);
db.execSQL(scriptSQLCreate[i]);
}
}
}
…
I want to pass a constant to the scriptSQLCreate parameter shown above that would be like so:
private static final String[] SCRIPT_DATABASE_CREATE = {
"create table memes( id integer primary key autoincrement," +
+ " img blob not null," +
+ " name text not null unique)" ,
"insert into memes(img,name) values(BITMAP1,'1.jpg')",
"insert into memes(img,name) values(BITMAP2,'2.jpg')",
"insert into memes(img,name) values(BITMAP3,'3.jpg')"}
}
Any help will be much apreciated,
Thx,
Tulio Zahn
If you really, really want to you can use a very long hex literal as a blob literal:
However, this is usually a bad idea; instead, go look at parameterised queries. They will let you compile a statement once using placeholders instead of actual values, and then reuse it many times, filling in the placeholders as needed:
(Warning — code not tested.)
In general you should be using parameterised queries everywhere, as they’re a sure-fire way to avoid SQL injection attacks, plus are usually easier and clearer. Assembling SQL queries by glueing strings together should be avoided at all costs.