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Home/ Questions/Q 530343
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:11:12+00:00 2026-05-13T09:11:12+00:00

Is this good style of java data access code, or is it too much

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Is this good style of java data access code, or is it too much try finally ?

public List<Item> getItems() throws ItemException {
    ArrayList<Item> items = new ArrayList<Item>();
    try {
        Connection con = ds.getConnection();
        try {
            PreparedStatement pStmt = con.prepareStatement("SELECT ....");
            try {
                ResultSet rs = pStmt.executeQuery();
                try {
                    while (rs.next()) {
                        Item item = new Item();
                        item.setItemNo(rs.getString("item_id"));
                        // ...
                        items.add(item);
                    }
                } finally {
                    rs.close();
                }
            } finally {
                pStmt.close();
            }
        } finally {
            con.close();
        }
    } catch (SQLException e) {
        throw new ItemException(e);
    }
    return items;
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:11:12+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:11 am

    Compare it to my code:

    Connection con = null;
    PreparedStatement pStmt = null;
    ResultSet rs = null;
    try
    {
        con = ds.getConnection();
        pStmt = con.prepareStatement("SELECT ....");
        rs = pStmt.executeQuery();
        while (rs.next()) {
            Item item = new Item();
    
            item.setItemNo(rs.getString("item_id"));
            ...
    
            items.add(item);
        }
    }
    finally {
        rs = DBUtil.close (rs);
        pStmt = DBUtil.close (rs);
        con = DBUtil.close (rs);
    }
    

    Here is what close() looks like:

    public static ResultSet close (ResultSet rs) {
        try {
            if (rs != null)
                rs.close ();
        } catch (SQLException e) {
            e.printStackTrace (); 
            // Or use your favorite logging framework.
            // DO NOT THROW THIS EXCEPTION OR IT WILL
            // HIDE EXCEPTIONS IN THE CALLING METHOD!!
        }
        return null; // Make sure no one uses this anymore
    }
    

    [EDIT] You’ll need to copy this code for the other types.

    I also moved all this into a helper class called DBOp so I just have to override processRow(ResultSet row) to do the actual processing and I can omit all that boilerplate code. In Java 5, the constructor of DBOp reads:

    public DBOp (Logger log, DataSource ds, String sql, Object... param)
    

    I’m passing in the logger so I can show which instance is actually polling data.

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