- 3.46.0 (latest)
- 3.45.0
- 3.44.0
- 3.43.0
- 3.42.0
- 3.41.0
- 3.40.1
- 3.39.0
- 3.38.0
- 3.37.0
- 3.36.0
- 3.35.1
- 3.34.0
- 3.33.0
- 3.32.0
- 3.31.0
- 3.30.0
- 3.29.0
- 3.28.0
- 3.27.1
- 3.26.0
- 3.25.0
- 3.24.0
- 3.23.0
- 3.22.2
- 3.21.0
- 3.20.0
- 3.19.0
- 3.18.0
- 3.17.0
- 3.16.0
- 3.15.1
- 3.14.1
- 3.13.0
- 3.12.1
- 3.11.1
- 3.10.0
- 3.9.0
- 3.8.0
- 3.7.0
- 3.6.0
- 3.5.0
- 3.4.0
- 3.3.0
- 3.2.0
- 3.1.0
- 3.0.0
- 2.1.1
- 2.0.0
- 1.19.3
- 1.18.0
- 1.17.1
- 1.16.0
- 1.15.1
- 1.14.0
- 1.13.0
- 1.12.0
- 1.11.0
- 1.10.0
ResultSetMetadata(mapping=None, *, ignore_unknown_fields=False, **kwargs)
Metadata about a ResultSet][google.spanner.v1.ResultSet]
or
PartialResultSet][google.spanner.v1.PartialResultSet]
.
Attributes | |
---|---|
Name | Description |
row_type |
google.cloud.spanner_v1.types.StructType
Indicates the field names and types for the rows in the result set. For example, a SQL query like "SELECT UserId, UserName FROM Users" could return a
row_type value like:
::
"fields": [
{ "name": "UserId", "type": { "code": "INT64" } },
{ "name": "UserName", "type": { "code": "STRING" } },
]
|
transaction |
google.cloud.spanner_v1.types.Transaction
If the read or SQL query began a transaction as a side-effect, the information about the new transaction is yielded here. |
undeclared_parameters |
google.cloud.spanner_v1.types.StructType
A SQL query can be parameterized. In PLAN mode, these parameters can be undeclared. This indicates the field names and types for those undeclared parameters in the SQL query. For example, a SQL query like "SELECT * FROM Users where UserId = @userId and UserName = @userName "
could return a undeclared_parameters value like:
::
"fields": [
{ "name": "UserId", "type": { "code": "INT64" } },
{ "name": "UserName", "type": { "code": "STRING" } },
]
|