AI-generated Key Takeaways
-
A Statement captures the
WHERE
,ORDER BY
, andLIMIT
clauses of a PQL query for retrieving objects. -
Statements can utilize bind variables as input parameters, allowing for substitution of literals in the query.
-
The LIKE keyword is supported in Statements for wildcard string matching.
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Bind variables require their values to be set with objects of type Value, such as NumberValue, TextValue, or BooleanValue.
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The Statement object contains fields for the PQL query string and a map of bind variable keys and their corresponding literal values.
Captures the WHERE
, ORDER BY
and LIMIT
clauses of a
PQL query. Statements are typically used to retrieve objects of a predefined
domain type, which makes SELECT clause unnecessary.
An example query text might be "WHERE status = 'ACTIVE' ORDER BY id
LIMIT 30"
.
Statements support bind variables. These are substitutes for literals and can be thought of as input parameters to a PQL query.
An example of such a query might be "WHERE id = :idValue"
.
Statements also support use of the LIKE keyword. This provides wildcard string matching.
An example of such a query might be "WHERE name LIKE '%searchString%'"
.
- Namespace
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https://www.google.com/apis/ads/publisher/v202508
Field |
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Holds the query in PQL syntax. The syntax is:
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Holds keys and values for bind variables and their values. The key is the name of the bind variable. The value is the literal value of the variable.
In the example |