Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 6

javax.sql
Interface RowSetListener

All Superinterfaces:
EventListener

public interface RowSetListener
extends EventListener

An interface that must be implemented by a component that wants to be notified when a significant event happens in the life of a RowSet object. A component becomes a listener by being registered with a RowSet object via the method RowSet.addRowSetListener. How a registered component implements this interface determines what it does when it is notified of an event.

Since:
1.4

Method Summary
 void cursorMoved(RowSetEvent event)
          Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object's cursor has moved.
 void rowChanged(RowSetEvent event)
          Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object has had a change in one of its rows.
 void rowSetChanged(RowSetEvent event)
          Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object in the given RowSetEvent object has changed its entire contents.
 

Method Detail

rowSetChanged

void rowSetChanged(RowSetEvent event)
Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object in the given RowSetEvent object has changed its entire contents.

The source of the event can be retrieved with the method event.getSource.

Parameters:
event - a RowSetEvent object that contains the RowSet object that is the source of the event

rowChanged

void rowChanged(RowSetEvent event)
Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object has had a change in one of its rows.

The source of the event can be retrieved with the method event.getSource.

Parameters:
event - a RowSetEvent object that contains the RowSet object that is the source of the event

cursorMoved

void cursorMoved(RowSetEvent event)
Notifies registered listeners that a RowSet object's cursor has moved.

The source of the event can be retrieved with the method event.getSource.

Parameters:
event - a RowSetEvent object that contains the RowSet object that is the source of the event

Java™ Platform
Standard Ed. 6

Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

Copyright © 1993, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.