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The JDBC type 4 driver, also known as the Direct to Database Pure Java Driver, is a database driver implementation that converts JDBC calls directly into a vendor-specific database protocol. Written completely in Java , type 4 drivers are thus platform independent .
Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) is an application programming interface (API) for the Java programming language which defines how a client may access a database.It is a Java-based data access technology used for Java database connectivity.
Apache Phoenix is an open source, massively parallel, relational database engine supporting OLTP for Hadoop using Apache HBase as its backing store. Phoenix provides a JDBC driver that hides the intricacies of the NoSQL store enabling users to create, delete, and alter SQL tables, views, indexes, and sequences; insert and delete rows singly and in bulk; and query data through SQL. [1]
In most ways, JDBC can be considered a version of ODBC for the programming language Java instead of C. JDBC-to-ODBC bridges allow Java-based programs to access data sources through ODBC drivers on platforms lacking a native JDBC driver, although these are now relatively rare. Inversely, ODBC-to-JDBC bridges allow C-based programs to access data ...
J. Jackson (API) Jakarta Mail; Jakarta Project; Jake2; JAR (file format) Java Advanced Imaging; Java Caps; Java Card OpenPlatform; Java Device Test Suite; Java Embedding Plugin
Apache Empire-db is a Java library that provides a high level object-oriented API for accessing relational database management systems (RDBMS) through JDBC.Apache Empire-db is open source and provided under the Apache License 2.0 from the Apache Software Foundation.
NetBeans IDE is an open-source integrated development environment. NetBeans IDE supports development of all Java application types ( Java SE (including JavaFX ), Java ME , web , EJB and mobile applications) out of the box.
Oracle NoSQL Database EE supports external table allows fetching Oracle NoSQL data from Oracle database using SQL statements such as Select, Select Count(*) etc. Once NoSQL data is exposed through external tables, one can access the data via standard JDBC drivers and/or visualize it through enterprise business intelligence tools.