XQJ (XQuery API for Java) is a proposed vendor-neutral API for invoking XQuery from Java applications. It is currently published as a "Proposed Final Draft" (JSR 225) at http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=225, dated 2007-11-20. Saxon includes a complete and conformant implementation of this (draft) API.
For information on how to use the API, please see the JSR 225 documentation. Note that the interface is subject to change.
XQJ has many similarities with JDBC, and its general style is that of a client-server API in which the application opens a "connection" to a database. This of course does not fit the Saxon in-process model particularly well; on the other hand, apart from the terminology and the use of some methods (such as the ability to set a connection timeout) that make little sense in a Saxon context, the API works equally well in an environment like Saxon where the XQuery processor is invoked directly and runs within the same Java VM as the client application.
The samples directory in the issued saxon-resources download file includes a Java test application, XQJExamples.java, which illustrates some of the possible ways of invoking Saxon using the XQJ interface.
Note that Saxon will generally only recognize its own implementation of XQJ interfaces. For example,
the interface XQDynamicContext
includes a method bindAtomicValue
that allows the value of a variable
or the context item to be supplied.
The type of the argument is XQItem
: however, Saxon will only accept an XQItem
that was created by its own implementations of the factory methods in XQDataFactory
.
Unlike JAXP interfaces, XQJ does not include an implementation-independent factory class. Instead, you start the process by calling:
new SaxonXQDataSource()
This constructor will create a new Configuration, which will be an EnterpriseConfiguration
or
ProfessionalConfiguration
if Saxon-EE or Saxon-PE is in use. As an alternative, there is also a constructor
that allows a specific pre-exising configuration to be used.
From the XQDataSource
you can call getConnection()
to get a connection,
and from the connection you can call prepareExpression()
to compile a query. The resulting
XQPreparedExpression
object has a method executeQuery()
allowing the query
to be evaluated. The result of the query evaluation is an XQSequence
, which acts as a cursor
or iterator: it has a next()
method allowing you to change the current position, and a
getItem()
method allowing you to retrieve the item at the current position. The result
of getItem()
is an XQItem
object, and this has methods allowing you to determine
the item type, and to convert the item into a suitable Java object or value.