| Package | flash.data | 
| Class | public class SQLColumnNameStyle | 
| Inheritance | SQLColumnNameStyle    Object | 
| Language Version: | ActionScript 3.0 | 
| Runtime Versions: | AIR 1.0 | 
SQLConnection.columnNameStyle property. These values indicate
 different options that control how column names (property names) are formatted in the objects
 returned as a result of a SQL SELECT statement.
 
 See also
| Constant | Defined By | ||
|---|---|---|---|
[static] 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement
	 use the default format.  | SQLColumnNameStyle | ||
[static] 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement use
	 long-column-name format.  | SQLColumnNameStyle | ||
[static] 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement use short-column-name
	 format.  | SQLColumnNameStyle | ||
| Constant | 
public static const DEFAULT:String = "default"| Language Version: | ActionScript 3.0 | 
| Runtime Versions: | AIR 1.0 | 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement
	 use the default format. In the default format, column names have the form
     [table-name]_[column-name] when multiple tables are
	 included in the SELECT statement, or [column-name] when
	 the SELECT statement includes a single table.
	 
	 
See also
| Constant | 
public static const LONG:String = "long"| Language Version: | ActionScript 3.0 | 
| Runtime Versions: | AIR 1.0 | 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement use
	 long-column-name format. In this format, column names use the form
	 [table-name]_[column-name] regardless of how many
	 tables are included in the SELECT statement.
	 
	 
See also
| Constant | 
public static const SHORT:String = "short"| Language Version: | ActionScript 3.0 | 
| Runtime Versions: | AIR 1.0 | 
     Indicates that column names returned from a SELECT statement use short-column-name
	 format. In this format, column names use the form [column-name],
	 regardless of how many tables are included in the SELECT statement.
	 
	 
If the result set contains multiple columns with the same name, only one property with that
	 name is added to the result object. The value assigned to that property is taken from the last
	 column with that name in the result row. For example, consider the following SELECT
	 statement:
SELECT customers.customerId, addresses.customerId FROM customers INNER JOIN addresses ON customers.customerId = addresses.customerId
When this statement is executed on a SQLConnection instance with short column name format,
	 each result object has a property named customerId, containing the
	 value from the addresses table's customerId column.
See also