public interface DialectFactory
Dialect objects.
 If you create a class that implements Dialect, you may optionally
 provide a factory by creating a constant field in that class. For
 example:
 public class MyDialect implements Dialect {
     public static final DialectFactory FACTORY =
         new JdbcDialectFactory(MyDialect.class, null);
     public MyDialect(Connection connection) {
         ...
     }
     ...
 }
 (The field must be public, static, final, named "FACTORY", of type
 DialectFactory or a subclass, and its value must not be
 null.)
Explicitly providing a factory gives you more control about how dialects are produced.
If you do not provide such a field, Mondrian requires that the dialect has
 a public constructor that takes a Connection as a parameter,
 and automatically creates a factory that calls the class's public
 constructor.
However, an explicit DialectFactory is superior:
null, whereas a dialect's constructor can only throw an
     exception.
 If your dialect is a subclass of JdbcDialectImpl
 you may wish to use a dialect factory that is a subclass of
 JdbcDialectFactory.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
Dialect | 
createDialect(DataSource dataSource,
             Connection connection)
Creates a Dialect. 
 | 
Dialect createDialect(DataSource dataSource, Connection connection)
If the dialect cannot handle this connection, returns null.
dataSource - JDBC data sourceconnection - JDBC connectionRuntimeException - if underlying systems give an errorCopyright © 2017 Hitachi Vantara. All rights reserved.