PL SQL
PL SQL
PL SQL
com/
Raju Ch
PL/SQL
This section will provide a basic understanding of PL/SQL. This document will briefly cover the main concepts behind
PL/SQL and provide brief examples illustrating the important facets of the language. Most of the information contained
in this section is DIRECTLY extracted from ``PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference'' and all credit should be given to
ORACLE. If you require more detailed information than provided in this section, consult the above stated manual.
PL/SQL is Oracle's procedural language extension to SQL, the relational database language. PL/SQL fully integrates
modern software engineering features such as data encapsulation, information hiding, overloading, and exception
handling, and so brings state-of-the-art programming to the ORACLE Server and a variety of ORACLE tools.
With PL/SQL, you can use SQL statements to manipulate ORACLE data and flow-of-control statements to process the
data. Moreover, you can declare constants and variables, define subprograms (procedures and functions), and trap
runtime errors. Thus, PL/SQL combines the data manipulating power of SQL with the data processing power of
procedural languages.
PL/SQL is a block-structured language. That is, the basic units (procedures, functions, and anonymous blocks) that
make up a PL/SQL program are logical blocks, which can contain any number of nested sub-blocks. Typically, each
logical block corresponds to a problem or subproblem to be solved.
A block (or sub-block) lets you group logically related declarations and statements. That way you can place
declarations close to where they are used. The declarations are local to the block and cease to exist when the block
completes.
[DECLARE
-- declarations]
BEGIN
-- statements
[EXCEPTION
-- handlers]
END;
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FUNDAMENTALS of PL/SQL
Lexical Units
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PL/SQL is not case-sensitive, so lower-case letters are equivalent to corresponding upper-case letters except within
string and character literals. A line of PL/SQL text contains groups of characters known as lexical units, which can be
classified as follows:
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Overview of PL/SQL
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A delimiter is a simple or compound symbol that has a special meaning to PL/SQL. For example, you use delimiters to
represent arithmetic operations such as addition and subtraction.
You use identifiers to name PL/SQL program objects and units, which include constants, variables, exceptions, cursors,
subprograms, and packages. Some identifiers called RESERVED WORDS, have a special syntactic meaning to
PL/SQL and so cannot be redefined. For flexibility, PL/SQL lets you enclose identifiers within double quotes. Quoted
identifiers are seldom needed, but occasionally they can be useful.
A literal is an explicit numeric, character, string, or Boolean value not represented by an identifier.
Two kinds of numeric literals can be used in arithmetic expressions: integers and reals.
String literal is a sequence of zero or more characters enclosed by single quotes. All string literals except the null
string (`') belong to type CHAR. PL/SQL is case-sensitive within string literals.
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Boolean literals are the predefined values TRUE and FALSE and the non-value NULL (which stands for a missing,
unknown, or inapplicable value). Keep in mind that Boolean literals are not strings.
The PL/SQL compiler ignores comments but you should not. Adding comments to your program promotes readability
and aids understanding. PL/SQL supports two comment styles: single-line and multiline. Single-line comments begin
with a double hyphen (--) anywhere on a line and extend to the end of the line. Multiline comments begin with a slashasterisk (/*), end with an asterisk-slash (*/), and can span multiple lines. You cannot nest comments.
Datatypes
Every constant and variable has a datatype, which specifies a storage format, constraints, and valid range of values.
PL/SQL provides a variety of predefined scalar and composite datatypes. A scalar type has no internal components. A
composite type has internal components that can be manipulated individually. PL/SQL Datatypes are similar to SQL's
Datatypes but some of the common datatypes are discussed again. For more information on the PL/SQL Datatypes see
Chapter 2 of ``PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference.''
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(NUMBER) You use the NUMBER datatype to store fixed or floating point numbers of virtually any size. You can
specify precision, which is the total number of digits, and scale, which determines where rounding occurs.
NUMBER[(precision, scale)]
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You cannot use constants or variables to specify precision and scale; you must use an integer literals.
(CHAR) You use the CHAR datatype to store fixed-length character data. The CHAR datatype takes an optional
parameter that lets you specify a maximum length up to 32767 bytes.
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CHAR[(maximum_length)]
You cannot use a constant or variable to specify the maximum length; you must use an integer literal. If you do not
specify the maximum length, it defaults to 1.
(VARCHAR2) You use the VARCHAR2 datatype to store variable-length character data. The VARCHAR2 datatype
takes a required parameter that lets you specify a maximum length up to 32767 bytes.
VARCHAR2(maximum_length)
You cannot use a constant or variable to specify the maximum length; you must use an integer literal.
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(BOOLEAN) You use the BOOLEAN datatype to store the values TRUE and FALSE and the non-value NULL.
Recall that NULL stands for a missing, unknown, or inapplicable value. The BOOLEAN datatype takes no parameters.
(DATE) You use the DATE datatype to store fixed-length date values. The DATE datatype takes no parameters. Valid
dates for DATE variables include January 1, 4712 BC to December 31, 4712 AD. When stored in the database column,
date values include the time of day in seconds since midnight. The date portion defaults to the first day of the current
month; the time portion defaults to midnight.
Datatype Conversion
Sometimes it is necessary to convert a value from one datatype to another. PL/SQL supports both explicit and implicit
(automatic) datatype conversions.
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To specify conversions explicitly, you use built-in functions that convert values from one datatype to another. PL/SQL
conversion functions are similar to those in SQL. For more information on conversion functions see Chapter 2 of
``PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference.''
When it makes sense, PL/SQL can convert the datatype of a value implicitly. This allows you to use literals, variables,
and parameters of one type where another type is expected. If PL/SQL cannot determine which implicit conversion is
needed, you get a compilation error. It is your responsibility to ensure that values are convertible. For instance, PL/SQL
can convert the CHAR value '02-JUN-92' to a DATE value, but PL/SQL cannot convert the CHAR value
'YESTERDAY' to a DATE value.
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Declarations
Your program stores values in variables and constants. As the program executes, the values of variables can change,
but the values of constants cannot.
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You can declare variables and constants in the declarative part of any PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package.
Declarations allocate storage space for a value, specify its datatype, and name the storage location so that the value can
be referenced. They can also assign an initial value and specify the NOT NULL constraint.
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birthdate DATE;
emp_count SMALLINT := 0;
acct_id
VARCHAR2 (5) NOT NULL := 'AP001';
The first declaration names a variable of type DATE. The second declaration names a variable of type SMALLINT and
uses the assignment operator (:=) to assign an initial value of zero to the variable. The third declaration names a
variable of type VARCHAR2, specifies the NOT NULL constraint, and assigns an initial value of 'AP001' to the
variable.
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In constant declarations, the reserved word CONSTANT must precede the type specifier.
credit_limit CONSTANT REAL := 5000.00;
Using DEFAULT. If you prefer, you can use the reserved word DEFAULT instead of the assignment operator to
initialize variables and constants. You can also use DEFAULT to initialize subprogram parameters, cursor parameters,
and fields in a user-defined record.
tax_year SMALLINT DEFAULT 92;
valid BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE;
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Using %TYPE. The %TYPE attribute provides the datatype of a variable, constant, or database column. Variables and
constants declared using %TYPE are treated like those declared using a datatype name. For example in the declaration
below, PL/SQL treats debit like a REAL(7,2) variable.
credit REAL(7,2);
debit credit%TYPE;
The %TYPE attribute is particularly useful when declaring variables that refer to database columns. You can reference
a table and column, or you can reference an owner, table, and column.
my_dname scott.dept.dname%TYPE;
Using %TYPE to declare my_dname has two advantages. First, you need not know the exact datatype of dname.
Second, if the database definition of dname changes, the datatype of my_dname changes accordingly at run time.
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Using %ROWTYPE. The %ROWTYPE attribute provides a record type that represents a row in a table (or view). The
record can store an entire row of data selected from the table or fetched by a cursor.
DECLARE
emp_rec emp%ROWTYPE;
CURSOR c1 is SELECT deptno, dname, loc FROM dept;
dept_rec c1%ROWTYPE
...
BEGIN
SELECT * INTO emp_rec FROM emp WHERE ...
...
END;
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Columns in a row and corresponding fields in a record have the same names and datatypes.
The column values returned by the SELECT statement are stored in fields. To reference a field, you use the dot
notation.
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A %ROWTYPE declaration cannot include an initialization clause. However, there are two ways to assign values to all
fields in a record at once. First, PL/SQL allows aggregate assignment between entire records if their declarations refer
to the same table or cursor.
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DECLARE
dept_rec1 dept%ROWTYPE;
dept_rec2 dept%ROWTYPE;
CURSOR c1 IS SELECT deptno, dname, loc FROM dept;
dept_rec3 c1%ROWTYPE;
dept_rec4 c1%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
...
dept_rec1 := dept_rec2;
dept_rec4 := dept_rec3;
...
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END;
But, because dept_rec2 is based on a table and dept_rec3 is based on a cursor, the following assignment is illegal:
dept_rec2 := dept_rec3; -- illegal
Second, you can assign a list of column values to a record by using the SELECT and FETCH statement, as the example
below shows. The column names must appear in the order in which they were defined by the CREATE TABLE or
CREATE VIEW statement.
DECLARE
dept_rec dept%ROWTYPE;
...
BEGIN
SELECT deptno, dname, loc INTO dept_rec FROM dept
WHERE deptno = 30;
...
END;
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However, you cannot assign a list of column values to a record by using an assignment statement. Although you can
retrieve entire records, you cannot insert them. For example, the following statement is illegal:
Select-list items fetched by a cursor associated with %ROWTYPE must have simple names or, if they are expressions,
must have aliases. In the following example, you use an alias called wages:
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DECLARE
CURSOR my_cursor IS SELECT sal + NVL(comm,0) wages, ename
FROM emp;
my_rec
my_cursor%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
OPEN my_cursor;
LOOP
FETCH my_cursor INTO my_rec;
EXIT WHEN my_cursor%NOTFOUND;
IF my_rec.wages > 2000 THEN
INSERT INTO temp VALUES (NULL, my_rec.wages, my_rec.ename);
END IF;
END LOOP;
CLOSE my_cursor;
END;
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PL/SQL does not allow forward references. You must declare a variable or constant before referencing it in other
statements, including other declarative statements. However, PL/SQL does allow the forward declaration of
subprograms.
Some languages allow you to declare a list of variables belonging to the same datatype. PL/SQL does not allow this.
For example, the following declaration is illegal:
i, j, k
SMALLINT; -- illegal
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Naming Conventions
The same naming conventions apply to all PL/SQL program objects and units including constants, variables, cursors,
exceptions, procedures, functions, and packages.
Within the same scope, all declared identifiers must be unique. So, even if their datatypes differ, variables and
parameters cannot share the same name.
In potentially ambiguous SQL statements, the names of local variables and formal parameters take precedence over the
names of database tables. For example, the following SELECT statement fails because PL/SQL assumes that emp
refers to the formal parameter:
PROCEDURE calc_bonus (emp NUMBER, bonus OUT REAL) IS
avg_sal REAL;
...
BEGIN
SELECT AVG(sal) INTO avg_sal FROM emp WHERE ...
...
END;
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In such cases, you can prefix the table name with a username, as follows:
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The names of database columns take precedence over the names of local variables and formal parameters. For example,
the following DELETE statement removes all employees from the emp table, not just KING, because ORACLE
assumes that both enames in the WHERE clause refer to the database column:
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DECLARE
ename CHAR(10) := 'KING';
BEGIN
DELETE FROM emp WHERE ename = ename;
...
END;
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In such cases, to avoid ambiguity, prefix the names of local variables and formal parameters with my_ as follows:
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DECLARE
my_ename CHAR(10) := 'KING';
...
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The next example shows that you can use a subprogram name to qualify references to local variables and formal
parameters:
PROCEDURE calc_bonus (empno NUMBER, bonus OUT REAL) IS
avg_sal REAL;
name CHAR(10);
job CHAR(15) := 'SALESMAN';
BEGIN
SELECT AVG(sal) INTO avg_sal FROM emp
WHERE job = calc_bonus.job; -- refers to local variable
SELECT ename INTO name FROM emp
WHERE empno = calc_bonus.empno; -- refers to parameter
...
END;
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References to an identifier are resolved according to its scope and visibility. The scope of an identifier is that region of
a program unit (block, subprogram, or package) from which you can reference the identifier. An identifier is visible
only in the regions from which you can reference the identifier using an unqualified name.
For example, identifiers declared in a PL/SQL block are considered local to that block and global to all its sub-blocks.
If a global identifier is redeclared in a sub-block, both identifiers remain in scope. Within the sub-block, however, only
the local identifier is visible because you must use a qualified name to reference the global identifier.
Although you cannot declare an identifier twice in the same block, you can declare the same identifier in two different
blocks. The two objects represented by the identifier are distinct, and any change in one does not affect the other. Note
that a block cannot reference identifiers declared in other blocks nested at the same level because those identifiers are
neither local nor global to the block.
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If you redeclare a identifier in a sub-block, you cannot reference the global identifier unless you use a qualified name.
The qualifier can be the label of an enclosing block (or enclosing subprogram) as follows:
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<<outer>>
DECLARE
birthdate DATE;
BEGIN
...
DECLARE birthdate DATE;
BEGIN
...
IF birthdate = outer.birthdate THEN
...
END IF;
END;
END outer;
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Assignments
Variables and constants are initialized every time a block or subprogram is entered. By default, variables are initialized
to NULL. So, unless you expressly initialize a variable, its value is undefined, as the following example shows:
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DELCARE
count INTEGER;
BEGIN
count := count + 1; -- assigns a null to count
END;
Therefore, never reference a variable before you assign it a value. Only the values TRUE and FALSE and the nonvalue NULL can be assigned to a Boolean variable. When applied to PL/SQL expressions, the relational operators
return a Boolean value. So, the following assignment is legal:
DECLARE
done BOOLEAN;
BEGIN
done := (count > 500);
...
END;
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Alternatively, you can use the SELECT or FETCH statement to have ORACLE assign values to a variable.
For each item in the SELECT list, there must be a corresponding variable in the INTO list. Also, each item must return
a value that is implicitly convertible to the datatype of its corresponding variable.
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All expressions and comparisons are the same as those explained in the SQL Reference section. Some guidelines
follow to help you prevent falling into common traps.
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In general, do not compare real numbers for exact equality or inequality. It is also a good idea to use parentheses when
doing comparisons.
Remember that a boolean variable is itself either true or false. So comparisons with the boolean values TRUE and
FALSE are redundant. For example, assuming the variable done belongs to type BOOLEAN, the IF statement
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You can avoid some common mistakes by keeping in mind the following rules:
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If a null argument is passed to a function, a null is returned except in the following cases:
(DECODE) The function DECODE compares its first argument to one or more search expressions, which are paired
with result expressions. Any search or result expression can be null. If a search is successful, the corresponding result is
returned. In the next example, if the value of rating is null, DECODE returns the value 1000:
credit_limit := (rating, NULL, 1000, 'B', 2000, 'A', 4000);
(NVL) If its first argument is null, the function NVL returns the value of its second argument. In the following
example, if hire_date is null, NVL returns the value of SYSDATE; otherwise, NVL returns the value of hire_date:
start_date := NVL(hire_date, SYSDATE);
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(REPLACE). If its second argument is null, the function REPLACE returns the value of its first argument whether the
optional third argument is present or not. For instance, after the assignment:
Built-in Functions
PL/SQL provides many powerful functions to help you manipulate data. You can use them wherever expressions of the
same type are allowed. Furthermore, you can nest them.
error-reporting functions
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number functions
character functions
data functions
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conversion functions
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miscellaneous functions
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You can use all the built-in functions in SQL statements except the error-reporting functions SQLCODE and
SQLERRM. In addition, you can use all the functions in procedural statements except the miscellaneous function
DECODE.
Most functions are the same as those discussed in SQL Reference section except the ones that are discussed below.
Two functions, SQLCODE and SQLERRM, give you information about PL/SQL execution errors.
(SQLCODE) function SQLCODE return NUMBER
Returns the number associated with the most recently raised exception. This function is meaningful only in an
exception handler. Outside a handler, SQLCODE always returns zero.
For internal exceptions, SQLCODE returns the number of the associated ORACLE error. The NUMBER that
SQLCODE returns is negative unless the ORACLE error is "no data found", in which case SQLCODE returns +100.
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For user-defined exceptions, SQLCODE returns +1 unless you used the pragma EXCEPTION_INIT to associate the
exception with an ORACLE error number, in which case SQLCODE returns that error number.
(SQLERRM) function SQLERRM [(error_number NUMBER)] return CHAR
Returns the error message associated with the current value of SQLCODE. SQLERRM is meaningful only in an
exception handler. Outside a handler, SQLERRM with no argument always returns the message ``ORA-0000:normal,
successful completion.''
For internal exceptions, SQLERRM returns the message associated with the ORACLE error that occurred. The
message begins with the ORACLE error code.
For user-defined exceptions, SQLERRM returns the message ``User-Defined Exception'' unless you used the pragma
EXCEPTION_INIT to associate the exception with an ORACLE error number, in which case SQLERRM returns the
corresponding error message.
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You can pass the argument error_number to SQLERRM, in which case SQLERRM returns the message associated
with error_number.
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'LANGUAGE' returns the language, territory, and database character set in use
'SESSIONID' returns the auditing session identifier
'TERMINAL' returns the operating system identifier for the session terminal
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RPL/SQL Tables
You cannot specify the 'ENTRYID' or 'SESSIONID' option in SQL statements that access a remote database.
PL/SQL provides two composite datatypes: TABLE and RECORD. Objects of type TABLE are called PL/SQL tables,
which are modeled as (but not the same as) database tables. PL/SQL tables use a primary key to give you array-like
access to rows.
Like the size of a database table, the size of a PL/SQL table is unconstrained. That is, the number of rows in a PL/SQL
table can increase dynamically. The PL/SQL table grows as new rows are added.
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PL/SQL tables can have one column and a primary key, neither of which can be named. The column can belong to any
scalar type, but the primary key must belong to type BINARY_INTEGER.
PL/SQL tables must be declared in two steps. First, you define a TABLE type, then declare PL/SQL tables of that type.
You can declare TABLE types in the declarative part of any block, subprogram, or package using the syntax:
TYPE type_name IS TABLE OF
{ column_type | variable%TYPE | table.column%TYPE } [NOT NULL]
INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
where type_name is a type specifier used in subsequent declarations of PL/SQL tables and column_type is any scalar
(not composite) datatype such as CHAR, DATE, or NUMBER. You can use the %TYPE attribute to specify a column
datatype.
In the following example, you declare a TABLE type called EnameTabTyp:
Once you define type EnameTabTyp, you can declare PL/SQL tables of that type, as follows:
ename_tab
EnameTabTyp
PL/SQL table is unconstrained because its primary key can assume any value in the range of values defined for
BINARY_INTEGER. As a result, you cannot initialize a PL/SQL table in its declaration. For example, the following
declaration is illegal:
ename_tab
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To reference rows in a PL/SQL table, you specify a primary key value using the array-like syntax
plsql_table_name(primary_key_value)
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where primary_key_value belongs to type BINARY_INTEGER. The magnitude range of a BINARY_INTEGER value
is -2**31-1 ... 2**31-1. For example, you reference the third row in PL/SQL table ename_tab as follows:
ename_tab(3) ...
You can assign the value of a PL/SQL expression to a specific row using the following syntax:
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plsql_table_name(primary_key_value) := plsql_expression;
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DECLARE
TYPE EnameTabTyp IS TABLE OF emp.ename%TYPE
INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
...
In the example below, you use a cursor FOR loop to load two PL/SQL tables. A cursor FOR loop implicitly declares its
loop index as a record, opens the cursor associated with a given query, repeatedly fetches rows of values from the
cursor into fields in the record, then closes the cursor.
DECLARE
TYPE EnameTabTyp IS TABLE OF emp.ename%TYPE
INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
TYPE SalTabTyp IS TABLE OF emp.sal%TYPE
INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
ename_tab EnameTabTyp;
sal_tab
SalTabTyp;
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i
BINARY_INTEGER := 0;
...
BEGIN
-- load employee names and salaries into PL/SQL tables
For emprec IN (SELECT ename, sal FROM emp) LOOP
i := i + 1;
ename_tab(i) := emprec.ename;
sal_tab(i) := emprec.sal;
END LOOP;
--process the tables
process_sals(ename_tab, sal_tab);
...
END;
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Until a row is assigned a value, it does not exist. If you try to reference an uninitialized row, PL/SQL raises the
predefined exception NO_DATA_FOUND.
Remember that the size of PL/SQL table is unconstrained so, that if you want to maintain a row count, you must
declare a variable for that purpose. A PL/SQL table can grow large, constrained only by available memory. When
PL/SQL runs out of memory it raises the predefined exception STORAGE_ERROR.
You must use a loop to INSERT values from a PL/SQL table into a database column. Likewise, you must use a loop to
FETCH values from a database column into a PL/SQL table. Therefore, you cannot reference PL/SQL tables in the
INTO clause of a SELECT statement.
There is no straightforward way to delete rows from a PL/SQL table because the DELETE statement cannot specify
PL/SQL tables. Setting a row to NULL does not work because the row remains and does not raise the exception
NO_DATA_FOUND when referenced.
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Although you cannot delete individual rows from a PL/SQL table, you can use a simple workaround to delete entire
PL/SQL tables. First, declare another PL/SQL table of the same type and leave it empty. Later, when you want to delete
the original PL/SQL tables, simply assign the empty table to them.
User-defined Records
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You can use the %ROWTYPE attribute to declare a record that represents a row in a table or a row fetched by a cursor.
However, you cannot specify the datatypes of fields in the record or define fields of your own. The composite datatype
RECORD lifts those restrictions.
As you might expect, objects of type RECORD are called records. Unlike PL/SQL tables, records have uniquely named
fields, which can belong to different datatypes. For example, suppose you have different kinds of data about an
employee such as name, salary, hire date, and so on. This data is dissimilar in type but logically related. A record that
contains such fields as the name, salary, and hire date of an employee would let you treat the data as a logical unit.
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Like PL/SQL tables, records must be declared in two steps. First, you define a RECORD type, then declare userdefined records of that type.
You can declare RECORD types in the declarative part of any block, subprogram, or package using the syntax
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TYPE type_name IS RECORD
(field_name1 {field_type | variable%TYPE | table.column%TYPE |
table%ROWTYPE} [NOT NULL],
(field_name2 {field_type | variable%TYPE | table.column%TYPE |
table%ROWTYPE} [NOT NULL],
... );
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where type_name is a type specifier used in subsequent declarations of records and field_type is any datatype including
RECORD and TABLE. You can use the %TYPE or %ROWTYPE attribute to specify a field datatype. In the following
example, you declare a RECORD type named DeptRecTyp:
DECLARE
TYPE DeptRecTyp is RECORD
(deptno NUMBER(2) NOT NULL := 20,
dname
dept.dname%TYPE,
loc
dept.dname%TYPE);
...
Once you define type DeptRecTyp, you can declare records of that type, as follows:
dept_rec
DeptRecTyp;
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You can assign the value of a PL/SQL expression to a specific field by using the following syntax:
record_name.field_name := plsql_expression;
Instead of assigning values separately to each field in a record, you can assign values to all fields at once. This can be
done in two ways. First, you can assign one record to another if they belong to the same datatype. Second, you can
assign a list of column values to a record by using the SELECT or FETCH statement, as the example below shows. Just
make sure the column names appear in the same order as the fields in your record.
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DECLARE
TYPE DeptRecTyp IS RECORD
(deptno NUMBER(2) NOT NULL := 20,
dname
dept.dname%TYPE,
loc
dept.dname%TYPE);
dept_rec
DeptRecTyp;
...
BEGIN
SELECT deptno, dname, loc INTO dept_rec FROM dept
WHERE deptno = 30;
...
END;
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Even if their fields match exactly, records of different types cannot be assigned to each other. Furthermore, a userdefined record and a %ROWTYPE record always belong to different types.
You cannot assign a list of values to a record by using an assignment statement. So, the following syntax is illegal:
record_name := (value1, value2, value3, ...); -- illegal
Also, records cannot be tested for equality or inequality. For instance, the following IF condition is illegal:
IF dept_rec1 = dept_rec2 THEN -- illegal
...
END IF;
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PL/SQL lets you declare and reference nested records. That is, a record can be the component of another record. You
can assign one nested record to another if they belong to the same datatype. Such assignments are allowed even if the
containing records belong to different datatypes, as follows:
DECLARE
TYPE TimeTyp IS RECORD
(minute SMALLINT,
hour
SMALLINT);
TYPE MeetingTyp IS RECORD
(day
DATE,
time
TimeTyp,
-- nested record
place
CHAR(20),
purpose CHAR(50));
TYPE PartyTyp IS RECORD
(date
DATE,
time
TimeTyp,
-- nested record
loc
CHAR(15));
meeting
MeetingTyp;
seminar
MeetingTyp;
party
PartyTyp;
...
BEGIN
meeting.day := '26-Jun-91';
meeting.time.minute := 45;
meeting.time.hour := 10;
...
seminar.time := meeting.time;
party.time := meeting.time;
END;
CONTROL STRUCTURES
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According to the structure theorem, any computer program can be written using the basic control structures which can
be combined in any way necessary to deal with a given problem.
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The selection structure tests a condition, then executes one sequence of statements instead of another, depending on
whether the condition is true or false. A condition is any variable or expression that returns a Boolean value (TRUE,
FALSE, or NULL). The iteration structure executes a sequence of statements repeatedly as long as a condition holds
true. The sequence structure simply executes a sequence of statements in the order in which they occur.
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Often, it is necessary to take alternative actions depending on circumstances. The IF statement lets you execute a
sequence of statements conditionally. That is, whether the sequence is executed or not depends on the value of a
condition. There are three forms of IF statements: IF-THEN, IF-THEN-ELSE, and IF-THEN-ELSIF.
The third form of IF statement uses the keyword ELSIF (NOT ELSEIF) to introduce additional conditions, as follows:
IF condition1 THEN
sequence_of_statements1;
ELSIF condition2 THEN
sequence_of_statements2;
ELSE
sequence_of_statements3;
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END IF;
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With each iteration of the loop, the sequence of statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. If
further processing is undesirable or impossible, you can use the EXIT statement to complete the loop. You can place
one or more EXIT statements anywhere inside a loop, but nowhere outside a loop. There are two forms of EXIT
statements: EXIT and EXIT-WHEN.
The EXIT statement forces a loop to complete unconditionally. When an EXIT statement is encountered, the loop
completes immediately and control passes to the next statement.
LOOP
...
IF ... THEN
...
EXIT; -- exit loop immediately
END IF;
END LOOP;
-- control resumes here
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The EXIT-WHEN statement allows a loop to complete conditionally. When the EXIT statement is encountered, the
condition in the WHEN clause is evaluated. If the condition evaluates to TRUE, the loop completes and control passes
to the next statement after the loop.
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LOOP
FETCH c1 INTO ...
EXIT WHEN c1%NOTFOUND; -- exit loop if condition is true
...
END LOOP;
CLOSE c1;
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LOOP
sequence_of_statements3;
...
END LOOP;
Until the condition evaluates to TRUE, the loop cannot complete. So, statements within the loop must change the value
of the condition.
Like PL/SQL blocks, loops can be labeled. The label, an undeclared identifier enclosed by double angle brackets, must
appear at the beginning of the LOOP statement, as follows:
<<label_name>>
LOOP
sequence_of_statements;
...
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WHILE-LOOP
The WHILE-LOOP statement associates a condition with a sequence of statements enclosed by the keywords LOOP
and END LOOP, as follows:
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Before each iteration of the loop, the condition is evaluated. If the condition evaluates to TRUE, the sequence of
statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. If the condition evaluates to FALSE or NULL, the
loop is bypassed and control passes to the next statement. Since the condition is tested at the top of the loop, the
sequence might execute zero times.
FOR-LOOP
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Whereas the number of iteration through a WHILE loop is unknown until the loop completes, the number of iterations
through a FOR loop is known before the loop is entered. FOR loops iterate over a specified range of integers. The
range is part of an iteration scheme, which is enclosed by the keywords FOR and LOOP.
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The lower bound need not be 1. However, the loop counter increment (or decrement) must be 1.
PL/SQL lets you determine the loop range dynamically at run time, as the following example shows:
SELECT COUNT(empno) INTO emp_count FROM emp;
FOR i IN 1..emp_count LOOP
...
END LOOP;
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The loop counter is defined only within the loop. You cannot reference it outside the loop. You need not explicitly
declare the loop counter because it is implicitly declared as a local variable of type INTEGER.
The EXIT statement allows a FOR loop to complete prematurely. You can complete not only the current loop, but any
enclosing loop.
A GOTO statement cannot branch into an IF statement, LOOP statement, or sub-block. A GOTO statement cannot
branch from one IF statement clause to another. A GOTO statement cannot branch out of a subprogram. Finally, a
GOTO statement cannot branch from an exception handler into the current block.
The NULL statement explicitly specifies inaction; it does nothing other than pass control to the next statement. It can,
however, improve readability. Also, the NULL statement is a handy way to create stubs when designing applications
from the top down.
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SQL Support
By extending SQL, PL/SQL offers a unique combination of power and ease of use. You can manipulate ORACLE data
flexibly and safely because PL/SQL supports all SQL data manipulation commands (except EXPLAIN PLAN),
transaction control commands, functions, pseudocolumns, and operators. However, PL/SQL does not support data
definition commands such as CREATE, session control commands such as SET ROLES, or the system control
command ALTER SYSTEM.
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Data Manipulation
To manipulate ORACLE data, you use the INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, SELECT, and LOCK TABLE commands.
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BEGIN
...
GOTO insert_row;
...
<<insert_row>>
INSERT INTO emp VALUES ...
END;
Transaction Control
ORACLE is transaction oriented; that is, ORACLE uses transactions to ensure data integrity. A transaction is a series
of SQL data manipulation statements that does a logical unit of work. For example, two UPDATE statements might
credit one bank account and debit another. At the same instant, ORACLE makes permanent or undoes all database
changes made by a transaction. If your program fails in the middle of a transaction, ORACLE detects the error and rolls
back the transaction. Hence, the database is restored to its former state automatically.
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You use the COMMIT, ROLLBACK, SAVEPOINT, and SET TRANSACTION commands to control transactions.
COMMIT makes permanent any database changes made during the current transaction. Until you commit your
changes, other users cannot see them. ROLLBACK ends the current transaction and undoes any changes made since
the transaction began. SAVEPOINT marks the current point in the processing of a transaction. Used with
ROLLBACK, undoes part of a transaction. SET TRANSACTION establishes a read-only transaction.
SQL Functions
PL/SQL lets you use all the SQL functions including group functions, which summarize entire columns of ORACLE
data.
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SQL Pseudocolumns
PL/SQL recognizes the following SQL pseudocolumns, which return specific data items: CURRVAL, LEVEL,
NEXTVAL, ROWID, and ROWNUM.
For example, NEXTVAL returns the next value in a database sequence. They are called pseudocolumns because they
are not actual columns in a table but behave like columns. For instance, you can reference pseudocolumns in SQL
statements. Furthermore, you can select values from a pseudocolumn. However, you cannot insert values into, update
values in, or delete values from a pseudocolumn. Assume that you have declared empno_seq as a database sequence,
then the following statement inserts a new employee number into the emp table:
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A sequence is a database object that generates sequential numbers. When you create a sequence, you can specify its
initial value and an increment. CURRVAL returns the current value in a specified sequence. Before you can reference
CURRVAL in a session, you must use NEXTVAL to generate a number.
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LEVEL is used with the SELECT CONNECT BY statement to organize rows from a database table into a tree
structure. LEVEL returns the level number of a node in a tree structure. The root is level 1, children of the root are level
2 and so on. You specify the direction in which the query walks the tree (down from the root or up from the branches)
with the PRIOR operator. In the START WITH clause, you specify a condition that identifies the root of the tree.
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ROWNUM returns a number indicating the order in which a row was selected from a table. If a SELECT statement
includes an ORDER BY clause, ROWNUMs are assigned to the retrieved rows before the sort is done.
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Operators
PL/SQL lets you use all the SQL comparison, set, and row operators in SQL statements.
Cursor Management
PL/SQL uses two types of cursors: implicit and explicit. PL/SQL declares a cursor implicitly for all SQL data
manipulation statements, including queries that return only one row. However, for queries that return more than one
row, you must declare an explicit cursor or use a cursor FOR loop
Explicit Cursors
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The set of rows returned by a query can consist of zero, one, or multiple rows, depending on how many rows meet your
search criteria. When a query returns multiple rows, you can explicitly define a cursor to process the rows. You define
a cursor in a declarative part of a PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package by naming it and specifying a query. Then,
you use three commands to control the cursor: OPEN, FETCH, and CLOSE.
Forward references are not allowed in PL/SQL. So, you must declare a cursor before referencing it in other statements.
When you declare a cursor, you name it and associate it with a specific query. The cursor name is an undeclared
identifier, not a PL/SQL variable; it is used only to reference a query.
Cursors can take parameters, as the example below shows. A cursor parameter can appear in a query wherever a
constant can appear. The formal parameters of a cursor must be IN parameter.
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OPENing the cursor executes the query and identifies the active set, which consists of all rows that meet the query
search criteria. For cursors declared using the FOR UPDATE clause, the OPEN statement also locks those rows. Rows
in the active set are not retrieved when the OPEN statement is executed. Rather, the FETCH statement retrieves the
rows.
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The FETCH statement retrieves the rows in the active set one at a time. Each time FETCH is executed, the cursor
advances to the next row in the active set. For each column value returned by the query associated with the cursor,
there must be a corresponding variable in the INTO list. Also, their datatypes must be compatible. Any variables in the
WHERE clause of the query associated with the cursor are evaluated only when the cursor is OPENed. As the
following example shows, the query can reference PL/SQL variables within its scope:
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DECLARE
my_sal emp.sal%TYPE;
my_job emp.job%TYPE;
factor INTEGER := 2;
cursor c1 IS
SELECT factor*sal FROM emp WHERE job = my_job;
BEGIN
...
OPEN c1; -- here factor equals 2
LOOP
FETCH c1 INTO my_sal;
EXIT WHEN c1%NOTFOUND;
...
factor := factor + 1; -- does not affect FETCH
END LOOP;
CLOSE c1;
END;
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You can open multiple cursors, then use %NOTFOUND to tell which cursors have rows left to fetch.
Using %FOUND. %FOUND is the logical opposite of %NOTFOUND. After an explicit cursor is open but before the
first fetch, %FOUND evaluates to NULL. Thereafter, it evaluates to TRUE if the last fetch returned a row or to FALSE
if no row was returned.
Using %ROWCOUNT. When you open its cursor, %ROWCOUNT is zeroed. Before the first fetch, %ROWCOUNT
returns a zero. Thereafter, it returns the number of rows fetched so far. The number is incremented if the latest fetch
returned a row.
Using %ISOPEN. %ISOPEN evaluates to TRUE if its cursor is open; otherwise, %ISOPEN evaluates to FALSE.
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Implicit Cursors
ORACLE implicitly opens a cursor to process each SQL statement not associated with an explicitly declared cursor.
PL/SQL lets you refer to the most recent implicit cursor as the ``SQL'' cursor. So, although you cannot use the OPEN,
FETCH, and CLOSE statements to control an implicit cursor, you can still use cursor attributes to access information
about the most recently executed SQL statement.
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The SQL cursor has four attributes: %NOTFOUND, %FOUND, %ROWCOUNT, and %ISOPEN. When appended to
the cursor name (SQL), these attributes let you access information about the execution of INSERT, UPDATE,
DELETE, and SELECT INTO statements. You can use implicit cursor attributes in procedural statements but not in
SQL statements.
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Using %NOTFOUND. The features of %NOTFOUND are similar to those of the explicit cursor attributes but you
must bear in mind the following: if a SELECT INTO fails to return a row, the predefined exception
NO_DATA_FOUND is raised whether you check %NOTFOUND on the next line or not. The check for
%NOTFOUND on the next line would be useless because when NO_DATA_FOUND is raised, normal execution stops
and control transfers to the exception-handling part of the block. In this situation %NOTFOUND is useful in the
OTHERS exception handler. Instead of coding a NO_DATA_FOUND handler, you find out if that exception was
raised by checking %NOTFOUND.
DECLARE
my_sal NUMBER(7,2);
my_empno NUMBER(4);
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BEGIN
...
SELECT sal INTO my_sal FROM emp WHERE empno = my_empno;
-- might raise NO_DATA_FOUND
EXCEPTION
WHEN OTHERS THEN
IF SQL%NOTFOUND THEN -- check for 'no data found'
...
END IF;
...
END;
However, a SELECT INTO that calls a SQL group function never raises the exception NO_DATA_FOUND. That is
because group functions such as AVG and SUM always return a value or a null.
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Using %FOUND, %ROWCOUNT and %ISOPEN. These attributes are similar in use to those of explicit cursor
attributes.
Packaged Cursors
You can separate a cursor specification from its body for placement in a package by using the RETURN clause:
CREATE PACKAGE emp_actions AS
/* Declare cursor specification */
CURSOR c1 RETURN emp%ROWTYPE
...
END emp_action;
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This way, you can change the cursor body without changing the cursor specification. A cursor specification has no
SELECT statement because the RETURN clause defines the datatype of the result value.
A cursor body must have a SELECT statement and the same RETURN clause as its corresponding cursor specification.
Furthermore, the number and datatypes of select-list items in the SELECT statement must match the RETURN clause.
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You can use a cursor FOR loop to simplify coding. A cursor FOR loop implicitly declares its loop index as a record of
type %ROWTYPE, opens a cursor, repeatedly fetches rows of values from the active set into fields in the record, then
closes the cursor when all rows have been processed or when you exit the loop.
You can pass parameters to a cursor used in a cursor FOR loop. In the following example, you pass a department
number. Then, you compute the total wages paid to employees in that department. Also, you determine how many
employees have salaries higher than $2000 and how many have commissions larger than their salaries.
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DECLARE
CURSOR emp_cursor(dnum NUMBER) IS
SELECT sal, comm FROM emp WHERE deptno = dnum;
total_wages NUMBER(11,2) := 0;
high_paid
NUMBER(4) := 0;
higher_comm NUMBER(4) := 0;
BEGIN
/* the number of iterations will equal the number of rows *
* returned by emp_cursor
*/
FOR emp_record IN emp_cursor(20) LOOP
emp_record.comm := NVL(emp_record.comm,0);
total_wages := total_wages + emp_record.sal +
emp_record.comm;
IF emp_record.sal > 2000 THEN
high_paid := high_paid + 1;
END IF;
END LOOP;
INSERT INTO temp VALUES (high_paid, higher_comm, 'Total Wages: '
|| TO_CHAR(total_wages));
COMMIT;
END;
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By default ORACLE locks data structures for you automatically. However, you can request specific data locks on rows
or tables when it is to your advantage to override default locking.
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Using FOR UPDATE. When declaring a cursor that will be referenced in the WHERE CURRENT OF clause of an
UPDATE or DELETE statement, you must use the FOR UPDATE clause to acquire exclusive row locks. If present, the
FOR UPDATE clause must appear at the end of the cursor declaration, as the following example shows.
DECLARE
CURSOR c1 IS SELECT empno, sal FROM emp
WHERE job = 'SALESMAN' AND comm > sal FOR UPDATE;
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The FOR UPDATE clause indicates that rows will be updated or deleted and locks all rows in the active set. All rows
in the active set are locked when you OPEN the cursor. The rows are unlocked when you COMMIT the transaction. So,
you cannot FETCH from a FOR UPDATE cursor after a COMMIT. When querying multiple tables, you can use the
FOR UPDATE OF clause to confine row locking to particular tables.
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DECLARE
CURSOR c1 IS SELECT ename, dname FROM emp, dept
WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno AND job = 'MANAGER'
FOR UPDATE OF sal;
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Using a LOCK TABLE statement lets you lock entire database tables in a specified lock mode so that you can share or
deny access to tables while maintaining their integrity. Table locks are released when your transaction issues a
COMMIT or ROLLBACK.
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Database Triggers
A database trigger is a stored PL/SQL program unit associated with a specific database table. ORACLE executes (fires)
the database trigger automatically whenever a given SQL operation affects the table. So, unlike subprograms, which
must be invoked explicitly, database triggers are invoked implicitly. Among other things, you can use database triggers
to
audit data modification
log events transparently
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You can associate up to 12 database triggers with a give table. A database trigger has three parts: a triggering event, an
optional trigger constraint, and a trigger action. When the event occurs, the database trigger fires and an anonymous
PL/SQL block performs the action. Database triggers fire with the privileges of the owner, not the current user. So, the
owner must have appropriate access to all objects referenced by the trigger action.
The example below illustrates transparent event logging. The database trigger named reorder ensures that a part is
reordered when its quantity on hand drops below the reorder point.
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The name in the ON clause identifies the database table associated with the database trigger. The triggering event
specifies the SQL data manipulation statement that affects the table. In this case, the statement is UPDATE. If the
trigger statement fails, it is rolled back. The keyword AFTER specifies that the database trigger fires after the update is
done.
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By default, a database trigger fires once per table. The FOR EACH ROW option specifies that the trigger fires once per
row. For the trigger to fire, however, the Boolean expression in the WHEN clause must evaluate to TRUE.
The prefix :new is a correlation name that refers to the newly updated column value. Within a database trigger, you can
reference :new and :old values of changing rows. Notice that the colon is not used in the WHEN clause. You can use
the REFERENCING clause (not shown) to replace :new and :old with other correlation names.
Except for transaction control statements such as COMMIT and ROLLBACK, any SQL or procedural statement,
including subprogram calls, can appear in the BEGIN...END block. A database trigger can also have DECLARE and
EXCEPTION sections.
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The next example shows that the trigger action can include calls to the built-in ORACLE procedure
raise_application_error, which lets you issue user-defined error messages:
CREATE TRIGGER check_salary
BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE OF sal, job ON emp
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (new.job != 'PRESIDENT')
DECLARE
minsal NUMBER;
maxsal NUMBER;
BEGIN
/* Get salary range for a given job from table sals. */
SELECT losal, hisal INTO minsal, maxsal FROM sals
WHERE job = :new.job;
/* If salary is out of range, increase is negative, *
* or increase exceeds 10%, raise an exception. */
IF (:new.sal < minsal OR :new.sal > maxsal) THEN
raise_application_error(-20225, 'Salary out of range');
ELSIF (:new.sal < :old.sal) THEN
raise_application_error(-20320, 'Negative increase');
ELSIF (:new.sal > 1.1 * :old.sal) THEN
raise_application_error(-20325, 'Increase exceeds 10%');
END IF:
END;
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More information on built-in procedures is provided later in this chapter. For a full discussion of database triggers, see
``ORACLE7 Server Application Developer's Guide''.
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Error Handling
Overview
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In PL/SQL a warning or error condition is called an exception. Exceptions can be internally defined (by the runtime
system) or user-defined.
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Examples of internally defined exceptions include division by zero and out of memory. Some common internal
exceptions have predefined names, such as ZERO_DIVIDE and STORAGE_ERROR. The other internal exceptions
can be given names.
You can define exceptions of your own in the declarative part of any PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package. For
example, you might define an exception named insufficient_funds to flag an overdrawn bank accounts. Unlike internal
exceptions, user-defined exceptions must be given names.
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When an error occurs, an exception is raised. That is, normal execution stops and control transfers to the exception
handling part of your PL/SQL block or subprogram. Internal exceptions are raised implicitly (automatically) by the
runtime system. User-defined exceptions must be raised explicitly by RAISE statements, which can also raise
predefined exceptions.
To handle raised exceptions, you write separate routines called exception handlers. After an exception handler runs, the
current block stops executing and the enclosing block resumes with the next statement. If there is no enclosing block,
control returns to the host environment.
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Advantages of Exceptions
Using exceptions for error handling has several advantages. Without exception handling, every time you issue a
command, you must check for execution errors. Exceptions also improve reliability. You need not worry about
checking for an error at every point it might occur. Just add an exception handler to your PL/SQL block. If the
exception is ever raised in that block (or any sub-block), you can be sure it will be handled.
Predefined Exceptions
An internal exception is raised explicitly whenever your PL/SQL program violates an ORACLE rule or exceeds a
system-dependent limit. Every ORACLE error has a number, but exceptions must be handled by name. So, PL/SQL
predefines some common ORACLE errors as exceptions. For example, the predefined exception NO_DATA_FOUND
is raised if a SELECT INTO statement returns no rows.
Exception Name
ORACLE Error
SQLCODE Value
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DUP_VAL_ON_INDEX is raised if you try to store duplicate values in a database column that is constrained by a
unique index.
INVALID_CURSOR is raised if you try an illegal cursor operation. For example, if you try to CLOSE an unopened
cursor.
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INVALID_NUMBER is raised in a SQL statement if the conversion of a character string to a number fails.
LOGIN_DENIED is raised if you try logging on to ORACLE with an invalid username/password.
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PL/SQL declares predefined exceptions globally in package STANDARD, which defines the PL/SQL environment. So,
you need not declare them yourself. You can write handlers for predefined exceptions using the names shown below:
NO_DATA_FOUND is raised if a SELECT INTO statement returns no rows or if you reference an uninitialized row
in a PL/SQL table.
NOT_LOGGED_ON is raised if your PL/SQL program issues a database call without being logged on to ORACLE.
PROGRAM_ERROR is raised if PL/SQL has an internal problem.
STORAGE_ERROR is raised if PL/SQL runs out of memory or if memory is corrupted.
TIMEOUT_ON_RESOURCE is raised if a timeout occurs while ORACLE is waiting for a resource.
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TOO_MANY_ROWS is raised if a SELECT INTO statement returns more than one row.
VALUE_ERROR is raised if an arithmetic, conversion, truncation, or constraint error occurs.
ZERO_DIVIDE is raised if you try to divide a number by zero.
User-defined Exceptions
PL/SQL lets you define exceptions of your own. Unlike predefined exceptions, user-defined exceptions must be
declared and must be raised explicitly by RAISE statements. Exceptions can be declared only in the declarative part of
a PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package. You declare an exception by introducing its name, followed by the keyword
EXCEPTION.
Exceptions and variable declarations are similar. But remember, an exception is an error condition, not an object.
Unlike variables, exceptions cannot appear in assignment statements or SQL statements. However, the same scope
rules apply to variables and exceptions.
Using EXCEPTION_INIT. To handle unnamed internal exceptions, you must use the OTHERS handler or the pragma
EXCEPTION_INIT. A pragma is a compiler directive, which can be thought of as a parenthetical remark to the
compiler.
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In PL/SQL, the predefined pragma EXCEPTION_INIT tells the compiler to associate an exception name with an
ORACLE error number. That allows you to refer to any internal exception by name and to write a specific handler for
it.
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You code the pragma EXCEPTION_INIT in the declarative part of a PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package using the
syntax
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DECLARE
insufficient_privileges EXCEPTION;
PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT(insufficient_privileges, -1031);
------------------------------------------------------ ORACLE returns error number -1031 if, for example
-- you try to UPDATE a table for which you have only
-- SELECT privileges
----------------------------------------------------BEGIN
...
EXCEPTION
WHEN insufficient_privileges THEN
-- handle the error
...
END;
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DECLARE
past_due EXCEPTION;
acct_num NUMBER(5);
BEGIN
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Using raise_application_error. A package named DBMS_STANDARD (part of the Procedural Database Extention)
provides language facilities that help your application interact with ORACLE. This package includes a procedure
named raise_application_error, which lets you issue user-defined error messages from a stored subprogram or database
trigger. The calling syntax is
raise_application_error(error_number, error_message);
where error_number is a negative integer in the range -20000..-20999 and error_message is a character string up to 512
bytes in length.
An application can call raise_application_error only from an executing stored subprogram. When called,
raise_application_error ends a subprogram, rolls back any database changes it made, and returns a user-defined error
message to the application.
PROCEDURE raise_salary (emp_id NUMBER, increase NUMBER) IS
current_salary
NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT sal INTO current_salary FROM emp
WHERE empno = emp_id;
IF current_salary is NULL THEN
raise_application_error(-20101, 'Salary is missing');
ELSE
UPDATE emp SET sal = current_salary + increase
WHERE empno = emp_id;
END IF;
END raise_salary;
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The calling application gets a PL/SQL exception, which it can process using the error-reporting functions SQLCODE
and SQLERRM in an OTHERS handler. Furthermore, it can use EXCEPTION_INIT to map specific error numbers
returned by raise_application_error to exceptions of its own.
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DECLARE
...
null_salary EXCEPTION;
PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT(null_salary, -20101);
...
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Internal exceptions are raised implicitly by the runtime system, as are user-defined exceptions that you have associated
with an ORACLE error number using EXCEPTION_INIT. However, other user-defined exceptions must be raised
explicitly by RAISE statements.
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Using RAISE statement. PL/SQL blocks and subprograms should RAISE an exception only when an error makes it
undesirable or impossible to finish processing. You can code a RAISE statement for a given exception anywhere within
the scope of that exception.
DECLARE
out_of_stock EXCEPTION;
number_on_hand NUMBER(4);
BEGIN
...
IF number_on_hand < 1 THEN
RAISE out_of_stock;
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END IF;
...
EXCEPTION
WHEN out_of_stock THEN
-- handle the error
END;
You can also raise a predefined exception explicitly:
RAISE INVALID_NUMBER;
That way, you can use an exception handler written for the predefined exception to process other errors.
Sometimes, you want to reraise an exception, that is, handle it locally, then pass it to an enclosing block. To reraise an
exception, simply place a RAISE statement in the local handler, as shown below
DECLARE
out_of_balance EXCEPTION;
BEGIN
...
------------- beginning of sub-block ----------------------BEGIN
...
IF ... THEN
RAISE out_of_balance; -- raise the exception
END IF;
...
EXCEPTION
WHEN out_of_balance THEN
-- handle the error
RAISE;
-- reraise the current exception
END;
------------- end of sub-block ----------------------------EXCEPTION
WHEN out_of_balance THEN
- handle the error differently
...
END;
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Omitting the exception name in a RAISE statement, which is allowed only in an exception handler, reraises the current
exception.
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When an exception is raised, normal execution of your PL/SQL block or subprogram stops and control transfers to its
exception-handling part and control does NOT return to where the exception was raised. In other words, you cannot
resume processing where you left off.
The optional OTHERS exception handler, which is always the last handler in a block or subprogram, acts as the
handler for all exceptions not named specifically. Use of the OTHERS handler guarantees that no exception will go
unhandled.
If you want two or more exceptions to execute the same sequence of statements, list the exception names in the WHEN
clause, separating them by the keyword OR. The keyword OTHERS cannot appear in the list of exception names; it
must appear by itself.
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...
EXCEPTION
WHEN ... THEN
- handle the error differently
WHEN ... OR ... THEN
- handle the error differently
...
WHEN OTHERS THEN
- handle the error differently
END;
Using SQLCODE and SQLERRM. You cannot use SQLCODE and SQLERRM directly in a SQL statement. Instead,
you must assign their values to local variables, then use the variables in the SQL statement.
The string function SUBSTR ensures that a VALUE_ERROR exception (for truncation) is not raised when you assign
the value of SQLERRM to err_msg. SQLCODE and SQLERRM are especially useful in the OTHERS exception
handler because they tell you which internal exception was raised.
Subprograms
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Subprograms are named PL/SQL blocks that can take parameters and be invoked. PL/SQL has two types of
subprograms called procedures and functions. Generally, you use a procedure to perform an action and a function to
compute a value.
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Like unnamed or anonymous PL/SQL blocks, subprograms have a declarative part, an executable part, and an optional
exception-handling part.
Procedures
A procedure is a subprogram that performs a specific action. You write procedures using the syntax
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DECLARE
err_num NUMBER;
err_msg CHAR(100);
BEGIN
...
WHEN OTHERS THEN
err_num := SQLCODE;
err_msg := SUBSTR(SQLERRM, 1, 100);
INSERT INTO errors VALUES (err_num, err_msg);
END;
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Unlike the datatype specifier in a variable declaration, the datatype specifier in a parameter declaration must be
unconstrained.
PROCEDURE ... (name CHAR(20) ) IS -- illegal; should be CHAR
The procedure specification begins with the keyword PROCEDURE and ends with the procedure name or a parameter
list. The procedure body begins with the keyword IS and ends with the keyword END followed by an optional
procedure name.
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Functions
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A function is a subprogram that computes a value. Functions and procedure are structured alike, except that functions
have a RETURN clause. You write functions using the syntax
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The function body begins with the keyword IS and ends with the keyword RETURN clause, which specifies the
datatype of the result value.
Calls to user-defined functions can appear in procedural statements, but not in SQL statements.
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RETURN Statement
The RETURN statement immediatedly completes the execution of a subprogram and returns control to the caller.
Execution then resumes with the statement following the subprogram call. A subprogram can contain several RETURN
statements, none of which need be the last lexical statement.
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In procedures, a RETURN statement cannot contain an expression. The statement simply returns control to the caller
before the normal end of the procedure is reached.
However, in functions, a RETURN statement must contain an expression, which is evaluated when the RETURN
statement is reached. A function must contain at least one RETURN statement. Otherwise, PL/SQL raises the
predefined exception PROGRAM_ERROR at run time.
Forward Declarations
PL/SQL requires that you declare an identifier before using it. Therefore, you must declare a subprogram before calling
it. PL/SQL solves the problem of subprograms used before they are declared by providing a special subprogram
declaration called forward declaration.
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DECLARE
PROCEDURE calc_rating (...); -- forward declaration
/* Define subprogram in alphabetical order */
PROCEDURE award_bonus (..) IS
BEGIN
calc_rating(..);
...
END;
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Although the formal parameter list appears in the forward declaration, it must also appear in the subprogram body. You
can place the subprogram body anywhere after the forward declaration, but they must appear in the same block,
subprogram, or package.
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Packaged Subprograms
Forward declarations also let you group logically related subprograms in a package. The subprogram specifications go
in the package specification, and the subprogram bodies go in the package body, where they are invisible to
applications. Thus, packages allow you to hide implementation details.
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When calling a subprogram, you can write the actual parameters using either positional or named notation. For
example, the call to the procedure raise_salary can be made as follows:
raise_salary(emp, inc);
raise_salary(increase => inc, emp_id => emp)
raise_salary(emp, increase => inc)
The first procedure call uses positional notation, the second uses named notation, and the third uses mixed notation.
Parameter Modes
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You use parameter modes to define the behavior of formal parameters. The three parameter modes, IN (the default),
OUT, and IN OUT, can be used with any subprogram. However, avoid using the OUT and IN OUT modes with
functions.
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an IN parameter lets you pass values to the subprogram being called. Inside the subprogram, an IN parameter acts like
a constant. Therefore, it cannot be assigned a value. Unlike OUT and IN OUT parameters, an IN parameter can be
initialized to default values.
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an OUT parameter lets you return values to the caller of a subprogram. Inside the subprogram, an OUT parameter acts
like an uninitialized variable. Therefore, its value cannot be assigned to another variable or reassigned to itself.
The actual parameter that corresponds to an OUT formal parameter must be a variable; it cannot be a constant or
expression.
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An OUT actual parameter can (but need not) have a value before the subprogram is called. However, the value is lost
when you call the subprogram.
Before exiting a subprogram, explicitly assign values to all OUT formal parameters. Otherwise, the values of
corresponding actual parameters are indeterminate. If you exit successfully, PL/SQL assigns values to the actual
parameters. However, if you exit with an unhandled exception, PL/SQL does not assign values to the actual parameters.
an IN OUT parameter lets you pass initial values to the subprogram being called and return updated values to the
caller. Inside the subprogram, an IN OUT parameter acts like an initialized variable.
The actual parameter that corresponds to an IN OUT formal parameter must be a variable; it cannot be a constant or
expression.
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The actual parameter and its corresponding formal parameter must belong to compatible datatypes.
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Overloading
PL/SQL lets you overload subprogram names. That is, you can use the same name for several different subprograms as
long as their formal parameters differ in number, order, or datatype family.
DECLARE
TYPE DateTabTyp IS TABLE OF DATE INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
TYPE RealTabTyp IS TABLE OF REAL INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
hiredate_tab DateTabTyp;
sal_tab
RealTabTyp;
...
You might write the following procedures to initialize the PL/SQL tables named initialize for hiredate_tab and sal_tab.
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Because the processing in these two procedures is the same, it is logical to give them the same name. You can place the
two overloaded initialize procedures in the same block, subprogram, or package. PL/SQL determines which of the two
procedures is being called by checking their formal parameters.
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You cannot overload the names of stand-alone subprograms. You cannot overload two subprograms if their formal
parameters differ only in name or parameter mode. You cannot overload two subprograms if their formal parameters
differ only in datatype and the different datatypes are in the same family (REAL and INTEGER). Finally, you cannot
overload two functions that differ only in return type even if the types are in different families.
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Stored Subprograms
Subprograms can be compiled separately and stored permanently in an ORACLE database, ready to be executed.
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Stored subprograms offer higher productivity, better performance, memory savings, application integrity, and tighter
security. Stored subprograms can help enforce data security. You can restrict users to specific database operations by
granting access only through subprograms. For example you can grant users EXECUTE access to a stored procedure
that updates the emp table, but not grant them access to the table itself. That way, users can call the procedure, but
cannot arbitrarily manipulate table data.
You can call stored subprograms from a database trigger, another stored subprogram, an ORACLE Precompiler
application, an OCI application, or an ORACLE tool such as SQL*Plus.
PACKAGES
A package is a database object that groups logically related PL/SQL types, objects, and subprograms. Packages usually
have two parts, a specification and a body, although sometimes the body is unnecessary. The specification is the
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interface to your application; it declares the types, variables, constants, exceptions, cursors, and subprograms available
for use. The body fully defines cursors and subprograms, and so implements the specification.
Unlike subprograms, packages cannot be called, passed parameters, or nested. Still, the format of a package is similar
to that of a subprogram:
PACKAGE name IS -- specification (visible part)
-- public type and object declarations
-- subprogram specifications
END [name};
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Packages are created interactively with SQL*Plus using the CREATE PACKAGE and CREATE PACKAGE BODY
commands. In the following example, a record type, a cursor, and two employment procedures are packaged:
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PROCEDURE hire_employee
(ename CHAR, job CHAR, mgr NUMBER, sal NUMBER,
comm NUMBER, deptno NUMBER );
BEGIN
INSERT INTO emp VALUES (empno_seq.NEXTVAL, ename, job, mgr,
SYSDATE, sal, comm, deptno );
END hire_employee;
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Packages offer several advantages: modularity, easier application design, information hiding, added functionality, and
better performance.
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The package body implements the package specification. That is, the package body contains the definition of every
cursor and subprogram declared in the package specification. Keep in mind that subprograms defined in a package
body are accessible outside the package only if their specification also appear in the package specification.
The package body can also contain private declarations, which define types and objects necessary for the internal
workings of the package. The scope of these declarations is local to the package body. Therefore, the declared types
and objects are inaccessible except from within the package body. Unlike a package specification, the declarative part
of a package body can contain subprogram bodies.
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Following the declarative part of a package body is the optional initialization part, which typically holds statements that
initialize some of the variables previously declared in the package.
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The initialization part of a package plays a minor role because, unlike subprograms, a package cannot be called or
passed parameters. As a result, the initialization part of a package is run only once, the first time you reference the
package.
Guidelines
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When writing packages, keep them as general as possible so they can be reused in future applications. Avoid writing
packages that duplicate some feature already provided by ORACLE.
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Package specifications reflect the design of your application. So, define them before the package bodies. Place in a
specification only the types, objects, and subprograms that must be visible to users of the package.
To reduce the need for recompiling when code is changed, place as few items as possible in a package specification.
Changes to a package body do not require ORACLE to recompile dependent procedures. However, changes to a
package specification require ORACLE to recompile every stored subprogram that references the package.
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