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Re: Help on stored proc

From: Thomas Kyte <tkyte_at_us.oracle.com>
Date: Mon, 08 Jun 1998 13:57:47 GMT
Message-ID: <357fedcd.6383619@192.86.155.100>


A copy of this was sent to "T.A.V." <tav_at_sj.bigger.net> (if that email address didn't require changing) On Sun, 07 Jun 1998 19:05:35 -0700, you wrote:

>I posted this question recently, but got no help. Here i am again
>asking for HELP:
>
>I need HELP!! I 'd like to create a stored procedure returning more
>than 1 row as the resultsets. For example, I would like to create a
>stored
>procedure to return a list of employee names and salaries who were hired
>

In short, it'll look like this:

create or replace function sp_ListEmp return types.cursortype as

    l_cursor types.cursorType;
begin

    open l_cursor for select ename, empno from emp order by ename;     return l_cursor;
end;
/

With 7.2 on up of the database you have cursor variables. Cursor variables are cursors opened by a pl/sql routine and fetched from by another application or pl/sql routine (in 7.3 pl/sql routines can fetch from cursor variables as well as open them). The cursor variables are opened with the privelegs of the owner of the procedure and behave just like they were completely contained within the pl/sql routine. It uses the inputs to decide what database it will run a query on.

Here is an example:

create or replace package types
as

    type cursorType is ref cursor;
end;
/  

create or replace function sp_ListEmp return types.cursortype as

    l_cursor types.cursorType;
begin

    open l_cursor for select ename, empno from emp order by ename;  

    return l_cursor;
end;
/    

REM SQL*Plus commands to use a cursor variable  

variable c refcursor
exec :c := sp_ListEmp
print c


and the Pro*c to use this would look like:

static void process()
{
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
    SQL_CURSOR my_cursor;

    VARCHAR     ename[40];
    int         empno;

EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION;       EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR DO sqlerror_hard();  

    EXEC SQL ALLOCATE :my_cursor;  

    EXEC SQL EXECUTE BEGIN
        :my_cursor := sp_listEmp;
    END; END-EXEC;       for( ;; )
    {

        EXEC SQL WHENEVER NOTFOUND DO break;
        EXEC SQL FETCH :my_cursor INTO :ename, empno;
 
        printf( "'%.*s', %d\n", ename.len, ename.arr, empno );
    }
    EXEC SQL CLOSE :my_cursor;
}

>
>
 

Thomas Kyte
tkyte_at_us.oracle.com
Oracle Government
Herndon VA  

http://govt.us.oracle.com/ -- downloadable utilities  



Opinions are mine and do not necessarily reflect those of Oracle Corporation  

Anti-Anti Spam Msg: if you want an answer emailed to you, you have to make it easy to get email to you. Any bounced email will be treated the same way i treat SPAM-- I delete it. Received on Mon Jun 08 1998 - 08:57:47 CDT

Original text of this message

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