views:

607

answers:

2

In SQL Server, you can do things like this:

INSERT INTO some_table (...) OUTPUT INSERTED.*
VALUES (...)

So that you can insert arbitrary sets of columns/values and get those results back. Is there any way to do this in Oracle?

The best I can come up with is this:

INSERT INTO some_table (...)
VALUES (...)
RETURNING ROWID INTO :out_rowid

...using :out_rowid as a bind variable. And then using a second query like this:

SELECT *
FROM some_table
WHERE ROWID = :rowid

...but this isn't quite the same as it returns everything within the column, not just the columns I inserted.

Is there any better way to do this without using a lot of PL/SQL and preferably with only one query?

A: 

Hi Jason,

The RETURNING clause supports the BULK COLLECT INTO synthax. Consider (10g):

SQL> CREATE TABLE t (ID NUMBER);

Table created
SQL> INSERT INTO t (SELECT ROWNUM FROM dual CONNECT BY LEVEL <= 5);

5 rows inserted
SQL> DECLARE
  2     TYPE tab_rowid IS TABLE OF ROWID;
  3     l_r tab_rowid;
  4  BEGIN
  5     UPDATE t SET ID = ID * 2
  6      RETURNING ROWID BULK COLLECT INTO l_r;
  7     FOR i IN 1 .. l_r.count LOOP
  8        dbms_output.put_line(l_r(i));
  9     END LOOP;
 10  END;
 11  /

AADcriAALAAAAdgAAA
AADcriAALAAAAdgAAB
AADcriAALAAAAdgAAC
AADcriAALAAAAdgAAD
AADcriAALAAAAdgAAE

It works with multi-row UPDATE and DELETE with my version (10.2.0.3.0) but NOT with INSERT:

SQL> DECLARE
  2     TYPE tab_rowid IS TABLE OF ROWID;
  3     l_r tab_rowid;
  4  BEGIN
  5     INSERT INTO t (SELECT ROWNUM FROM dual CONNECT BY LEVEL <= 5)
  6      RETURNING ROWID BULK COLLECT INTO l_r;
  7     FOR i IN 1 .. l_r.count LOOP
  8        dbms_output.put_line(l_r(i));
  9     END LOOP;
 10  END;
 11  /

ORA-06550: line 7, column 5:
PL/SQL: ORA-00933: SQL command not properly ended

Maybe you have a more recent version (11g?) and the BULK COLLECT INTO is supported for multi-row INSERTs ?

Vincent Malgrat
I'm not so much worried about the number of rows as I am the number of columns. The number of rows will pretty much always be one while the columns will be variable.
Jason Baker
@Jason: I think you will have to use dbms_sql if the number of columns is variable/not known at compile time
Vincent Malgrat
+1  A: 

Maybe I don't understand the question, but wouldn't this do it? (you must know what you want back)

INSERT INTO some_table (...)
VALUES (...)
RETURNING some_column_a, some_column_b, some_column_c,  ...  INTO :out_a, :out_b, :out_c, ...

@Vincent returning bulk collect into for multi-row insert works only in conjunction with forall (in another words if you insert from collection you can retrieve "results" into another)

Michal Pravda