views:

686

answers:

2

I write a simple procedure. I try to store selection result in variable. I use "SELECT INTO" query but I can not doing this.

Example:

DECLARE
     v_employeeRecord  employee%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
 SELECT * INTO v_employeeRecord
      FROM Employee WHERE Salary > 10;
END;
+4  A: 

You have a couple options. You could turn that query into a cursor:

DECLARE
     CURSOR v_employeeRecords IS
          SELECT * FROM Employee WHERE Salary > 10;
     v_employeeRecord  employee%ROWTYPE;
BEGIN
     FOR v_employeeRecord IN v_employeeRecords LOOP
          /* Do something with v_employeeRecord */
     END LOOP;
END;

Or, you can create a TABLE variable:

DECLARE
     v_employeeRecord  employee%ROWTYPE;
     v_employeeRecords IS TABLE OF employee%ROWTYPE;
     i BINARY_INTEGER;
BEGIN
 SELECT * BULK COLLECT INTO v_employeeRecords
      FROM Employee WHERE Salary > 10;

 i := v_employeeRecords.FIRST;
 WHILE v_employeeRecords.EXISTS(i) LOOP
     v_employeeRecord := v_employeeRecords(i);
     /* Do something with v_employeeRecord */
     i := v_employeeRecords.NEXT(i);
 END;
END;

I haven't tried these samples in Oracle, so you may get compiler errors...

Adam Paynter
Cursor solve my problem.
mykhaylo
You have to use "BULK COLLECT INTO"
jva
@jva: Thanks for the catch!
Adam Paynter
+1  A: 

Hi Mykhaylo,

IF your SELECT returns more than one row, you won't be able to use the SELECT INTO synthax.

You will need to build a loop to navigate through the resulte set:

Adam demonstrated how you would use an explicit cursor and a bulk collect loop. I will show how you can build the simplest loop possible (implicit cursor, doesn't need a DECLARE section):

BEGIN
   FOR c_emp IN (SELECT * 
                   FROM Employee 
                  WHERE Salary > 10) LOOP
      /* do something with each row, for example:*/
      UPDATE foo SET bar = bar + c_emp.salary WHERE id = c_emp.id;
   END LOOP;
END;
Vincent Malgrat
Good example, thanks
mykhaylo