This chapter describes data access in oracle.sql.*
formats, as opposed to standard Java formats. Using oracle.sql.*
formats involves casting your result sets and statements to OracleResultSet
, OracleStatement
, OraclePreparedStatement
, and OracleCallableStatement
, as appropriate, and using the getOracleObject
, setOracleObject
, get
XXX
, and set
XXX
methods of these classes, where XXX
corresponds to the types in the oracle.sql
package.
This chapter covers the following topics:
The Oracle JDBC drivers support standard JDBC types as well as Oracle-specific data types. This section documents standard and Oracle-specific SQL-Java default type mappings. This section contains the following topics:
Table 11-1 shows the default mappings between SQL data types, JDBC type codes, standard Java types, and Oracle extended types.
The SQL Data Types column lists the SQL types that exist in Oracle Database 11g. The JDBC Type Codes column lists data type codes supported by the JDBC standard and defined in the java.sql.Types
class or by Oracle in the oracle.jdbc.OracleTypes
class. For standard type codes, the codes are identical in these two classes.
The Standard Java Types column lists standard types defined in the Java language. The Oracle Extension Java Types column lists the oracle.sql.*
Java types that correspond to each SQL data type in the database. These are Oracle extensions that let you retrieve all SQL data in the form of a oracle.sql.*
Java type.
Note:
In general, the Oracle JDBC drivers are optimized to manipulate SQL data using the standard JDBC types. In a few specialized cases, it may be advantageous to use the Oracle extension classes that are available in the oracle.sql
package. But, Oracle strongly recommends to use the standard JDBC types instead of Oracle extensions, whenever possible. For more information about when to use Oracle extension, refer to "Standard Types Versus Oracle Types".
Oracle JDBC drivers do not support sharing any JDBC types across connections.
See Also:
"Package oracle.sql" for more information on Oracle extensionsTable 11-1 Default Mappings Between SQL Types and Java Types
SQL Data Types | JDBC Type Codes | Standard Java Types | Oracle Extension Java Types |
---|---|---|---|
STANDARD JDBC TYPES: |
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user-defined object |
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user-defined reference |
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user-defined collection |
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java.sql.RowId |
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java.sql.Types.NCHAR |
java.lang.String |
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ORACLE EXTENSIONS: |
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NA |
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Note:
For database versions, such as 8.1.7, which do not support theTIMESTAMP
data type, TIMESTAMP
is mapped to DATE
.This section provides further detail regarding mappings for NUMBER
and user-defined types.
For the different type codes that an Oracle NUMBER
value can correspond to, call the getter routine that is appropriate for the size of the data for mapping to work properly. For example, call getByte
to get a Java tinyint
value for an item x, where -128 < x < 128.
User-defined types, such as objects, object references, and collections, map by default to weak Java types, such as java.sql.Struct
, but alternatively can map to strongly typed custom Java classes. Custom Java classes can implement one of two interfaces:
The standard java.sql.SQLData
The Oracle-specific oracle.sql.ORAData
When JDBC programs retrieve SQL data into Java, you can use standard Java types, or you can use types of the oracle.sql
package. This section covers the following topics:
The Oracle data types in oracle.sql
store data in the same bit format as used by the database. In versions of the Oracle JDBC drivers prior to Oracle Database 10g, the Oracle data types were generally more efficient. The Oracle Database 10g JDBC drivers were substantially updated. As a result, in most cases the standard Java types are preferred to the data types in oracle.sql.*
. In particular, java.lang.String
is much more efficient than oracle.sql.CHAR
.
In general, Oracle recommends that you use the Java standard types. The exceptions to this are:
Use the oracle.sql.OraData
rather than the java.sql.SqlData
if the OraData functionality better suits your needs.
Use oracle.sql.NUMBER
rather than java.lang.Double
if you need to retain the exact values of floating point numbers. Oracle NUMBER
is a decimal representation and Java Double
and Float
are binary representations. Conversion from one format to the other can result in slight variations in the actual value represented. Additionally, the range of values that can be represented using the two formats is different.
Use oracle.sql.NUMBER
rather than java.math.BigDecimal
when performance is critical and you are not manipulating the values, just reading and writing them.
Use oracle.sql.DATE
or oracle.sql.TIMESTAMP
rather than java.sql.Date
or java.sql.Timestamp
if you are using a JDK version earlier than JDK 1.6 or require maximum performance. You can also use the oracle.sql
data type if you want to read many date values, and compute or display only a small percentage.
Note:
Due to a bug in all versions of Java prior to JDK 1.6, construction ofjava.lang.Date
and java.lang.Timestamp
objects is slow, especially in multithreaded environments. This bug is fixed in JDK 1.6.Use oracle.sql.CHAR
only when you have data from some external source, which has been represented in an Oracle character set encoding. In all other cases, you should use java.lang.String
.
STRUCT
, ARRAY
, BLOB
, CLOB
, REF
, and ROWID
are all the implementation classes of the corresponding JDBC standard interface types. So, there is no benefit of using the Oracle extension types as they are identical to the JDBC standard types.
BFILE
, TIMESTAMPTZ
, and TIMESTAMPLTZ
have no representation in the JDBC standard. You must use these Oracle extensions.
In all other cases, you should use the standard JDBC type rather than the Oracle extensions.
Note:
If you convert anoracle.sql
data type to a Java standard data type, then the benefits of using the oracle.sql
data type are lost.Java represents a SQL NULL
datum by the Java value null
. Java data types fall into two categories: primitive types, such as byte
, int
, and float
, and object types, such as class instances. The primitive types cannot represent null
. Instead, they store null
as the value zero, as defined by the JDBC specification. This can lead to ambiguity when you try to interpret your results.
In contrast, Java object types can represent null
. The Java language defines an object container type corresponding to every primitive type that can represent null
. The object container types must be used as the targets for SQL data to detect SQL NULL
without ambiguity.
You cannot use a relational operator to compare NULL
values with each other or with other values. For example, the following SELECT
statement does not return any row even if the COMM
column contains one or more NULL
values.
PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement( "SELECT * FROM EMP WHERE COMM = ?"); pstmt.setNull(1, java.sql.Types.VARCHAR);
The next example shows how to compare values for equality when some return values might be NULL
. The following code returns all the ENAMES
from the EMP
table that are NULL
, if there is no value of 100 for COMM
.
PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("SELECT ENAME FROM EMP WHERE COMM =? OR ((COMM IS NULL) AND (? IS NULL))"); pstmt.setBigDecimal(1, new BigDecimal(100)); pstmt.setNull(2, java.sql.Types.VARCHAR);
The JDBC Statement
object returns an OracleResultSet
object, typed as a java.sql.ResultSet
. If you want to apply only standard JDBC methods to the object, then keep it as a ResultSet
type. However, if you want to use the Oracle extensions on the object, then you must cast it to OracleResultSet
. All of the Oracle Result Set extensions are in the oracle.jdbc.OracleResultSet
interface and all the Statement
extensions are in the oracle.jdbc.OracleStatement
interface.
For example, assuming you have a standard Statement
object stmt
, do the following if you want to use only standard JDBC ResultSet
methods:
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT * FROM emp");
If you need the extended functionality provided by the Oracle extensions to JDBC, you can select the results into a standard ResultSet
variable and then cast that variable to OracleResultSet
later.
Key extensions to the result set and statement classes include the getOracleObject
and setOracleObject
methods, used to access and manipulate data in oracle.sql.*
formats.
This section describes get
and set
methods, particularly the JDBC standard getObject
and setObject
methods and the Oracle-specific getOracleObject
and setOracleObject
methods, and how to access data in oracle.sql.*
format compared with Java format.
Although there are specific get
XXX
methods for all the Oracle SQL types, you can use the general get
methods for convenience or simplicity, or if you are not certain in advance what type of data you will receive.
This section covers the following topics:
Note:
You cannot qualify a column name with a table name and pass it as a parameter to theget
XXX
method. For example:
ResultSet rset = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT emp.deptno, dept.deptno FROM emp, dept"); rset.getInt("emp.deptno");
The getInt
method in the preceding code will throw an exception. To uniquely identify the columns in the get
XXX
method, you can either use column index or specify column aliases in the query and use these aliases in the get
XXX
method.
The standard getObject
method of a result set or callable statement has a return type of java.lang.Object
. The class of the object returned is based on its SQL type, as follows:
For SQL data types that are not Oracle-specific, getObject
returns the default Java type corresponding to the SQL type of the column, following the mapping in the JDBC specification.
For Oracle-specific data types, getObject
returns an object of the appropriate oracle.sql.*
class, such as oracle.sql.ROWID
.
For Oracle database objects, getObject
returns a Java object of the class specified in your type map. Type maps specify a mapping from database named types to Java classes. The getObject(
parameter_index
)
method uses the default type map of the connection. The getObject(
parameter_index
,
map
)
enables you to pass in a type map. If the type map does not provide a mapping for a particular Oracle object, then getObject
returns an oracle.sql.STRUCT
object.
If you want to retrieve data from a result set or callable statement as an oracle.sql.*
object, then you must follow a special process. For a Result Set, you must cast the Result Set itself to oracle.jdbc.OracleResultSet
and then call getOracleObject
instead of getObject
. The same applies to CallableStatement
and oracle.jdbc.OracleCallableStatement
.
The return type of getOracleObject
is oracle.sql.Datum
. The actual returned object is an instance of the appropriate oracle.sql.*
class. The method signature is:
public oracle.sql.Datum getOracleObject(int parameter_index)
When you retrieve data into a Datum
variable, you can use the standard Java instanceof
operator to determine which oracle.sql.*
type it really is.
Example: Using getOracleObject with a Result Set
The following example creates a table that contains a column of CHAR
data and a column containing a BFILE
locator. A SELECT
statement retrieves the contents of the table as a result set. The getOracleObject
then retrieves the CHAR
data into the char_datum
variable and the BFILE
locator into the bfile_datum
variable. Note that because getOracleObject
returns a Datum
object, the return values must be cast to CHAR
and BFILE
, respectively.
stmt.execute ("CREATE TABLE bfile_table (x VARCHAR2 (30), b BFILE)"); stmt.execute ("INSERT INTO bfile_table VALUES ('one', BFILENAME ('TEST_DIR', 'file1'))"); ResultSet rset = stmt.executeQuery ("SELECT * FROM bfile_table"); while (rset.next ()) { CHAR char_datum = (CHAR) ((OracleResultSet)rset).getOracleObject (1); BFILE bfile_datum = (BFILE) ((OracleResultSet)rset).getOracleObject (2); ... }
Example: Using getOracleObject in a Callable Statement
The following example prepares a call to the procedure myGetDate
, which associates a character string with a date. The program passes "SCOTT"
to the prepared call and registers the DATE
type as an output parameter. After the call is run, getOracleObject
retrieves the date associated with "SCOTT"
. Note that because getOracleObject
returns a Datum
object, the results are cast to DATE
.
OracleCallableStatement cstmt = (OracleCallableStatement)conn.prepareCall ("begin myGetDate (?, ?); end;"); cstmt.setString (1, "SCOTT"); cstmt.registerOutParameter (2, Types.DATE); cstmt.execute (); DATE date = (DATE) ((OracleCallableStatement)cstmt).getOracleObject (2); ...
Table 11-2 lists the underlying return types for the getObject
and getOracleObject
methods for each Oracle SQL type.
Keep in mind the following when you use these methods:
getObject
always returns data into a java.lang.Object
instance
getOracleObject
always returns data into an oracle.sql.Datum
instance
You must cast the returned object to use any special functionality.
Table 11-2 getObject and getOracleObject Return Types
Oracle SQL Type | getObject Underlying Return Type | getOracleObject Underlying Return Type |
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Footnote 1 ResultSet.getObject
returns java.sql.Timestamp
only if the oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant
connection property is set to TRUE
, else the method returns oracle.sql.TIMESTAMP
.
Note:
TheResultSet.getObject
method returns java.sql.Timestamp
for the TIMESTAMP
SQL type, only when the connection property oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant
is set to TRUE
. This property has to be set when the connection is obtained. If this connection property is not set or if it is set after the connection is obtained, then the ResultSet.getObject
method returns oracle.sql.TIMESTAMP
for the TIMESTAMP
SQL type.
The oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant
connection property can also be set without changing the code in the following ways:
Including the ojdbc5dms.jar
or ojdbc6dms.jar
files in the CLASSPATH
. These files set oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant
to TRUE
by default. These are specific to the Oracle Application Server release and are not available as part of the general JDBC release. They are located in $ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib
.
Setting the system property by calling the java
command with the flag -Doracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant=true
. For example,
java -Doracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant=true ...
When the J2EE13Compliant
is set to TRUE
the action is as in Table B-3 of the JDBC specification.
See Also:
Table A-1, "Valid SQL Data Type-Java Class Mappings", for information about type compatibility between all SQL and Java types.Standard JDBC provides a get
XXX
for each standard Java type, such as getByte
, getInt
, getFloat
, and so on. Each of these returns exactly what the method name implies.
In addition, the OracleResultSet
and OracleCallableStatement
classes provide a full complement of get
XXX
methods corresponding to all the oracle.sql.*
types. Each get
XXX
method returns an oracle.sql.
XXX
object. For example, getROWID
returns an oracle.sql.ROWID
object.
There is no performance advantage in using the specific get
XXX
methods. However, they do save you the trouble of casting, because the return type is specific to the object being returned.
This section covers the following topics:
Refer to the Java doc to know the return types for each get
XXX
method and also which are Oracle extensions under Java Development Kit (JDK) 1.6. You must cast the returned object to OracleResultSet
or OracleCallableStatement
to use methods that are Oracle extensions.
This section provides additional details about some get
XXX
methods.
JDBC 2.0 simplified method signatures for the getBigDecimal
method. The previous input signatures were:
(int columnIndex, int scale) or (String columnName, int scale)
The simplified input signature is:
(int columnIndex) or (String columnName)
The scale
parameter, used to specify the number of digits to the right of the decimal, is no longer necessary. The Oracle JDBC drivers retrieve numeric values with full precision.
Because there is no BOOLEAN
database type, when you use getBoolean
a data type conversion always occurs. The getBoolean
method is supported only for numeric columns. When applied to these columns, getBoolean
interprets any zero value as false
and any other value as true
. When applied to any other sort of column, getBoolean
raises the exception java.lang.NumberFormatException
.
The return type of getObject
is java.lang.Object
. The returned value is an instance of a subclass of java.lang.Object
. Similarly, the return type of getOracleObject
is oracle.sql.Datum
, and the class of the returned value is a subclass of oracle.sql.Datum
. You typically cast the returned object to the appropriate class to use particular methods and functionality of that class.
In addition, you have the option of using a specific get
XXX
method instead of the generic getObject
or getOracleObject
methods. The get
XXX
methods enable you to avoid casting, because the return type of get
XXX
corresponds to the type of object returned. For example, the return type of getCLOB
is oracle.sql.CLOB
, as opposed to java.lang.Object
.
Example of Casting Return Values
This example assumes that you have fetched data of the NUMBER
type as the first column of a result set. Because you want to manipulate the NUMBER
data without losing precision, cast your result set to OracleResultSet
and use getOracleObject
to return the NUMBER
data in oracle.sql.*
format. If you do not cast your result set, then you have to use getObject
, which returns your numeric data into a Java Float
and loses some of the precision of your SQL data.
The getOracleObject
method returns an oracle.sql.NUMBER
object into an oracle.sql.Datum
return variable unless you cast the output. Cast the getOracleObject
output to oracle.sql.NUMBER
if you want to use a NUMBER
return variable and any of the special functionality of that class.
NUMBER x = (NUMBER)ors.getOracleObject(1);
Just as there is a standard getObject
and Oracle-specific getOracleObject
in result sets and callable statements, there are also standard setObject
and Oracle-specific setOracleObject
methods in OraclePreparedStatement
and OracleCallableStatement
. The setOracleObject
methods take oracle.sql.*
input parameters.
To bind standard Java types to a prepared statement or callable statement, use the setObject
method, which takes a java.lang.Object
as input. The setObject
method does support a few of the oracle.sql.*
types. However, the method has been implemented so that you can enter instances of the oracle.sql.*
classes that correspond to the following JDBC standard types: Blob
, Clob
, Struct
, Ref
, and Array
.
To bind oracle.sql.*
types to a prepared statement or callable statement, use the setOracleObject
method, which takes a subclass of oracle.sql.Datum
as input. To use setOracleObject
, you must cast your prepared statement or callable statement to OraclePreparedStatement
or OracleCallableStatement
.
Example of Using setObject and setOracleObject
For a prepared statement, the setOracleObject
method binds the oracle.sql.CHAR
data represented by the charVal
variable to the prepared statement. To bind the oracle.sql.*
data, the prepared statement must be cast to OraclePreparedStatement
. Similarly, the setObject
method binds the Java String
data represented by the variable strVal
.
PreparedStatement ps= conn.prepareStatement("text_of_prepared_statement"); ((OraclePreparedStatement)ps).setOracleObject(1,charVal); ps.setObject(2,strVal);
As with the get
XXX
methods, there are several specific set
XXX
methods. Standard set
XXX
methods are provided for binding standard Java types, and Oracle-specific set
XXX
methods are provided for binding Oracle-specific types.
Similarly, there are two forms of the setNull
method:
void setNull(int
parameterIndex,
int
sqlType
)
This is specified in the standard java.sql.PreparedStatement
interface. This signature takes a parameter index and a SQL type code defined by the java.sql.Types
or oracle.jdbc.OracleTypes
class. Use this signature to set an object other than a REF
, ARRAY
, or STRUCT
to NULL
.
void setNull(int
parameterIndex
, int
sqlType
, String
sql_type_name
)
With JDBC 2.0, this signature is also specified in the standard java.sql.PreparedStatement
interface. This method takes a SQL type name in addition to a parameter index and a SQL type code. Use this method when the SQL type code is java.sql.Types.REF
, ARRAY
, or STRUCT
. If the type code is other than REF
, ARRAY
, or STRUCT
, then the given SQL type name is ignored.
Similarly, the registerOutParameter
method has a signature for use with REF
, ARRAY
, or STRUCT
data:
void registerOutParameter (int parameterIndex, int sqlType, String sql_type_name)
Binding Oracle-specific types using the appropriate setXXX
methods, instead of the methods used for binding standard Java types, may offer some performance advantage.
This section covers the following topics:
There are three way to bind data for input:
Direct binding where the data itself is placed in a bind buffer
Stream binding where the data is streamed
LOB binding where a temporary lob is created, the data placed in the LOB using the LOB APIs, and the bytes of the LOB locator are placed in the bind buffer
The three kinds of binding have some differences in performance and have an impact on batching. Direct binding is fast and batching is fine. Stream binding is slower, may require multiple round trips, and turns batching off. LOB binding is very slow and requires many round trips. Batching works, but might be a bad idea. They also have different size limits, depending on the type of the SQL statement.
For SQL parameters, the length of standard parameter types, such as RAW
and VARCHAR2
, is fixed by the size of the target column. For PL/SQL parameters, the size is limited to a fixed number of bytes, which is 32766.
In Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2), certain changes were made to the setString
, setCharacterStream
, setAsciiStream
, setBytes
, and setBinaryStream
methods of PreparedStatement
. The original behavior of these APIs were:
setString
: Direct bind of characters
setCharacterStream
: Stream bind of characters
setAsciiStream
: Stream bind of bytes
setBytes
: Direct bind of bytes
setBinaryStream
: Stream bind of bytes
Starting from Oracle Database 10g release 2 (10.2), automatic switching between binding modes, based on the data size and on the type of the SQL statement is provided.
For SQL, direct bind is used for size up to 2000 and stream bind for larger.
For PL/SQL direct bind is used for size up to 32766 and LOB bind is used for larger.
setString, setCharacterStream, and setAsciiStream
For SQL, direct bind is used up to 32766 Java characters and stream bind is used for larger. This is independent of character set.
For PL/SQL, you must be careful about the byte size of the character data in the database character set or the national character set depending on the setting of the form of use parameter. Direct bind is used for data where the byte length is less than 32766 and LOB bind is used for larger.
For fixed length character sets, multiply the length of the Java character data by the fixed character size in bytes and compare that to the restrictive values. For variable length character sets, there are three cases based on the Java character length, as follows:
If character length is less than 32766 divided by the maximum character size, then direct bind is used.
If character length is greater than 32766 divided by the minimum character size, then LOB bind is used.
If character length is in between and if the actual length of the converted bytes is less than 32766, then direct bind is used, else LOB bind is used.
Note:
When a PL/SQL procedure is embedded in a SQL statement, the binding action is different. Refer to "Data Interface for LOBs" for more information.The server-side internal driver has the following additional limitations:
setString
, setCharacterStream
, and setASCIIStream
APIs are not supported for SQL CLOB columns when the data size in characters is over 4000 bytes
setBytes
and setBinaryStream
APIs are not supported for SQL BLOB columns when the data size is over 2000 bytes
Important:
Do not use these APIs with the server-side internal driver, without careful checking of the data size in client code.See Also:
JDBC Release Notes for further discussion and possible workaroundsCHAR
data in the database is padded to the column width. This leads to a limitation in using the setCHAR
method to bind character data into the WHERE
clause of a SELECT
statement. The character data in the WHERE
clause must also be padded to the column width to produce a match in the SELECT
statement. This is especially troublesome if you do not know the column width.
To remedy this, Oracle has added the setFixedCHAR
method to the OraclePreparedStatement
class. This method runs a non-padded comparison.
Note:
Remember to cast your prepared statement object to OraclePreparedStatement
to use the setFixedCHAR
method.
There is no need to use setFixedCHAR
for an INSERT
statement. The database always automatically pads the data to the column width as it inserts it.
The following example demonstrates the difference between the setCHAR
and setFixedCHAR
methods.
/* Schema is : create table my_table (col1 char(10)); insert into my_table values ('JDBC'); */ PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement ("select count(*) from my_table where col1 = ?"); pstmt.setString (1, "JDBC"); // Set the Bind Value runQuery (pstmt); // This will print " No of rows are 0" CHAR ch = new CHAR("JDBC ", null); ((OraclePreparedStatement)pstmt).setCHAR(1, ch); // Pad it to 10 bytes runQuery (pstmt); // This will print "No of rows are 1" ((OraclePreparedStatement)pstmt).setFixedCHAR(1, "JDBC"); runQuery (pstmt); // This will print "No of rows are 1" void runQuery (PreparedStatement ps) { // Run the Query ResultSet rs = pstmt.executeQuery (); while (rs.next()) System.out.println("No of rows are " + rs.getInt(1)); rs.close(); rs = null; }
The oracle.jdbc.OracleResultSetMetaData
interface is JDBC 2.0-compliant but does not implement the getSchemaName
and getTableName
methods because Oracle Database does not make this feasible.
The following code snippet uses several of the methods in the OracleResultSetMetadata
interface to retrieve the number of columns from the EMP
table and the numerical type and SQL type name of each column:
DatabaseMetaData dbmd = conn.getMetaData(); ResultSet rset = dbmd.getTables("", "SCOTT", "EMP", null); while (rset.next()) { OracleResultSetMetaData orsmd = ((OracleResultSet)rset).getMetaData(); int numColumns = orsmd.getColumnCount(); System.out.println("Num of columns = " + numColumns); for (int i=0; i<numColumns; i++) { System.out.print ("Column Name=" + orsmd.getColumnName (i+1)); System.out.print (" Type=" + orsmd.getColumnType (i + 1) ); System.out.println (" Type Name=" + orsmd.getColumnTypeName (i + 1)); } }
The program returns the following output:
Num of columns = 5 Column Name=TABLE_CAT Type=12 Type Name=VARCHAR2 Column Name=TABLE_SCHEM Type=12 Type Name=VARCHAR2 Column Name=TABLE_NAME Type=12 Type Name=VARCHAR2 Column Name=TABLE_TYPE Type=12 Type Name=VARCHAR2 Column Name=TABLE_REMARKS Type=12 Type Name=VARCHAR2
You can use the CALL statement to execute a routine from within SQL.
Note:
A routine is a procedure or a function that is standalone or is defined within a type or package. You must haveEXECUTE
privilege on the standalone routine or on the type or package in which the routine is defined. Refer to the "Oracle Database SQL Language Reference" for more information about using the CALL
statement.You can execute a routine in two ways:
By issuing a call to the routine itself by name or by using the routine_clause
By using an object_access_expression
inside the type of an expression
You can specify one or more arguments to the routine, if the routine takes arguments. You can use positional, named, or mixed notation for argument.
The INTO
clause applies only to calls to functions. You can use the following types of variables with this clause:
Host variable
Indicator variable
The basic unit in PL/SQL is a block. All PL/SQL programs are made up of blocks, which can be nested within each other. A PL/SQL block has three parts: a declarative part, an executable part, and an exception-handling part. You get the following advantages by using PL/SQL blocks in your application:
Better performance
Higher productivity
Full portability
Tight integration with Oracle
Tight security