How to declare variable and use it in the same Oracle SQL script?
I want to write reusable code and need to declare some variables at the beginning and reuse them in the script, such as:
DEFINE stupidvar = 'stupidvarcontent';
SELECT stupiddata
FROM stupidtable
WHERE stupidcolumn = &stupidvar;
How can I declare 开发者_高级运维a variable and reuse it in statements that follow such as in using it SQLDeveloper.
Attempts
- Use a DECLARE section and insert the following SELECT statement in
BEGIN
andEND;
. Acces the variable using&stupidvar
. - Use the keyword
DEFINE
and access the variable. - Using the keyword
VARIABLE
and access the the variable.
But I am getting all kinds of errors during my tries (Unbound variable, Syntax error, Expected SELECT INTO
...).
There are a several ways of declaring variables in SQL*Plus scripts.
The first is to use VAR, to declare a bind variable. The mechanism for assigning values to a VAR is with an EXEC call:
SQL> var name varchar2(20)
SQL> exec :name := 'SALES'
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL> select * from dept
2 where dname = :name
3 /
DEPTNO DNAME LOC
---------- -------------- -------------
30 SALES CHICAGO
SQL>
A VAR is particularly useful when we want to call a stored procedure which has OUT parameters or a function.
Alternatively we can use substitution variables. These are good for interactive mode:
SQL> accept p_dno prompt "Please enter Department number: " default 10
Please enter Department number: 20
SQL> select ename, sal
2 from emp
3 where deptno = &p_dno
4 /
old 3: where deptno = &p_dno
new 3: where deptno = 20
ENAME SAL
---------- ----------
CLARKE 800
ROBERTSON 2975
RIGBY 3000
KULASH 1100
GASPAROTTO 3000
SQL>
When we're writing a script which calls other scripts it can be useful to DEFine the variables upfront. This snippet runs without prompting me to enter a value:
SQL> def p_dno = 40
SQL> select ename, sal
2 from emp
3 where deptno = &p_dno
4 /
old 3: where deptno = &p_dno
new 3: where deptno = 40
no rows selected
SQL>
Finally there's the anonymous PL/SQL block. As you see, we can still assign values to declared variables interactively:
SQL> set serveroutput on size unlimited
SQL> declare
2 n pls_integer;
3 l_sal number := 3500;
4 l_dno number := &dno;
5 begin
6 select count(*)
7 into n
8 from emp
9 where sal > l_sal
10 and deptno = l_dno;
11 dbms_output.put_line('top earners = '||to_char(n));
12 end;
13 /
Enter value for dno: 10
old 4: l_dno number := &dno;
new 4: l_dno number := 10;
top earners = 1
PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
SQL>
Try using double quotes if it's a char variable:
DEFINE stupidvar = "'stupidvarcontent'";
or
DEFINE stupidvar = 'stupidvarcontent';
SELECT stupiddata
FROM stupidtable
WHERE stupidcolumn = '&stupidvar'
upd:
SQL*Plus: Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production on Wed Aug 25 17:13:26 2010
Copyright (c) 1982, 2005, Oracle. All rights reserved.
SQL> conn od/od@etalon
Connected.
SQL> define var = "'FL-208'";
SQL> select code from product where code = &var;
old 1: select code from product where code = &var
new 1: select code from product where code = 'FL-208'
CODE
---------------
FL-208
SQL> define var = 'FL-208';
SQL> select code from product where code = &var;
old 1: select code from product where code = &var
new 1: select code from product where code = FL-208
select code from product where code = FL-208
*
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-06553: PLS-221: 'FL' is not a procedure or is undefined
In PL/SQL v.10
keyword declare is used to declare variable
DECLARE stupidvar varchar(20);
to assign a value you can set it when you declare
DECLARE stupidvar varchar(20) := '12345678';
or to select something into that variable you use INTO
statement, however you need to wrap statement in BEGIN
and END
, also you need to make sure that only single value is returned, and don't forget semicolons.
so the full statement would come out following:
DECLARE stupidvar varchar(20);
BEGIN
SELECT stupid into stupidvar FROM stupiddata CC
WHERE stupidid = 2;
END;
Your variable is only usable within BEGIN
and END
so if you want to use more than one you will have to do multiple BEGIN END
wrappings
DECLARE stupidvar varchar(20);
BEGIN
SELECT stupid into stupidvar FROM stupiddata CC
WHERE stupidid = 2;
DECLARE evenmorestupidvar varchar(20);
BEGIN
SELECT evenmorestupid into evenmorestupidvar FROM evenmorestupiddata CCC
WHERE evenmorestupidid = 42;
INSERT INTO newstupiddata (newstupidcolumn, newevenmorestupidstupidcolumn)
SELECT stupidvar, evenmorestupidvar
FROM dual
END;
END;
Hope this saves you some time
If you want to declare date and then use it in SQL Developer.
DEFINE PROPp_START_DT = TO_DATE('01-SEP-1999')
SELECT *
FROM proposal
WHERE prop_start_dt = &PROPp_START_DT
The question is about to use a variable in a script means to me it will be used in SQL*Plus.
The problem is you missed the quotes and Oracle can not parse the value to number.
SQL> DEFINE num = 2018
SQL> SELECT &num AS your_num FROM dual;
old 1: SELECT &num AS your_num FROM dual
new 1: SELECT 2018 AS your_num FROM dual
YOUR_NUM
----------
2018
Elapsed: 00:00:00.01
This sample is works fine because of automatic type conversion (or whatever it is called).
If you check by typing DEFINE in SQL*Plus, it will shows that num variable is CHAR.
SQL>define
DEFINE NUM = "2018" (CHAR)
It is not a problem in this case, because Oracle can deal with parsing string to number if it would be a valid number.
When the string can not parse to number, than Oracle can not deal with it.
SQL> DEFINE num = 'Doh'
SQL> SELECT &num AS your_num FROM dual;
old 1: SELECT &num AS your_num FROM dual
new 1: SELECT Doh AS your_num FROM dual
SELECT Doh AS your_num FROM dual
*
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-00904: "DOH": invalid identifier
With a quote, so do not force Oracle to parse to number, will be fine:
17:31:00 SQL> SELECT '&num' AS your_num FROM dual;
old 1: SELECT '&num' AS your_num FROM dual
new 1: SELECT 'Doh' AS your_num FROM dual
YOU
---
Doh
So, to answer the original question, it should be do like this sample:
SQL> DEFINE stupidvar = 'X'
SQL>
SQL> SELECT 'print stupidvar:' || '&stupidvar'
2 FROM dual
3 WHERE dummy = '&stupidvar';
old 1: SELECT 'print stupidvar:' || '&stupidvar'
new 1: SELECT 'print stupidvar:' || 'X'
old 3: WHERE dummy = '&stupidvar'
new 3: WHERE dummy = 'X'
'PRINTSTUPIDVAR:'
-----------------
print stupidvar:X
Elapsed: 00:00:00.00
There is an other way to store variable in SQL*Plus by using Query Column Value.
The COL[UMN] has new_value option to store value from query by field name.
SQL> COLUMN stupid_column_name new_value stupid_var noprint
SQL> SELECT dummy || '.log' AS stupid_column_name
2 FROM dual;
Elapsed: 00:00:00.00
SQL> SPOOL &stupid_var.
SQL> SELECT '&stupid_var' FROM DUAL;
old 1: SELECT '&stupid_var' FROM DUAL
new 1: SELECT 'X.log' FROM DUAL
X.LOG
-----
X.log
Elapsed: 00:00:00.00
SQL>SPOOL OFF;
As you can see, X.log value was set into the stupid_var variable, so we can find a X.log file in the current directory has some log in it.
Just want to add Matas' answer. Maybe it's obvious, but I've searched for a long time to figure out that the variable is accessible only inside the BEGIN-END construction, so if you need to use it in some code later, you need to put this code inside the BEGIN-END block.
Note that these blocks can be nested:
DECLARE x NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT PK INTO x FROM table1 WHERE col1 = 'test';
DECLARE y NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT PK INTO y FROM table2 WHERE col2 = x;
INSERT INTO table2 (col1, col2)
SELECT y,'text'
FROM dual
WHERE exists(SELECT * FROM table2);
COMMIT;
END;
END;
In Toad I use this works:
declare
num number;
begin
---- use 'select into' works
--select 123 into num from dual;
---- also can use :=
num := 123;
dbms_output.Put_line(num);
end;
Then the value will be print to DBMS Output
Window.
Reference to here and here2.
Here's your answer:
DEFINE num := 1; -- The semi-colon is needed for default values.
SELECT &num FROM dual;
You can use a with
clause and move filter criteria from a where
to a join
.
It helps here: Oracle SQL alternative to using DEFINE.
with
mytab as (select 'stupidvarcontent' as myvar from dual)
SELECT
stupiddata
FROM
stupidtable a
inner join
mytab b
on
a.stupidcolumn = b.myvar
WHERE ...;
It works in Oracle 12R2.
It works for one SQL command only.
It is standard ANSI notation.
I'm using it in SQL Developer.
One possible approach, if you just need to specify a parameter once and replicate it in several places, is to do something like this:
SELECT
str_size /* my variable usage */
, LPAD(TRUNC(DBMS_RANDOM.VALUE * POWER(10, str_size)), str_size, '0') rand
FROM
dual /* or any other table, or mixed of joined tables */
CROSS JOIN (SELECT 8 str_size FROM dual); /* my variable declaration */
This code generates a string of 8 random digits.
Notice that I create a kind of alias named str_size
that holds the constant 8
. It is cross-joined to be used more than once in the query.
Sometimes you need to use a macro variable without asking the user to enter a value. Most often this has to be done with optional script parameters. The following code is fully functional
column 1 noprint new_value 1
select '' "1" from dual where 2!=2;
select nvl('&&1', 'VAH') "1" from dual;
column 1 clear
define 1
Similar code was somehow found in the rdbms/sql directory.
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