SELECT INTO v14
The SELECT INTO
statement is an SPL variation of the SQL SELECT
command. The differences are:
SELECT INTO
assigns the results to variables or records where they can then be used in SPL program statements.- The accessible result set of
SELECT INTO
is at most one row.
Other than these differences, all of the clauses of the SELECT
command, such as WHERE
, ORDER BY
, GROUP BY
, and HAVING
, are valid for SELECT INTO
. The following are the two variations of SELECT INTO
:
target
is a comma-separated list of simple variables. select_expressions
and the remainder of the statement are the same as for the SELECT
command. The selected values must exactly match in data type, number, and order the structure of the target or a runtime error occurs.
record
is a record variable that was previously declared.
If the query returns zero rows, null values are assigned to the targets. If the query returns multiple rows, the first row is assigned to the targets and the rest are discarded. ("The first row" isn't well-defined unless you used ORDER BY.
)
Note
In either case, where no row is returned or more than one row is returned, SPL throws an exception.
There is a variation of
SELECT INTO
using theBULK COLLECT
clause that allows a result set of more than one row that's returned into a collection. See SELECT BULK COLLECT for more information.
You can use the WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND
clause in an EXCEPTION
block to determine whether the assignment was successful, that is, at least one row was returned by the query.
This version of the emp_sal_query
procedure uses the variation of SELECT INTO
that returns the result set into a record. It also uses the EXCEPTION
block containing the WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND
conditional expression.