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Assigning and Comparing CollectionsOne collection can be assigned to other by an SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or FETCH statement, an assignment statement, or by a subprogram call. As the illustration shown below, the collections should have the same datatype. Having the similar element type is not enough.DECLARETYPE Clientele IS VARRAY(100) OF Customer;TYPE Vips IS VARRAY(100) OF Customer;group1 Clientele := Clientele(...);group2 Clientele := Clientele(...);group3 Vips := Vips(...);BEGINgroup2 := group1;group3 := group2; -- illegal; Various datatypes becomes automatically null (and should be reinitialized). Now consider the illustration as shown below: DECLARETYPE Clientele IS TABLE OF Customer;group1 Clientele := Clientele(...); -- initializedgroup2 Clientele; -- atomically nullBEGINIF group1 IS NULL THEN ... -- condition yields FALSEgroup1 := group2;IF group1 IS NULL THEN ... -- condition yields TRUE...END;Similarly, if you assign the non-value NULL to a collection, the collection becomes automatically null.Assigning Collection ElementsYou can assign the value of an expression to the specific element in a collection by using the syntaxcollection_name(subscript) := expression;Where the expression yields a value of the type specified for elements in the collection type definition. If the subscript is null or not convertible to an integer, the PL/SQL raises the predefined exception VALUE_ERROR. If the collection is automatically null, then the PL/SQL raises COLLECTION_IS_NULL. Some of the examples are shown below:DECLARETYPE NumList IS TABLE OF INTEGER;nums NumList := NumList(10,20,30);ints NumList;...BEGIN...nums(1) := TRUNC(high/low);nums(3) := nums(1);nums(2) := ASCII(’B’);/* Assume execution continues despite the raised exception. */nums(’A’) := 40; -- raises VALUE_ERRORints(1) := 15; -- raises COLLECTION_IS_NULLEND;Comparing Whole CollectionsThe Nested tables and varrays can be automatically null; therefore they can be tested for the nullity, as the example below shows:DECLARETYPE Staff IS TABLE OF Employee;members Staff;BEGIN...IF members IS NULL THEN ... -- condition yields TRUE;END;Though, the collections cannot be compared for equality or inequality. For illustration, the IF condition below is illegal as shown:DECLARETYPE Clientele IS TABLE OF Customer;group1 Clientele := Clientele(...);group2 Clientele := Clientele(...);BEGIN...IF group1 = group2 THEN -- causes compilation error...END IF;END;This restriction also applies to implicit the comparisons. For illustration, the collections cannot appear in an ORDER BY, GROUP BY, or DISTINCT list.
Control Structures The Control structures are the most important PL/SQL extension to the SQL. Not only does PL/SQL let you manipulate Oracle data, it lets you process the data
Tautologies: Above given table allows us to read the truth of the connectives in the next manner. Just expect we are looking at row three. It means this says that, if there P
Delimiters A delimiter is a simple or compound symbol which has a special meaning to PL/SQL. For example, you use delimiters to symbolize an arithmetic operation like additio
CHECK Constraints in SQL A CHECK constraint is a table constraint defined using the key word CHECK, as already illustrated in several examples in this chapter. In particular,
Raise_application_error - procedure of package DBMS_STANDARD , allows to issue an user_defined error messages by stored sub-program or database trigger.
On occasion, some of Brewbean's customers mistakenly leave an item out of a basket already checked out, so they create a new basket containing the missing items. However, they requ
%FOUND Subsequent to a cursor or cursor variable is opened but before the first fetch, the %FOUND yields NULL. Afterward, it yields TRUE when the last fetch returned a row, or
JOIN and AND in SQL In this Section is all about one operator, JOIN. SQL's closest counterpart, NATURAL JOIN, has already been covered. Here we look at several other "join" op
Project Description: I want a small relational database to be built. I want the database to have the subsequent information tables: Employee Information Document storage
Using Invoker Rights: By default, the stored procedure executes with the privileges of its definer, not its invoker. These procedures are bound to the schema in which they inh
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