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Categories / Oracle PLSQL Tutorial / Cursor
 

Cursors

You use a cursor when you have a SELECT statement that returns more than one row from the database. A cursor is basically a set of rows that you can access one at a time. You retrieve the rows into the cursor using your SELECT statement and then fetch the rows from the cursor. You may follow five steps when using a cursor: Declare variables to store the column values from the SELECT statement. Declare the cursor, specifying your SELECT statement. Open the cursor. Fetch the rows from the cursor. Close the cursor. The syntax for declaring a cursor is as follows: CURSOR cursor_name IS   SELECT_statement; where cursor_name specifies the name of the cursor. SELECT_statement is a SELECT statement. You open a cursor using the OPEN statement, which must be placed in the executable section of the block. To read each row from the cursor, you can use the FETCH statement. The FETCH statement reads the column values into the variables that you specify; FETCH uses the following syntax: FETCH cursor_name INTO variable[, variable ...]; where cursor_name specifies the name of the cursor. variable is a previously declared variable into which values from the cursor's SELECT statement are stored. Once you've finished with the cursor, the final step is to close the cursor using the CLOSE statement. Closing your cursors frees up system resources. SQL> SQL> -- create demo table SQL> create table Employee(   2    ID                 VARCHAR2(4 BYTE)         NOT NULL primary key,   3    First_Name         VARCHAR2(10 BYTE),   4    Last_Name          VARCHAR2(10 BYTE),   5    Start_Date         DATE,   6    End_Date           DATE,   7    Salary             Number(8,2),   8    City               VARCHAR2(10 BYTE),   9    Description        VARCHAR2(15 BYTE)  10  )  11  / Table created. SQL> SQL> -- prepare data SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary,  City,       Description)   2               values ('01','Jason',    'Martin',  to_date('19960725','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('20060725','YYYYMMDD'), 1234.56, 'Toronto',  'Programmer')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary,  City,       Description)   2                values('02','Alison',   'Mathews', to_date('19760321','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19860221','YYYYMMDD'), 6661.78, 'Vancouver','Tester')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary,  City,       Description)   2                values('03','James',    'Smith',   to_date('19781212','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19900315','YYYYMMDD'), 6544.78, 'Vancouver','Tester')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary,  City,       Description)   2                values('04','Celia',    'Rice',    to_date('19821024','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19990421','YYYYMMDD'), 2344.78, 'Vancouver','Manager')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary,  City,       Description)   2                values('05','Robert',   'Black',   to_date('19840115','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19980808','YYYYMMDD'), 2334.78, 'Vancouver','Tester')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary, City,        Description)   2                values('06','Linda',    'Green',   to_date('19870730','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19960104','YYYYMMDD'), 4322.78,'New York',  'Tester')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary, City,        Description)   2                values('07','David',    'Larry',   to_date('19901231','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('19980212','YYYYMMDD'), 7897.78,'New York',  'Manager')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> insert into Employee(ID,  First_Name, Last_Name, Start_Date,                     End_Date,                       Salary, City,        Description)   2                values('08','James',    'Cat',     to_date('19960917','YYYYMMDD'), to_date('20020415','YYYYMMDD'), 1232.78,'Vancouver', 'Tester')   3  / 1 row created. SQL> SQL> -- display data in the table SQL> select * from Employee   2  / ID   FIRST_NAME LAST_NAME  START_DAT END_DATE      SALARY CITY       DESCRIPTION ---- ---------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------- ---------- --------------- 01   Jason      Martin     25-JUL-96 25-JUL-06    1234.56 Toronto    Programmer 02   Alison     Mathews    21-MAR-76 21-FEB-86    6661.78 Vancouver  Tester 03   James      Smith      12-DEC-78 15-MAR-90    6544.78 Vancouver  Tester 04   Celia      Rice       24-OCT-82 21-APR-99    2344.78 Vancouver  Manager 05   Robert     Black      15-JAN-84 08-AUG-98    2334.78 Vancouver  Tester 06   Linda      Green      30-JUL-87 04-JAN-96    4322.78 New York   Tester 07   David      Larry      31-DEC-90 12-FEB-98    7897.78 New York   Manager 08   James      Cat        17-SEP-96 15-APR-02    1232.78 Vancouver  Tester 8 rows selected. SQL> SQL> SET SERVEROUTPUT ON SQL> DECLARE   2    -- step 1: declare the variables   3    v_id employee. id%TYPE;   4    v_name employee.first_name%TYPE;   5    v_salary employee.salary%TYPE;   6   7    -- step 2: declare the cursor   8    CURSOR cv_employee_cursor IS   9      SELECT id, first_name, salary  10      FROM employee  11      ORDER BY id;  12  13  BEGIN  14  15    -- step 3: open the cursor  16    OPEN cv_employee_cursor;  17  18    LOOP  19  20      -- step 4: fetch the rows from the cursor  21      FETCH cv_employee_cursor  22      INTO v_id, v_name, v_salary;  23  24      -- exit the loop when there are no more rows, as indicated by  25      -- the Boolean variable NOTFOUND (= true when  26      -- there are no more rows)  27      EXIT WHEN cv_employee_cursor%NOTFOUND;  28      -- use DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE() to display the variables  29      DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(  30        'v_id = ' || v_id || ', v_name = ' || v_name ||  31        ', v_salary = ' || v_salary  32      );  33  34    END LOOP;  35  36    -- step 5: close the cursor  37    CLOSE cv_employee_cursor;  38  39  END;  40  / v_id = 01, v_name = Jason, v_salary = 1234.56 v_id = 02, v_name = Alison, v_salary = 6661.78 v_id = 03, v_name = James, v_salary = 6544.78 v_id = 04, v_name = Celia, v_salary = 2344.78 v_id = 05, v_name = Robert, v_salary = 2334.78 v_id = 06, v_name = Linda, v_salary = 4322.78 v_id = 07, v_name = David, v_salary = 7897.78 v_id = 08, v_name = James, v_salary = 1232.78 PL/SQL procedure successfully completed. SQL> SQL> -- clean the table SQL> drop table Employee   2  / Table dropped.