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    PL/SQL (Procedural Language/Structured Query Language) is Oracle Corporation's proprietary server-based procedural extension to the SQL database language. (Some other SQL database management systems offer languages similar to PL/SQL.) Its syntax strongly resembles that of the Ada programming language.

        PL/SQL
            Functionality
            Basic code structure
            Variables
                Numeric variables
                Character variables
                Boolean variables
                Date variables
                Datatypes for specific columns
                User-defined datatypes
            Array-handling
            Looping
                LOOP statements
                WHILE loops
                FOR loops
                Cursor FOR loops
            Similar languages

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    Functionality

    PL/SQL supports variables, conditions, arrays, and exceptions. Implementations from version 8 of the Oracle RDBMS onwards have included features associated with object-orientation.

    The underlying SQL functions as a declarative language. Standard SQL—unlike some functional programming languages—does not require implementations to convert tail calls to jumps. SQL does not readily provide "first row" and "rest of table" accessors, and it cannot easily perform some constructs such as loops.
    PL/SQL, however, as a Turing-complete procedural language which fills in these gaps, allows Oracle database developers to interface with the underlying relational database in an imperative manner. SQL statements can make explicit in-line calls to PL/SQL functions, or can cause PL/SQL triggers to fire upon pre-defined Data Manipulation Language (DML) events.

    PL/SQL stored procedures (functions, procedures, packages, and triggers) which perform DML get compiled into an Oracle database: to this extent their SQL code can undergo syntax-checking.
    Programmers working in an Oracle database environment can construct PL/SQL blocks of such functionality to serve as procedures, functions; or they can write in-line segments of PL/SQL within SQL*Plus scripts.

    While programmers can readily incorporate SQL DML statements into PL/SQL (as cursor definitions, for example, or using the SELECT ... INTO syntax), Data Definition Language (DDL) statements such as CREATE TABLE/DROP INDEX etc require the use of "Dynamic SQL". Earlier versions of Oracle required the use of a complex built-in DBMS_SQL package for Dynamic SQL where the system needed to explicitly parse and execute an SQL statement. Later versions have included an EXECUTE IMMEDIATE syntax called "Native Dynamic SQL" which considerably simplifies matters. Any use of DDL in Oracle will result in an implicit commit. Programmers can also use Dynamic SQL to execute DML where they do not know the exact content of the statement in advance.

    PL/SQL offers several pre-defined packages for specific purposes. Such PL/SQL packages include:
      DBMS_OUTPUT - for output operations to non-database destinations
      DBMS_JOB - for running specific procedures/functions at a particular time (i.e. scheduling)
      DBMS_XPLAN - for formatting "Explain Plan" output
      DBMS_SESSION - provides access to SQL ALTER SESSION and SET ROLE statements, and other session information.
      DBMS_METADATA - for extracting meta data from the data dictionary (such as DDL statements)
      UTL_FILE - for reading and writing files on disk
      UTL_HTTP - for making requests to web servers from the database
      UTL_SMTP - for sending mail from the database (via an SMTP server)

    Oracle Corporation customarily adds more packages and/or extends package functionality with each successive release of the Oracle DBMS.

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    Basic code structure

    PL/SQL programs consist of blocks. Blocks take the general form:


    006400">/
      Sample comment spanning

    006400">multiple lines...
      /

    006400">--Single-line comment

    The DECLARE section specifies the datatypes of variables, constants, collections, and user-defined types .

    The block between BEGIN and END specifies executable procedural code.

    Exceptions, errors which arise during the execution of the code, have one of two types:

      pre-defined exceptions
      user-defined exceptions.

    Programmers have to raise user-defined exceptions explicitly. They can do this by using the RAISE command, with the syntax:
    RAISE

    Oracle Corporation has pre-defined several exceptions like NO_DATA_FOUND, TOO_MANY_ROWS, etc.
    Each exception has an SQL Error Number and SQL Error Message associated with it. Programmers can access these by using the SQLCODE and SQLERRM functions.


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    Variables

    The DECLARE section defines and (optionally) initialises variables. If not initialised specifically they default to 0 or to null.

    For example:



    The symbol := functions as an assignment operator to store a value in a variable.

    The major datatypes in PL/SQL include NUMBER, INTEGER, CHAR, VARCHAR2, DATE, TIMESTAMP, TEXT etc.


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    Numeric variables
    variable_name FF0000">number0000FF">(8B4513">P,S0000FF">)
    = FF0000">value0000FF">;

    To define a numeric variable, the programmer appends the variable type NUMBER to the name definition.
    To specify the (optional) precision (P) and the (optional) scale (S), one can further append these in round brackets, separated by a comma. ("Precision" in this context refers to the number of digits which the variable can hold, "scale" refers to the number of digits which can follow the decimal point.)

    A selection of other datatypes for numeric variables would include:
    FF0000">binary_float, binary_double, dec, decimal, double precision, float ,integer, int, numeric, real, smallint, binary_integer, pls_integer

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    Character variables
    variable_name FF0000">varchar20000FF">(8B4513">L0000FF">)
    = FF0000">'Text'0000FF">;

    To define a character variable, the programmer normally appends the variable type VARCHAR2 to the name definition. There follows in brackets the maximum number of characters which the variable can store.

    Other datatypes for character variables include:
    FF0000">varchar, char, long, raw, long raw, nchar, nchar2

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    Boolean variables
    variable_name FF0000">boolean0000FF">0000FF">:= FF0000">true0000FF">;
    Boolean variables can convey TRUE, FALSE or NULL.

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    Date variables
    variable_name FF0000">date 0000FF">0000FF">:= FF0000">'01-Jan-2005'0000FF">;
    Programmers define date variables by appending the datatype code "DATE" to a variable name.
    The Oracle DBMS provides the function "to_date" to convert strings to date values. The function converts the first quoted string into a date, using as a definition the second quoted string.

    For example: "to_date('31-12-2004','dd-mm-yyyy')" or "to_date('31-Dec-2004','dd-mon-yyyy', 'NLS_DATE_LANGUAGE = American')"

    To convert dates into text one uses the function "to_char ( date_string, format_string )".

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    Datatypes for specific columns
    Variable_name B8860B">Table_name0000FF">.Column_name0000FF">%type;
    This syntax defines a variable of the type of the referenced column on the referenced table.

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    User-defined datatypes

    Programmers specify user-defined datatypes with the syntax:

    "type data_type is record(field_1 type_1
    =xyz, field_2 type_2
    =xyz, ..., field_n type_n
    =xyz);"


    For example:



    This sample program defines its own datatype, called t_address, which contains the fields name, street, street_number and postcode.

    Using this datatype the programmer has defined a variable called v_address and loaded it with data from the ADDRESS table.

    Programmers can address individual attributes in such a structure by means of the dot-notation, thus:
    "v_address.street
    = 'High Street';"


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    Array-handling

    PL/SQL refers to arrays as "collections". The language offers three types of collections:
      Index-by tables (associative arrays)
      Nested tables
      Varrays (variable-size arrays)

    Programmers must specify an upper limit for varrays, but need not for index-by tables or for nested tables. The language includes several collection methods used to manipulate collection elements: for example FIRST, LAST, NEXT, PRIOR, EXTEND, TRIM, DELETE, etc.

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    Looping
    As a procedural language by definition, PL/SQL provides iteration. Programmers can utilise:
      LOOP statements
      Cursor FOR loops

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    LOOP statements
    Syntax:
    LOOP
    ...do something...
    EXIT;
    END LOOP;

    Loops can be terminated by using the EXIT keyword, or by raising an exception.

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    WHILE loops
    Syntax:
    WHILE condition LOOP
    ...do something...
    END LOOP;

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    FOR loops
    FOR loops, also called "numerical loops", operate a certain (counted) number of times.



    FOR IN REVERSE .. LOOP
    ....
    .....
    END LOOP;



    The REVERSE keyword implements looping in reverse order.

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    Cursor FOR loops


    Cursor-for loops automatically open a cursor, read in their data and close the cursor again

    As an alternative, the PL/SQL programmer can pre-define the cursor's SELECT-statement in advance in order (for example) to allow re-use or to make the code more understandable (especially useful in the case of long or complex queries).



    The concept of the person_code within the FOR-loop gets expressed with dot-notation ("."):

    ..
    example:

    declare
    var number;

    begin
    for var in 0 ..10 loop

    dbms_output.put_line(var);

    end loop;

    end;
    /
    OUTPUT-
    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    8

    9

    10


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    Similar languages

    PL/SQL functions analogously to the embedded procedural languages associated with other relational databases. Sybase and its derivative Microsoft SQL Server have Transact-SQL, PostgreSQL has PL/pgSQL (which tries to emulate PL/SQL to an extent), and IBM DB2 includes SQL Procedural Language (SQL PL).

    The designers of PL/SQL modelled its syntax on that of Ada. Both Ada and PL/SQL have Pascal as a common ancestor, and so PL/SQL also resembles Pascal in numerous aspects. The structure of a PL/SQL package closely resembles the basic Pascal's program structure, or a Borland Delphi unit. Programmers can define global data-types, constants and static variables, public and private, in a PL/SQL package.

    PL/SQL also allows for the definition of classes and instantiating these as objects in PL/SQL code. This resembles usages in object-oriented programming languages like Borland Delphi, C++ and Java. PL/SQL refers to a class as an "Advanced Data Type" (ADT), and defines it as an Oracle SQL data-type as opposed to a PL/SQL user-defined type, allowing its use in both the Oracle SQL Engine and the Oracle PL/SQL engine. The constructor and methods of an Advanced Data Type are written in PL/SQL. The resulting Advanced Data Type can operate as an object class in PL/SQL. Such objects can also persist as column values in Oracle database tables.

    PL/SQL does not resemble Transact-SQL, despite superficial similarities due to the use of both as embedded database languages. Porting code from one to the other usually involves non-trivial work, not only due to the differences in the feature sets of the two languages, but also due to the very significant differences in the way Oracle and SQL-Server deal with concurrency and locking.

    The Fyracle project aims to enable the execution of PL/SQL code in the open-source Firebird database.
     
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