Looping through a Cursor by Using the LOOP Command : Implicit Cursor « Cursor « Oracle PL/SQL Tutorial

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Oracle PL/SQL Tutorial » Cursor » Implicit Cursor 
25. 8. 6. Looping through a Cursor by Using the LOOP Command
-- create demo table        
SQL> create table Employee(
  2    ID                 VARCHAR2(BYTE)         NOT NULL,
  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  /

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  /

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  /

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  /

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  /

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  /

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  /

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  /

row created.

SQL>
SQL>
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

rows selected.

SQL>
SQL>
SQL>
SQL> declare
  2  begin
  3      for r_emp in (select from employee where id = 10loop
  4          update employee set salary = salary * 1.5 where id = r_emp.id;
  5          DBMS_OUTPUT.put_line('Em'|| r_emp.first_Name||' - salary change:'||r_emp.salary||'-->'||r_emp.salary*1.5);
  6      end loop;
  7  end;
  8  /

PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.

SQL>
SQL>
SQL> -- clean the table
SQL> drop table Employee
  2  /

Table dropped.

SQL>
25. 8. Implicit Cursor
25. 8. 1. Taking a Shortcut with CURSOR FOR Loops
25. 8. 2. %ISOPEN, %FOUND, %NOTFOUND variables aren't useful at all in CURSOR FOR loops
25. 8. 3. Implicit Cursor Attributes: SQL%NOTFOUND
25. 8. 4. Implicit Cursor Attributes Example: SQL%ROWCOUNT
25. 8. 5. NO_DATA_FOUND Exception vs. %NOTFOUND
25. 8. 6. Looping through a Cursor by Using the LOOP Command
25. 8. 7. Adding an Exception Handler to a CURSOR FOR Loop
25. 8. 8. Knowing what record is processing
25. 8. 9. Use %ROWCOUNT to detect what record you are processing at a given point
25. 8. 10. Declare and use a cursor in for loop
25. 8. 11. Implicit cursor open, fetch and close
25. 8. 12. Handling exceptions in implicit cursors
25. 8. 13. Returning an implicit cursor into a record
25. 8. 14. The Difference between Explicit and Implicit Cursors
25. 8. 15. Implicit Cursor: Too many rows
25. 8. 16. Implicit Cursor: No rows found
25. 8. 17. Use implicit or explicit cursor to insert 50000 rows to a table
25. 8. 18. Test cursor attributes with an implicit cursor
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