PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference 10g Release 1 (10.1) Part Number B10807-01 |
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LOOP
statements execute a sequence of statements multiple times. The LOOP and END LOOP keywords enclose the statements. PL/SQL provides four kinds of loop statements: basic loop, WHILE
loop, FOR
loop, and cursor FOR
loop. For usage information, see "Controlling Loop Iterations: LOOP and EXIT Statements".
Syntax
Description of the illustration cursor_for_loop_statement.gif
Keyword and Parameter Description
A loop that executes an unlimited number of times. It encloses a sequence of statements between the keywords LOOP
and END
LOOP
. With each iteration, the sequence of statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. An EXIT
, GOTO
, or RAISE
statement branches out of the loop. A raised exception also ends the loop.
An expression that returns the Boolean value TRUE
, FALSE
, or NULL
. It is associated with a sequence of statements, which is executed only if the expression returns TRUE
. For the syntax of boolean_expression
, see "Expressions".
Issues a SQL query and loops through the rows in the result set. This is a convenient technique that makes processing a query as simple as reading lines of text in other programming languages.
A cursor FOR
loop implicitly declares its loop index as a %ROWTYPE
record, opens a cursor, repeatedly fetches rows of values from the result set into fields in the record, and closes the cursor when all rows have been processed.
An explicit cursor previously declared within the current scope. When the cursor FOR
loop is entered, cursor_name
cannot refer to a cursor already opened by an OPEN
statement or an enclosing cursor FOR
loop.
A variable declared as the formal parameter of a cursor. (For the syntax of cursor_parameter_declaration
, see "Cursors".) A cursor parameter can appear in a query wherever a constant can appear. The formal parameters of a cursor must be IN
parameters.
Numeric FOR
loops iterate over a specified range of integers. The range is part of an iteration scheme, which is enclosed by the keywords FOR
and LOOP
.
The range is evaluated when the FOR
loop is first entered and is never re-evaluated. The loop body is executed once for each integer in the range defined by lower_bound..upper_bound
. After each iteration, the loop index is incremented.
An undeclared identifier that names the loop index (sometimes called a loop counter). Its scope is the loop itself; you cannot reference the index outside the loop.
The implicit declaration of index_name
overrides any other declaration outside the loop. To refer to another variable with the same name, use a label:
<<main>> DECLARE num NUMBER; BEGIN ... FOR num IN 1..10 LOOP IF main.num > 5 THEN -- refers to the variable num, ... -- not to the loop index END IF; END LOOP; END main;
Inside a loop, the index is treated like a constant: it can appear in expressions, but cannot be assigned a value.
An optional undeclared identifier that labels a loop. label_name
must be enclosed by double angle brackets and must appear at the beginning of the loop. Optionally, label_name
(not enclosed in angle brackets) can also appear at the end of the loop.
You can use label_name
in an EXIT
statement to exit the loop labelled by label_name
. You can exit not only the current loop, but any enclosing loop.
You cannot reference the index of a FOR
loop from a nested FOR
loop if both indexes have the same name, unless the outer loop is labeled by label_name
and you use dot notation:
label_name.index_name
The following example compares two loop indexes that have the same name, one used by an enclosing loop, the other by a nested loop:
<<outer>> FOR ctr IN 1..20 LOOP ... <<inner>> FOR ctr IN 1..10 LOOP IF outer.ctr > ctr THEN ... END LOOP inner; END LOOP outer;
Expressions that return numbers. (Otherwise, PL/SQL raises the predefined exception VALUE_ERROR
.) The expressions are evaluated only when the loop is first entered. The lower bound need not be 1, as the example below shows. The loop counter increment (or decrement) must be 1.
FOR i IN -5..10 LOOP ... END LOOP;
Internally, PL/SQL assigns the values of the bounds to temporary PLS_INTEGER
variables, and, if necessary, rounds the values to the nearest integer. The magnitude range of a PLS_INTEGER
is +/-
2**31
. If a bound evaluates to a number outside that range, you get a numeric overflow error when PL/SQL attempts the assignment.
By default, the loop index is assigned the value of lower_bound
. If that value is not greater than the value of upper_bound
, the sequence of statements in the loop is executed, then the index is incremented. If the value of the index is still not greater than the value of upper_bound
, the sequence of statements is executed again. This process repeats until the value of the index is greater than the value of upper_bound
. At that point, the loop completes.
An implicitly declared record. The record has the same structure as a row retrieved by cursor_name
or select_statement
.
The record is defined only inside the loop. You cannot refer to its fields outside the loop. The implicit declaration of record_name
overrides any other declaration outside the loop. You cannot refer to another record with the same name inside the loop unless you qualify the reference using a block label.
Fields in the record store column values from the implicitly fetched row. The fields have the same names and datatypes as their corresponding columns. To access field values, you use dot notation, as follows:
record_name.field_name
Select-items fetched from the FOR
loop cursor must have simple names or, if they are expressions, must have aliases. In the following example, wages
is an alias for the select item sal+NVL(comm,0)
:
CURSOR c1 IS SELECT empno, sal+comm wages, job ...
By default, iteration proceeds upward from the lower bound to the upper bound. If you use the keyword REVERSE
, iteration proceeds downward from the upper bound to the lower bound.
An example follows:
FOR i IN REVERSE 1..10 LOOP -- i starts at 10, ends at 1 -- statements here execute 10 times END LOOP;
The loop index is assigned the value of upper_bound
. If that value is not less than the value of lower_bound
, the sequence of statements in the loop is executed, then the index is decremented. If the value of the index is still not less than the value of lower_bound
, the sequence of statements is executed again. This process repeats until the value of the index is less than the value of lower_bound
. At that point, the loop completes.
A query associated with an internal cursor unavailable to you. Its syntax is like that of select_into_statement
without the INTO
clause. See "SELECT INTO Statement". PL/SQL automatically declares, opens, fetches from, and closes the internal cursor. Because select_statement
is not an independent statement, the implicit cursor SQL
does not apply to it.
The WHILE-LOOP
statement associates a Boolean expression with a sequence of statements enclosed by the keywords LOOP
and END
LOOP
. Before each iteration of the loop, the expression is evaluated. If the expression returns TRUE
, the sequence of statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. If the expression returns FALSE
or NULL
, the loop is bypassed and control passes to the next statement.
Usage Notes
You can use the EXIT
WHEN
statement to exit any loop prematurely. If the Boolean expression in the WHEN
clause returns TRUE
, the loop is exited immediately.
When you exit a cursor FOR
loop, the cursor is closed automatically even if you use an EXIT
or GOTO
statement to exit the loop prematurely. The cursor is also closed automatically if an exception is raised inside the loop.
Example
The following cursor FOR
loop calculates a bonus, then inserts the result into a database table:
DECLARE bonus REAL; CURSOR c1 IS SELECT empno, sal, comm FROM emp; BEGIN FOR c1rec IN c1 LOOP bonus := (c1rec.sal * 0.05) + (c1rec.comm * 0.25); INSERT INTO bonuses VALUES (c1rec.empno, bonus); END LOOP; COMMIT; END;
Related Topics
Cursors, EXIT Statement, FETCH Statement, OPEN Statement, %ROWTYPE Attribute