How to use a table type in a SELECT FROM statement?
This question is more or less the same as this
In the package header :
Declared the following row type:
TYPE exch_row IS RECORD(
currency_cd VARCHAR2(9),
exch_rt_eur NUMBER,
exch_rt_usd NUMBER);
And this table type:
TYPE exch_tbl IS TABLE OF exch_row INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER;
Added a variable:
exch_rt exch_tbl;
In the package body:
Fill this table variable with some data.
In a procedure in the package body:
I want to use the following statement:
CURSOR c0 IS
SELECT i.*, rt.exch_rt_eur, rt.exch_rt_usd
FROM item i, exch_rt rt
WHERE i.currency = rt.exchange_cd
How to do this in Oracle ?
Notes
Actually I'm looking for the 'Table Variable' solution in MSSQL:
DECLARE @exch_tbl TABLE
(
currency_cd VARCHAR(9),
exch_rt_eur NUMBER,
exch_rt_usd NUMBER)
)
And use this Table Variable inside my StoredProcedure.
Solution 1:
In SQL you may only use table type which is defined at schema level (not at package or procedure level), and index-by table (associative array) cannot be defined at schema level. So - you have to define nested table like this
create type exch_row as object (
currency_cd VARCHAR2(9),
exch_rt_eur NUMBER,
exch_rt_usd NUMBER);
create type exch_tbl as table of exch_row;
And then you can use it in SQL with TABLE operator, for example:
declare
l_row exch_row;
exch_rt exch_tbl;
begin
l_row := exch_row('PLN', 100, 100);
exch_rt := exch_tbl(l_row);
for r in (select i.*
from item i, TABLE(exch_rt) rt
where i.currency = rt.currency_cd) loop
-- your code here
end loop;
end;
/
Solution 2:
Prior to Oracle 12C you cannot select from PL/SQL-defined tables, only from tables based on SQL types like this:
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE exch_row AS OBJECT(
currency_cd VARCHAR2(9),
exch_rt_eur NUMBER,
exch_rt_usd NUMBER);
CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE exch_tbl AS TABLE OF exch_row;
In Oracle 12C it is now possible to select from PL/SQL tables that are defined in a package spec.
Solution 3:
You can't do it in a single query inside the package - you can't mix the SQL and PL/SQL types, and would need to define the types in the SQL layer as Tony, Marcin and Thio have said.
If you really want this done locally, and you can index the table type by VARCHAR instead of BINARY_INTEGER, you can do something like this:
-- dummy ITEM table as we don't know what the real ones looks like
create table item(
item_num number,
currency varchar2(9)
)
/
insert into item values(1,'GBP');
insert into item values(2,'AUD');
insert into item values(3,'GBP');
insert into item values(4,'AUD');
insert into item values(5,'CDN');
create package so_5165580 as
type exch_row is record(
exch_rt_eur number,
exch_rt_usd number);
type exch_tbl is table of exch_row index by varchar2(9);
exch_rt exch_tbl;
procedure show_items;
end so_5165580;
/
create package body so_5165580 as
procedure populate_rates is
rate exch_row;
begin
rate.exch_rt_eur := 0.614394;
rate.exch_rt_usd := 0.8494;
exch_rt('GBP') := rate;
rate.exch_rt_eur := 0.9817;
rate.exch_rt_usd := 1.3572;
exch_rt('AUD') := rate;
end;
procedure show_items is
cursor c0 is
select i.*
from item i;
begin
for r0 in c0 loop
if exch_rt.exists(r0.currency) then
dbms_output.put_line('Item ' || r0.item_num
|| ' Currency ' || r0.currency
|| ' EUR ' || exch_rt(r0.currency).exch_rt_eur
|| ' USD ' || exch_rt(r0.currency).exch_rt_usd);
else
dbms_output.put_line('Item ' || r0.item_num
|| ' Currency ' || r0.currency
|| ' ** no rates defined **');
end if;
end loop;
end;
begin
populate_rates;
end so_5165580;
/
So inside your loop, wherever you would have expected to use r0.exch_rt_eur
you instead use exch_rt(r0.currency).exch_rt_eur
, and the same for USD. Testing from an anonymous block:
begin
so_5165580.show_items;
end;
/
Item 1 Currency GBP EUR .614394 USD .8494
Item 2 Currency AUD EUR .9817 USD 1.3572
Item 3 Currency GBP EUR .614394 USD .8494
Item 4 Currency AUD EUR .9817 USD 1.3572
Item 5 Currency CDN ** no rates defined **
Based on the answer Stef posted, this doesn't need to be in a package at all; the same results could be achieved with an insert
statement. Assuming EXCH
holds exchange rates of other currencies against the Euro, including USD with currency_key=1
:
insert into detail_items
with rt as (select c.currency_cd as currency_cd,
e.exch_rt as exch_rt_eur,
(e.exch_rt / usd.exch_rt) as exch_rt_usd
from exch e,
currency c,
(select exch_rt from exch where currency_key = 1) usd
where c.currency_key = e.currency_key)
select i.doc,
i.doc_currency,
i.net_value,
i.net_value / rt.exch_rt_usd AS net_value_in_usd,
i.net_value / rt.exch_rt_eur as net_value_in_euro
from item i
join rt on i.doc_currency = rt.currency_cd;
With items valued at 19.99 GBP and 25.00 AUD, you get detail_items
:
DOC DOC_CURRENCY NET_VALUE NET_VALUE_IN_USD NET_VALUE_IN_EURO
--- ------------ ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
1 GBP 19.99 32.53611 23.53426
2 AUD 25 25.46041 18.41621
If you want the currency stuff to be more re-usable you could create a view:
create view rt as
select c.currency_cd as currency_cd,
e.exch_rt as exch_rt_eur,
(e.exch_rt / usd.exch_rt) as exch_rt_usd
from exch e,
currency c,
(select exch_rt from exch where currency_key = 1) usd
where c.currency_key = e.currency_key;
And then insert using values from that:
insert into detail_items
select i.doc,
i.doc_currency,
i.net_value,
i.net_value / rt.exch_rt_usd AS net_value_in_usd,
i.net_value / rt.exch_rt_eur as net_value_in_euro
from item i
join rt on i.doc_currency = rt.currency_cd;