SQL & PL/SQL :: Retrieving Column Names And Storing Them
Apr 2, 2010
I'm writing a procedure that takes a table name as a parameter and I would like to print out the column name with the supporting row entry for each row. I know the logic I'd like to use, but how do you query the metadata to return the column names and store them.
I have 20 tables. In all 20 tables, some of column names are same and some are different. I need to find all column names in all 20 tables that have same names.
SQL> CREATE TYPE address_typ AS OBJECT (line1 VARCHAR2(20), city VARCHAR2(20), COUNTRY VARCHAR2(20)); 2 /
Type created. SQL> CREATE TYPE phone_typ AS OBJECT (area_cd VARCHAR2(10), phone# VARCHAR2(10)); 2 / Type created. SQL> CREATE TYPE phone_list_typ AS TABLE OF phone_typ;
[code]...
My questions are:
1. I have created an object table person_obj of parent type. I have not created object tables of salesperson_typ and customer_typ and want to store data related to both in person_obj. What is the difference between storing data in an object table of parent type and object table of subtypes? In which case should I consider storing data of all subtypes in an object table of parent type instead of object tables of individual subtypes?
2. Second question is regarding validating the column values before the creation of object instance. Suppose before creating an instance of salesperson_typ, I want to check if salary is NOT NULL and greater than 0. I guess constructor is the only option to achieve this but how full-proof it is if constructors are used for this purpose? Is there any other alternate way?
I have a table defined where some columns are of the datatype RAW(16). In fact these are foreign keys to other tables. Our company has a policy that all primary keys are of the datatype RAW(16). Not much I can do about that.
Now I want to retrieve all columns of a certain row in that table and just visualize the foreign keys in hex format. All values are filled out nicely, except the columns with datatype RAW(16). Is there something special I have to do to retreive and display these? I defined an item as text-field for these, but this doesn't seem to be working...
I have a tmp table with 6 cols, and data to be inserted is from two other tables. My problem is there the cols of the table are
sid varchar2(10), cob_dt varchar2(10), deal_id varchar2(10), new_val varchar2(10), old_val varchar2(30), amend_col v archar2(50), i have return a proc create or replace
Name Null? Type ----------------------------------------------------- -------- ------------------------------------ C1 NOT NULL VARCHAR2(15) C2 VARCHAR2(254) C3 NOT NULL NUMBER(15) C4 VARCHAR2(254) C5 NOT NULL VARCHAR2(254) C6 NOT NULL NUMBER(15) C7 NOT NULL NUMBER(15) C8 NOT NULL VARCHAR2(254)
[Code]...
But, till yday it was showing the orignal column name..
I am trying to build an array that contains known column names, 63 columns in all.The idea is to search backwards from 63 down to say 10 to find the first non-blank column.
Then using a loop with the known number of lines print from 1 to last non-blank column.The problem is that it only shows the column names and not the values of the columns.So I am getting 63 lines every time, instead of 20, 30, 40 or however how many fields actually have something.
Here is my declare to_num number; field_name varchar2(15); [code]....
I wonder if there is any way to return the columns of an select with its letters lowercase?
I have a piece of code that creates an script wich returns an SQL result to be confronted with some templates. My template have the column names in lowercase and because It is case sensitive the Uppercase returned by Oracle,
i have list item populated with many table names from a schema. i have grid in oracle forms 10g and i want to fill the grid with at least four/more columns.I want to fire the list change trigger when each time any one table name is selected.
how can i find the columns names dynamically for filling the grid.
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE COMP_RECORDS IS l_query VARCHAR2 (10000) := '';
CURSOR TBL1 IS SELECT TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME FROM COLS_TO_COMP WHERE TABLE_NAME='ACE_HIST'; TBL1_REC APP.COLS_TO_COMP%rowtype;
[Code]..
However I am getting an ORA-00923 exception with message as "FROM keyword not found where expected". know if I can/cannot use a cursor to fetch column names for a table?
I have limited permissions and am unable to create temp tables.So I would like to use a cursor to "create" a table of sorts then access/query it. But this "table"/cursor would have no column names so how do I refer to the columns? Is there a way to refer to a column by column number rather than column name in a query:
select column1 from tablename where column2 = 'abc'?
Is there a way in a query/update/insert to refer to a column by column number rather than column name?
declare cursor c1 is select 'abc', '8-Apr-2013', pk_id from EMPLOYEE where pk_id = '153' UNION select '1xyz', '4-10-2013', pk_id from EMPLOYEE where pk_id = '154' c1_val number;
I am a junior DBA. I want to check how many columns are under PRIMARY KEY constraint.
I used dba_constraints view. Please find below details.
SQL> select OWNER,CONSTRAINT_NAME,CONSTRAINT_TYPE,TABLE_NAME from dba_constraints 2 where TABLE_NAME='DSET_PRODUCT_S'; OWNER CONSTRAINT_NAME C TABLE_NAME ------------------------------ ------------------------------ - ---------------------------------------- SCOTT SYS_C10202456 C EMPLOYEE SCOTT SYS_C234576 C DEPT
I need to rename only two names in column report_headings1. But in order for me to see all other names I need to use all of them in decode function. Is there an easier way to write this Select Statement.
select days_start, days_to, decode(report_heading1,'31 Or More days', 'Future', '00 Dispute/Pend', 'Dispute or Pend', '1 to 30 Days', '1 to 30 Days', '31 to 60 Days', '31 to 60 Days','61 to 90 Days', '61 to 90 Days', '91 Or More Days', '91 Or More Days' ) report_heading1, report_heading2, type from ar_aging_bucket_lines lines, ar_aging_buckets buckets where lines.aging_bucket_id = buckets.aging_bucket_id;
Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.5.0 - 64bit PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.5.0 - Production "CORE10.2.0.5.0Production" TNS for Linux: Version 10.2.0.5.0 - Production NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.5.0 - Production
See attachment for table creation and table data.
The table tbl_completed has two columns, id and completed. I have created a query that does provide me with the result set that I need, but I need to pivot the rows into columns. So instead of a result set to look like this:
select completed, count(completed) as theCount from tbl_completed group by completed;
COMPLETED THECOUNT Y 772 N 720
I need a result set to look like this:
COMPLETED,Y,N THECOUNT,772,720
The best solution that I have discovered is this, but I figuring their might be a better way.
select (select 'THECOUNT' from dual) as COMPLETED, (select count(completed) from tbl_completed where completed = 'Y') as Y, (select count(completed) from tbl_completed where completed = 'N') as N from dual;
I have written an SQL which will dynamically generate the Select statement with from and where clause in it. But that select statement when executed will get me hundreds of rows and i want to insert each row separately into one more table.
For that i have used a ref cursor to open and insert the table.
In the select list the column names will also be as follows: COLUMN1, COLUMN2, COLUMN3,....COLUMNn
find below the sample
TYPE ref_csr IS REF CURSOR; insert_csr ref_csr; v_select VARCHAR2 (4000) := NULL;
I am working on convertion of triggers from SQL SERVER to Oracle. I got them converted using a tool. But not sure how to correct the below trigger which uses '*' in sql server.
Code in SQL SERVER :-
CREATE TRIGGER INSERT_AUDIT ON T_AUDIT FOR INSERT AS INSERT INTO T_AUDIT_LOG SELECT 'INSERT','AFTER', CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, NULL,* FROM INSERTED
Converted into Oracle:-
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER INSERT_AUDIT BEFORE INSERT ON T_AUDIT FOR EACH ROW INSERT INTO T_AUDIT_LOG VALUES ( 'INSERT', 'AFTER', SYSTIMESTAMP, NULL, * );
END;
how can I remove the *. I tried replacing the * with the rest column names prefixing with :NEW.
the last 3 columns when are c_data1,c_data2,c_data3 as :- INSERT INTO T_AUDIT_LOG VALUES ( 'INSERT', 'AFTER',SYSTIMESTAMP NULL, :NEW.c_data1,:NEW.c_data2,:NEW.c_data3); But this gives error:- PLS-00049: bad bind variable 'NEW.C_DATA1' PLS-00049: bad bind variable 'NEW.C_DATA2' PLS-00049: bad bind variable 'NEW.C_DATA3'
I have a requirement that i should list out all the table names which are all using timestamp datatype in a specified schema. Is there any way to find those table names by using any system tables.
What I am trying to do is print out page that displays all of the column titles and the data under them for a query given by the user. It is then going to be put into an excel spreadsheet.
I've done this before with Java, simply by using the getMetaData function, but I can't seem to find an alternative for PL/SQL. It seems at the very least I need to know the number of columns in a query, but that would defeat the purpose of this.
Is what I am trying to do even possible or is knowing the column names an absolute necessity when printing table data?
is it possible to use the records returned by a query as column names in a select query.
select (select column_name from dba_tab_cols where table_name='V_$DATABASE' and column_name like '%CONTROL%') from v$database; * ERROR at line 1: ORA-01427: single-row subquery returns more than one row
it seems that oracle data reader on some client machine is case sensitive. We are using oracle 10g. 2 client machines connect to the same DB and run the same code - one works and another doesn't. they are both using odac 2.111.7.20.
this is my .NET code (which works fine on every environment it was installed in the last 2 years):
using (OracleConnection sqlConn = new OracleConnection()) { sqlConn.ConnectionString = connectionString; using (OracleCommand sqlCmd = new OracleCommand()) { sqlCmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure; sqlCmd.CommandText = "getValues"; [code].......
this is the oracle procedure:
PROCEDURE getValues( rc IN OUT sys_refcursor ) IS BEGIN OPEN rc FOR SELECT Name, Value FROM MySchema.MyTable; END;
The problem that we saw was that on one of the client machines dr["Name"] threw exception :
Error Source: Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleDataReader.GetOrdinal Error Message: System.IndexOutOfRangeException: Unable to find specified column in result set at Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleDataReader.GetOrdinal(String name) at Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleDataReader.get_Item(String columnName)
We modified the code and used NAME instead of Name and it worked!! (dr["NAME"] instead of dr["Name"])
How can it be? from oracle documentation: A case-sensitive search is made to locate the specified column by its name. If this fails, then a case-insensitive search is made.
My question is what can cause such a behavior? Some ODAC/ODP definitions, .NET configuration?