ORACLE SQL: Inserting another ID from another row - sql

I have write a series of SQL statements in an ORACLE database. In my database, I have 2 tables (book, publisher).
Below is the table structure
BOOK
----------
bk_id | title | pub_id
PUBLISHER
----------
pub_id | pub_name
If I insert into the publisher table first
INSERT INTO PUBLISHER (pub_name) VALUE ('ABC Publisher');
How do I retrieve the id of the publisher and enter it into the book table?
I usually do this with a stored procedure (SQL Server) or do it in the application.
How can I do it in ORACLE in SQL?

I think the easiest way would consist in creating a Trigger that would insert in other table after table.
create or replace trigger tr_ai_publisher
after insert on publisher
for each row
begin
--Here you can access the new publisher id using :new.pub_id
end;
That way, you would not have to handle yourself a call to the procedure.
However, if you really want to, you can also use a stored procedure in ORACLE, the general syntax is
CREATE [OR REPLACE] PROCEDURE proc_name [list of parameters]
IS
Declaration section
BEGIN
Execution section
EXCEPTION
Exception section
END;

From PL/SQL, you might want to use the RETURNING INTO clause to get back the newly inserted id:
DECLARE
my_id int;
BEGIN
INSERT INTO PUBLISHER (pub_name) VALUE ('ABC Publisher')
RETURNING id INTO my_id;
...
END;
where my_id is a PL/SQL variable declared accordingly to your column type.

Just use a select statement:
INSERT INTO BOOK VALUES
(bk_id, title, (SELECT pub_id FROM PUBLISHER WHERE pub_name = publisher_name))
…
;
Replace bk_id, title, and publisher_name with the appropriate data you want.

Related

SQL command not ended properly at pkg_test

I have to write a stored procedure that starts copying the data from a table 'company' into a staging table 'company_stg' if no records for that date are present in it.
I have the following code :
CREATE OR REPLACE
PACKAGE BODY PKG_TEST AS
PROCEDURE SP_BILLING AS
BEGIN
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'SELECT * FROM COMPANY INTO COMPANY_STG
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM COMPANY_STG WHERE AS_OF_DATE = "2023-02-08")';
END;
END PKG_TEST;
I AM GETTING THE ERROR "SQL COMMAND NOT PROPERLY ENDED"
company * company_stg have as_of_date as a column. rest all are same.
please help me with this
I have also tried
if not exists (SELECT * FROM COMPANY_STG WHERE AS_OF_DATE = "2023-02-08")
then
select from company into company_stg
So many things look bad in that piece of code...
First, why use dynamic SQL execute immediate? It's best to avoid dynamic SQL as much as possible because it leads to runtime errors and requires pretty much instrumentation so that it may be debugged. Generally you use dynamic SQL when you do not know beforehand the name of a table it will operate on, which is not the case for you. You definitely know you have to work with tables COMPANY and COMPANY_STG. Is it not so?
Then, it doesn't look like you have read the manual to see an insert select.
When you insert into a table, it's best to give the list of columns into which you actually insert data. If one alters that table and adds one or more than one column, the insert which does not have the list of columns will crash.
Thus, to insert into COMPANY_STG data from COMPANY, the SQL should look like below:
insert into company_stg(
... ---- here should be the list of columns you insert data into
)
select
... --- here should the source columns you are willing to insert
from company c
where not exists (
select 1
from company_stg cs
where cs.as_of_date= --- what is the condition??? I did not understand
)
;
You have not given the structures for those tables, so that I can't give you the columns to select and to insert into. Nor did I really understand what the condition for inserting data should be.
SELECT does not perform a copy and SELECT * FROM COMPANY INTO COMPANY_STG is not valid syntax. You want to use an INSERT statement to do that (and check if there is any row first):
CREATE OR REPLACE PACKAGE BODY PKG_TEST AS
PROCEDURE SP_BILLING
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE
v_staged_count NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT 1
INTO v_staged_count
FROM COMPANY_STG
WHERE AS_OF_DATE = DATE '2023-02-08'
FETCH FIRST ROW ONLY; -- We don't care how many rows so stop after finding
-- the first one.
-- Stop as rows have been found.
RETURN;
EXCEPTION
WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
-- Continue
NULL;
END;
INSERT INTO company_stg
SELECT *
FROM COMPANY;
END;
END PKG_TEST;
/
fiddle

How to select all inserted rows to execute an insert trigger with a stored procedure in postgresql?

I'm trying to set an "after insert" trigger that executes a procedure. The procedure would take all inserted rows in table A, group them by a column and insert the result in a table B. I know about "new" variable but it gets inserted rows one by one. Is it possible to get all of them?
I think I can't use a for each row statement as I need to group rows depending on the "trackCode" variable, shared by different rows in tableA.
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE Public.my_procedure(**inserted rows in tableA?**)
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
AS $$
BEGIN
INSERT INTO Public."tableB" ("TrackCode", "count")
SELECT "TrackCode", count(*) as "count" FROM Public."tableA" --new inserted rows in this table
GROUP BY "vmsint"."TrackCode" ;
COMMIT;
END;
$$;
create trigger Public.my_trigger
after insert ON Public.tableA
execute procedure Public.my_procedure(**inserted rows in tableA?**)
Thank you!
You create a statement lever trigger, but do not attempt to pass parameters. Instead use the clause referencing new table as reference_table_name. In the trigger function you use the reference_table_name in place of the actual table name. Something like: (see demo)
create or replace function group_a_ais()
returns trigger
language 'plpgsql'
as $$
begin
insert into table_b(track_code, items)
select track_code, count(*)
from rows_inserted_to_a
group by track_code ;
return null;
end;
$$;
create trigger table_a_ais
after insert on table_a
referencing new table as rows_inserted_to_a
for each statement
execute function group_a_ais();
Do not attempt to commit in a trigger, it is a very bad id even if allowed. Suppose the insert to the main table is part of a larger transaction, which fails later in its process.
Be sure to refer to links provided by Adrian.

Stored procedure to perform different tasks?

I have a customer table.
I have created stored procedure I can use to insert new data into the table. But what if I wanted to use the same procedure to update OR delete data from that table. Could I do this easily or do I have to use a separate function/procedure for each function?
create or replace procedure add_customer(custid in table.id%type,
name table.name%type)
is
begin
insert into table(id, name)
values(id, name);
commit;
end;
/
You can add parameter like action in example below and use it in code:
create or replace procedure modify_customer(
action in varchar2, custid in table.id%type, custname table.name%type)
is
begin
if action = 'insert' then
insert into table(id, name) values(custid, name);
commit;
elsif action = 'delete' then
delete from table where id = custid and name = custname;
commit;
end if;
end;
You can add a discriminator parameter to your add_customer procedure which says whether the action is INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE. Based on this parameter you can create the required insert, update or delete statement. This way you will be able to use a common procedure for all the actions.
As far as using one procedure or multiple procedures, if the table is a simple one with limited number of columns, one procedure should do fine. But once the number of columns increases in the table, one procedure might become more complicated than required.

SQL postgresql insert statement

I have a following question, for example I have a following table:
CREATE TABLE "regions" (gid serial PRIMARY KEY,
"__gid" int8,
"name" varchar(20),
"language" varchar(7),
"population" int8);
And I want to insert some records, say one of the values for "name" is - 'B', what sort of code would I have to write to change 'B' to 'English-Speaking'? Is that done with some sort of trigger? So would I have to write a trigger to change the values automatically on insert? Any help greatly appriciated!!!
It's an UPDATE statement which will do what you wish, in this case:
UPDATE regions set name = 'English-Speaking' where name = 'B';
To put this in a function use something like:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION insert_into_wgs()
RETURNS void AS
$$
BEGIN
UPDATE regions SET name = 'English-Speaking' WHERE name = 'B';
END
$$
LANGUAGE 'pgpsql';
Then you create a trigger to run this function:
CREATE TRIGGER log_update
AFTER UPDATE ON accounts
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (OLD.* IS DISTINCT FROM NEW.*)
EXECUTE PROCEDURE
insert_into_wgs();
Assuming I've guessed what you mean correctly from your description:
You will need a simple BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ... FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE trigger to invoke a PL/PgSQL trigger procedure that changes the value of the NEW record and then does a RETURN NEW.
The documentation contains abundant details, and since this is homework I'm not going to provide a complete example. Start with CREATE TRIGGER and PL/pgSQL trigger procedures.

Oracle - Insert New Row with Auto Incremental ID

I have a workqueue table that has a workid column. The workID column has values that increment automatically. Is there a way I can run a query in the backend to insert a new row and have the workID column increment automatically?
When I try to insert a null, it throws error ORA01400 - Cannot insert null into workid.
insert into WORKQUEUE (facilitycode,workaction,description) values ('J', 'II', 'TESTVALUES')
What I have tried so far - I tried to look at the table details and didn't see any auto-increment. The table script is as follow
"WORKID" NUMBER NOT NULL ENABLE,
Database: Oracle 10g
Screenshot of some existing data.
ANSWER:
I have to thank each and everyone for the help. Today was a great learning experience and without your support, I couldn't have done. Bottom line is, I was trying to insert a row into a table that already has sequences and triggers. All I had to do was find the right sequence, for my question, and call that sequence into my query.
The links you all provided me helped me look these sequences up and find the one that is for this workid column. Thanks to you all, I gave everyone a thumbs up, I am able to tackle another dragon today and help patient care take a step forward!"
This is a simple way to do it without any triggers or sequences:
insert into WORKQUEUE (ID, facilitycode, workaction, description)
values ((select max(ID)+1 from WORKQUEUE), 'J', 'II', 'TESTVALUES')
It worked for me but would not work with an empty table, I guess.
To get an auto increment number you need to use a sequence in Oracle.
(See here and here).
CREATE SEQUENCE my_seq;
SELECT my_seq.NEXTVAL FROM DUAL; -- to get the next value
-- use in a trigger for your table demo
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER demo_increment
BEFORE INSERT ON demo
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT my_seq.NEXTVAL
INTO :new.id
FROM dual;
END;
/
There is no built-in auto_increment in Oracle.
You need to use sequences and triggers.
Read here how to do it right. (Step-by-step how-to for "Creating auto-increment columns in Oracle")
ELXAN#DB1> create table cedvel(id integer,ad varchar2(15));
Table created.
ELXAN#DB1> alter table cedvel add constraint pk_ad primary key(id);
Table altered.
ELXAN#DB1> create sequence test_seq start with 1 increment by 1;
Sequence created.
ELXAN#DB1> create or replace trigger ad_insert
before insert on cedvel
REFERENCING NEW AS NEW OLD AS OLD
for each row
begin
select test_seq.nextval into :new.id from dual;
end;
/ 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Trigger created.
ELXAN#DB1> insert into cedvel (ad) values ('nese');
1 row created.
You can use either SEQUENCE or TRIGGER to increment automatically the value of a given column in your database table however the use of TRIGGERS would be more appropriate. See the following documentation of Oracle that contains major clauses used with triggers with suitable examples.
Use the CREATE TRIGGER statement to create and enable a database trigger, which is:
A stored PL/SQL block associated with a table, a schema, or the
database or
An anonymous PL/SQL block or a call to a procedure implemented in
PL/SQL or Java
Oracle Database automatically executes a trigger when specified conditions occur. See.
Following is a simple TRIGGER just as an example for you that inserts the primary key value in a specified table based on the maximum value of that column. You can modify the schema name, table name etc and use it. Just give it a try.
/*Create a database trigger that generates automatically primary key values on the CITY table using the max function.*/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER PROJECT.PK_MAX_TRIGGER_CITY
BEFORE INSERT ON PROJECT.CITY
FOR EACH ROW
DECLARE
CNT NUMBER;
PKV CITY.CITY_ID%TYPE;
NO NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(*)INTO CNT FROM CITY;
IF CNT=0 THEN
PKV:='CT0001';
ELSE
SELECT 'CT'||LPAD(MAX(TO_NUMBER(SUBSTR(CITY_ID,3,LENGTH(CITY_ID)))+1),4,'0') INTO PKV
FROM CITY;
END IF;
:NEW.CITY_ID:=PKV;
END;
Would automatically generates values such as CT0001, CT0002, CT0002 and so on and inserts into the given column of the specified table.
SQL trigger for automatic date generation in oracle table:
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER name_of_trigger
BEFORE INSERT
ON table_name
REFERENCING NEW AS NEW
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT sysdate INTO :NEW.column_name FROM dual;
END;
/
the complete know how, i have included a example of the triggers and sequence
create table temasforo(
idtemasforo NUMBER(5) PRIMARY KEY,
autor VARCHAR2(50) NOT NULL,
fecha DATE DEFAULT (sysdate),
asunto LONG );
create sequence temasforo_seq
start with 1
increment by 1
nomaxvalue;
create or replace
trigger temasforo_trigger
before insert on temasforo
referencing OLD as old NEW as new
for each row
begin
:new.idtemasforo:=temasforo_seq.nextval;
end;
reference:
http://thenullpointerexceptionx.blogspot.mx/2013/06/llaves-primarias-auto-incrementales-en.html
For completeness, I'll mention that Oracle 12c does support this feature. Also it's supposedly faster than the triggers approach. For example:
CREATE TABLE foo
(
id NUMBER GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY (
START WITH 1 NOCACHE ORDER ) NOT NULL ,
name VARCHAR2 (50)
)
LOGGING ;
ALTER TABLE foo ADD CONSTRAINT foo_PK PRIMARY KEY ( id ) ;
Best approach: Get the next value from sequence
The nicest approach is getting the NEXTVAL from the SEQUENCE "associated" with the table. Since the sequence is not directly associated to any specific table,
we will need to manually refer the corresponding table from the sequence name convention.
The sequence name used on a table, if follow the sequence naming convention, will mention the table name inside its name. Something likes <table_name>_SEQ. You will immediately recognize it the moment you see it.
First, check within Oracle system if there is any sequence "associated" to the table
SELECT * FROM all_sequences
WHERE SEQUENCE_OWNER = '<schema_name>';
will present something like this
Grab that SEQUENCE_NAME and evaluate the NEXTVAL of it in your INSERT query
INSERT INTO workqueue(id, value) VALUES (workqueue_seq.NEXTVAL, 'A new value...')
Additional tip
In case you're unsure if this sequence is actually associated with the table, just quickly compare the LAST_NUMBER of the sequence (meaning the current value) with the maximum id of
that table. It's expected that the LAST_NUMBER is greater than or equals to the current maximum id value in the table, as long as the gap is not too suspiciously large.
SELECT LAST_NUMBER
FROM all_sequences
WHERE SEQUENCE_OWNER = '<schema_name>' AND SEQUENCE_NAME = 'workqueue_seq';
SELECT MAX(ID)
FROM workqueue;
Reference: Oracle CURRVAL and NEXTVAL
Alternative approach: Get the current max id from the table
The alternative approach is getting the max value from the table, please refer to Zsolt Sky answer in this same question
This is a simple way to do it without any triggers or sequences:
insert into WORKQUEUE (ID, facilitycode, workaction, description)
values ((select count(1)+1 from WORKQUEUE), 'J', 'II', 'TESTVALUES');
Note : here need to use count(1) in place of max(id) column
It perfectly works for an empty table also.