Oracle® Database PL/SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) E25519-09 |
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The OPEN
FOR
statement associates a cursor variable with a query, allocates database resources to process the query, identifies the result set, and positions the cursor before the first row of the result set. If the query has a FOR
UPDATE
clause, then the OPEN
FOR
statement locks the rows of the result set.
Name of a cursor variable. If cursor_variable
is the formal parameter of a subprogram, then it must not have a return type. For information about cursor variables as subprogram parameters, see "Cursor Variables as Subprogram Parameters".
Name of a cursor variable that was declared in a PL/SQL host environment and passed to PL/SQL as a bind variable. Do not put space between the colon (:) and host_cursor_variable
.
The data type of a host cursor variable is compatible with the return type of any PL/SQL cursor variable.
SQL SELECT
statement (not a PL/SQL SELECT
INTO
statement). Typically, select_statement
returns multiple rows.
String literal, string variable, or string expression of the data type CHAR
, VARCHAR2
, or CLOB
, which represents a SQL SELECT
statement. Typically, dynamic_statement
represents a SQL SELECT
statement that returns multiple rows.
Specifies bind variables.
Use if and only if select_statement
or dynamic_sql_stmt
includes placeholders for bind variables.
If dynamic_sql_stmt
has a RETURNING
INTO
clause, using_clause
can contain only IN
bind variables. The bind variables in the RETURNING
INTO
clause are OUT
bind variables by definition.
Expression whose value replaces its corresponding placeholder in select_statement
or dynamic_string
at run time. You must specify a bind_argument
for every placeholder.
Parameter modes of bind variables. An IN
bind variable passes its value to the select_statement
or dynamic_string
. An OUT
bind variable stores a value that dynamic_string
returns. An IN
OUT
bind variable passes its initial value to dynamic_string
and stores a value that dynamic_string
returns. Default: IN
.