PL/SQL User's Guide and Reference Release 2 (9.2) Part Number A96624-01 |
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This chapter shows you how to structure the flow of control through a PL/SQL program. You learn how statements are connected by simple but powerful control structures that have a single entry and exit point. Collectively, these structures can handle any situation. Their proper use leads naturally to a well-structured program.
This chapter discusses the following topics:
According to the structure theorem, any computer program can be written using the basic control structures shown in Figure 4-1. They can be combined in any way necessary to deal with a given problem.
The selection structure tests a condition, then executes one sequence of statements instead of another, depending on whether the condition is true or false. A condition is any variable or expression that returns a Boolean value (TRUE
or FALSE
). The iteration structure executes a sequence of statements repeatedly as long as a condition holds true. The sequence structure simply executes a sequence of statements in the order in which they occur.
Often, it is necessary to take alternative actions depending on circumstances. The IF
statement lets you execute a sequence of statements conditionally. That is, whether the sequence is executed or not depends on the value of a condition. There are three forms of IF
statements: IF-THEN
, IF-THEN-ELSE
, and IF-THEN-ELSIF
. The CASE
statement is a compact way to evaluate a single condition and choose between many alternative actions.
The simplest form of IF
statement associates a condition with a sequence of statements enclosed by the keywords THEN
and END
IF
(not ENDIF
), as follows:
IF condition THEN sequence_of_statements END IF;
The sequence of statements is executed only if the condition is true. If the condition is false or null, the IF
statement does nothing. In either case, control passes to the next statement. An example follows:
IF sales > quota THEN compute_bonus(empid); UPDATE payroll SET pay = pay + bonus WHERE empno = emp_id; END IF;
You might want to place brief IF
statements on a single line, as in
IF x > y THEN high := x; END IF;
The second form of IF
statement adds the keyword ELSE
followed by an alternative sequence of statements, as follows:
IF condition THEN sequence_of_statements1 ELSE sequence_of_statements2 END IF;
The sequence of statements in the ELSE
clause is executed only if the condition is false or null. Thus, the ELSE
clause ensures that a sequence of statements is executed. In the following example, the first UPDATE
statement is executed when the condition is true, but the second UPDATE
statement is executed when the condition is false or null:
IF trans_type = 'CR' THEN UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance + credit WHERE ... ELSE UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance - debit WHERE ... END IF;
The THEN
and ELSE
clauses can include IF
statements. That is, IF
statements can be nested, as the following example shows:
IF trans_type = 'CR' THEN UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance + credit WHERE ... ELSE IF new_balance >= minimum_balance THEN UPDATE accounts SET balance = balance - debit WHERE ... ELSE RAISE insufficient_funds; END IF; END IF;
Sometimes you want to select an action from several mutually exclusive alternatives. The third form of IF
statement uses the keyword ELSIF
(not ELSEIF
) to introduce additional conditions, as follows:
IF condition1 THEN sequence_of_statements1 ELSIF condition2 THEN sequence_of_statements2 ELSE sequence_of_statements3 END IF;
If the first condition is false or null, the ELSIF
clause tests another condition. An IF
statement can have any number of ELSIF
clauses; the final ELSE
clause is optional. Conditions are evaluated one by one from top to bottom. If any condition is true, its associated sequence of statements is executed and control passes to the next statement. If all conditions are false or null, the sequence in the ELSE
clause is executed. Consider the following example:
BEGIN ... IF sales > 50000 THEN bonus := 1500; ELSIF sales > 35000 THEN bonus := 500; ELSE bonus := 100; END IF; INSERT INTO payroll VALUES (emp_id, bonus, ...); END;
If the value of sales
is larger than 50000, the first and second conditions are true. Nevertheless, bonus
is assigned the proper value of 1500 because the second condition is never tested. When the first condition is true, its associated statement is executed and control passes to the INSERT
statement.
Like the IF
statement, the CASE
statement selects one sequence of statements to execute. However, to select the sequence, the CASE
statement uses a selector rather than multiple Boolean expressions. (Recall from Chapter 2 that a selector is an expression whose value is used to select one of several alternatives.) To compare the IF
and CASE
statements, consider the following code that outputs descriptions of school grades:
IF grade = 'A' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Excellent'); ELSIF grade = 'B' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Very Good'); ELSIF grade = 'C' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Good'); ELSIF grade = 'D' THEN dbms_output. put_line('Fair'); ELSIF grade = 'F' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Poor'); ELSE dbms_output.put_line('No such grade'); END IF;
Notice the five Boolean expressions. In each instance, we test whether the same variable, grade
, is equal to one of five values: 'A'
, 'B'
, 'C'
, 'D'
, or 'F'
. Let us rewrite the preceding code using the CASE
statement, as follows:
CASE grade WHEN 'A' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Excellent'); WHEN 'B' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Very Good'); WHEN 'C' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Good'); WHEN 'D' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Fair'); WHEN 'F' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Poor'); ELSE dbms_output.put_line('No such grade'); END CASE;
The CASE
statement is more readable and more efficient. So, when possible, rewrite lengthy IF-THEN-ELSIF
statements as CASE
statements.
The CASE
statement begins with the keyword CASE
. The keyword is followed by a selector, which is the variable grade
in the last example. The selector expression can be arbitrarily complex. For example, it can contain function calls. Usually, however, it consists of a single variable. The selector expression is evaluated only once. The value it yields can have any PL/SQL datatype other than BLOB
, BFILE
, an object type, a PL/SQL record, an index-by-table, a varray, or a nested table.
The selector is followed by one or more WHEN
clauses, which are checked sequentially. The value of the selector determines which clause is executed. If the value of the selector equals the value of a WHEN
-clause expression, that WHEN
clause is executed. For instance, in the last example, if grade
equals 'C'
, the program outputs 'Good'
. Execution never falls through; if any WHEN
clause is executed, control passes to the next statement.
The ELSE
clause works similarly to the ELSE
clause in an IF
statement. In the last example, if the grade is not one of the choices covered by a WHEN
clause, the ELSE
clause is selected, and the phrase 'No such grade'
is output. The ELSE
clause is optional. However, if you omit the ELSE
clause, PL/SQL adds the following implicit ELSE
clause:
ELSE RAISE CASE_NOT_FOUND;
If the CASE
statement selects the implicit ELSE
clause, PL/SQL raises the predefined exception CASE_NOT_FOUND
. So, there is always a default action, even when you omit the ELSE
clause.
The keywords END
CASE
terminate the CASE
statement. These two keywords must be separated by a space. The CASE
statement has the following form:
[<<label_name>>] CASE selector WHEN expression1 THEN sequence_of_statements1; WHEN expression2 THEN sequence_of_statements2; ... WHEN expressionN THEN sequence_of_statementsN; [ELSE sequence_of_statementsN+1;] END CASE [label_name];
Like PL/SQL blocks, CASE
statements can be labeled. The label, an undeclared identifier enclosed by double angle brackets, must appear at the beginning of the CASE
statement. Optionally, the label name can also appear at the end of the CASE
statement.
Exceptions raised during the execution of a CASE
statement are handled in the usual way. That is, normal execution stops and control transfers to the exception-handling part of your PL/SQL block or subprogram.
An alternative to the CASE
statement is the CASE
expression, where each WHEN
clause is an expression. For details, see "CASE Expressions".
PL/SQL also provides a searched CASE
statement, which has the form:
[<<label_name>>] CASE WHEN search_condition1 THEN sequence_of_statements1; WHEN search_condition2 THEN sequence_of_statements2; ... WHEN search_conditionN THEN sequence_of_statementsN; [ELSE sequence_of_statementsN+1;] END CASE [label_name];
The searched CASE
statement has no selector. Also, its WHEN
clauses contain search conditions that yield a Boolean value, not expressions that can yield a value of any type. An example follows:
CASE WHEN grade = 'A' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Excellent'); WHEN grade = 'B' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Very Good'); WHEN grade = 'C' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Good'); WHEN grade = 'D' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Fair'); WHEN grade = 'F' THEN dbms_output.put_line('Poor'); ELSE dbms_output.put_line('No such grade'); END CASE;
The search conditions are evaluated sequentially. The Boolean value of each search condition determines which WHEN
clause is executed. If a search condition yields TRUE
, its WHEN
clause is executed. If any WHEN
clause is executed, control passes to the next statement, so subsequent search conditions are not evaluated.
If none of the search conditions yields TRUE
, the ELSE
clause is executed. The ELSE
clause is optional. However, if you omit the ELSE
clause, PL/SQL adds the following implicit ELSE
clause:
ELSE RAISE CASE_NOT_FOUND;
Exceptions raised during the execution of a searched CASE
statement are handled in the usual way. That is, normal execution stops and control transfers to the exception-handling part of your PL/SQL block or subprogram.
Avoid clumsy IF
statements like those in the following example:
IF new_balance < minimum_balance THEN overdrawn := TRUE; ELSE overdrawn := FALSE; END IF; ... IF overdrawn = TRUE THEN RAISE insufficient_funds; END IF;
This code disregards two useful facts. First, the value of a Boolean expression can be assigned directly to a Boolean variable. So, you can replace the first IF
statement with a simple assignment, as follows:
overdrawn := new_balance < minimum_balance;
Second, a Boolean variable is itself either true or false. So, you can simplify the condition in the second IF
statement, as follows:
IF overdrawn THEN ...
When possible, use the ELSIF
clause instead of nested IF
statements. That way, your code will be easier to read and understand. Compare the following IF
statements:
IF condition1 THEN | IF condition1 THEN statement1; | statement1; ELSE | ELSIF condition2 THEN IF condition2 THEN | statement2; statement2; | ELSIF condition3 THEN ELSE | statement3; IF condition3 THEN | END IF; statement3; | END IF; | END IF; | END IF; |
These statements are logically equivalent, but the first statement obscures the flow of logic, whereas the second statement reveals it.
If you are comparing a single expression to multiple values, you can simplify the logic by using a single CASE
statement instead of an IF
with several ELSIF
clauses.
LOOP
statements let you execute a sequence of statements multiple times. There are three forms of LOOP
statements: LOOP
, WHILE-LOOP
, and FOR-LOOP
.
The simplest form of LOOP
statement is the basic (or infinite) loop, which encloses a sequence of statements between the keywords LOOP
and END
LOOP
, as follows:
LOOP sequence_of_statements END LOOP;
With each iteration of the loop, the sequence of statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. If further processing is undesirable or impossible, you can use an EXIT
statement to complete the loop. You can place one or more EXIT
statements anywhere inside a loop, but nowhere outside a loop. There are two forms of EXIT
statements: EXIT
and EXIT-WHEN
.
The EXIT
statement forces a loop to complete unconditionally. When an EXIT
statement is encountered, the loop completes immediately and control passes to the next statement. An example follows:
LOOP ... IF credit_rating < 3 THEN ... EXIT; -- exit loop immediately END IF; END LOOP; -- control resumes here
The next example shows that you cannot use the EXIT
statement to complete a PL/SQL block:
BEGIN ... IF credit_rating < 3 THEN ... EXIT; -- not allowed END IF; END;
Remember, the EXIT
statement must be placed inside a loop. To complete a PL/SQL block before its normal end is reached, you can use the RETURN
statement. For more information, see "Using the RETURN Statement".
The EXIT-WHEN
statement lets a loop complete conditionally. When the EXIT
statement is encountered, the condition in the WHEN
clause is evaluated. If the condition is true, the loop completes and control passes to the next statement after the loop. An example follows:
LOOP FETCH c1 INTO ... EXIT WHEN c1%NOTFOUND; -- exit loop if condition is true ... END LOOP; CLOSE c1;
Until the condition is true, the loop cannot complete. So, a statement inside the loop must change the value of the condition. In the last example, if the FETCH
statement returns a row, the condition is false. When the FETCH
statement fails to return a row, the condition is true, the loop completes, and control passes to the CLOSE
statement.
The EXIT-WHEN
statement replaces a simple IF
statement. For example, compare the following statements:
IF count > 100 THEN | EXIT WHEN count > 100; EXIT; | END IF; |
These statements are logically equivalent, but the EXIT-WHEN
statement is easier to read and understand.
Like PL/SQL blocks, loops can be labeled. The label, an undeclared identifier enclosed by double angle brackets, must appear at the beginning of the LOOP
statement, as follows:
<<label_name>> LOOP sequence_of_statements END LOOP;
Optionally, the label name can also appear at the end of the LOOP
statement, as the following example shows:
<<my_loop>> LOOP ... END LOOP my_loop;
When you nest labeled loops, use ending label names to improve readability.
With either form of EXIT
statement, you can complete not only the current loop, but any enclosing loop. Simply label the enclosing loop that you want to complete. Then, use the label in an EXIT
statement, as follows:
<<outer>> LOOP ... LOOP ... EXIT outer WHEN ... -- exit both loops END LOOP; ... END LOOP outer;
Every enclosing loop up to and including the labeled loop is exited.
The WHILE-LOOP
statement associates a condition with a sequence of statements enclosed by the keywords LOOP
and END
LOOP
, as follows:
WHILE condition LOOP sequence_of_statements END LOOP;
Before each iteration of the loop, the condition is evaluated. If the condition is true, the sequence of statements is executed, then control resumes at the top of the loop. If the condition is false or null, the loop is bypassed and control passes to the next statement. An example follows:
WHILE total <= 25000 LOOP ... SELECT sal INTO salary FROM emp WHERE ... total := total + salary; END LOOP;
The number of iterations depends on the condition and is unknown until the loop completes. The condition is tested at the top of the loop, so the sequence might execute zero times. In the last example, if the initial value of total
is larger than 25000, the condition is false and the loop is bypassed.
Some languages have a LOOP
UNTIL
or REPEAT
UNTIL
structure, which tests the condition at the bottom of the loop instead of at the top. Therefore, the sequence of statements is executed at least once. PL/SQL has no such structure, but you can easily build one, as follows:
LOOP sequence_of_statements EXIT WHEN boolean_expression; END LOOP;
To ensure that a WHILE
loop executes at least once, use an initialized Boolean variable in the condition, as follows:
done := FALSE; WHILE NOT done LOOP sequence_of_statements done := boolean_expression; END LOOP;
A statement inside the loop must assign a new value to the Boolean variable. Otherwise, you have an infinite loop. For example, the following LOOP
statements are logically equivalent:
WHILE TRUE LOOP | LOOP ... | ... END LOOP; | END LOOP;
Whereas the number of iterations through a WHILE
loop is unknown until the loop completes, the number of iterations through a FOR
loop is known before the loop is entered. 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
. A double dot (..
) serves as the range operator. The syntax follows:
FOR counter IN [REVERSE] lower_bound..higher_bound LOOP sequence_of_statements END LOOP;
The range is evaluated when the FOR
loop is first entered and is never re-evaluated.
As the next example shows, the sequence of statements is executed once for each integer in the range. After each iteration, the loop counter is incremented.
FOR i IN 1..3 LOOP -- assign the values 1,2,3 to i sequence_of_statements -- executes three times END LOOP;
The following example shows that if the lower bound equals the higher bound, the sequence of statements is executed once:
FOR i IN 3..3 LOOP -- assign the value 3 to i sequence_of_statements -- executes one time END LOOP;
By default, iteration proceeds upward from the lower bound to the higher bound. However, as the example below shows, if you use the keyword REVERSE
, iteration proceeds downward from the higher bound to the lower bound. After each iteration, the loop counter is decremented. Nevertheless, you write the range bounds in ascending (not descending) order.
FOR i IN REVERSE 1..3 LOOP -- assign the values 3,2,1 to i sequence_of_statements -- executes three times END LOOP;
Inside a FOR
loop, the loop counter can be referenced like a constant but cannot be assigned values, as the following example shows:
FOR ctr IN 1..10 LOOP IF NOT finished THEN INSERT INTO ... VALUES (ctr, ...); -- legal factor := ctr * 2; -- legal ELSE ctr := 10; -- not allowed END IF; END LOOP;
The bounds of a loop range can be literals, variables, or expressions but must evaluate to numbers. Otherwise, PL/SQL raises the predefined exception VALUE_ERROR
. The lower bound need not be 1, as the examples below show. However, the loop counter increment (or decrement) must be 1.
j IN -5..5 k IN REVERSE first..last step IN 0..TRUNC(high/low) * 2
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 .. 2**31. So, if a bound evaluates to a number outside that range, you get a numeric overflow error when PL/SQL attempts the assignment, as the following example shows:
DECLARE hi NUMBER := 2**32; BEGIN FOR j IN 1..hi LOOP -- causes a 'numeric overflow' error ... END LOOP; END;
Some languages provide a STEP
clause, which lets you specify a different increment (5 instead of 1 for example). PL/SQL has no such structure, but you can easily build one. Inside the FOR
loop, simply multiply each reference to the loop counter by the new increment. In the following example, you assign today's date to elements 5, 10, and 15 of an index-by table:
DECLARE TYPE DateList IS TABLE OF DATE INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER; dates DateList; k CONSTANT INTEGER := 5; -- set new increment BEGIN FOR j IN 1..3 LOOP dates(j*k) := SYSDATE; -- multiply loop counter by increment END LOOP; ... END;
PL/SQL lets you determine the loop range dynamically at run time, as the following example shows:
SELECT COUNT(empno) INTO emp_count FROM emp; FOR i IN 1..emp_count LOOP ... END LOOP;
The value of emp_count
is unknown at compile time; the SELECT
statement returns the value at run time.
What happens if the lower bound of a loop range evaluates to a larger integer than the upper bound? As the next example shows, the sequence of statements within the loop is not executed and control passes to the next statement:
-- limit becomes 1 FOR i IN 2..limit LOOP sequence_of_statements -- executes zero times END LOOP; -- control passes here
The loop counter is defined only within the loop. You cannot reference it outside the loop. After the loop is exited, the loop counter is undefined, as the following example shows:
FOR ctr IN 1..10 LOOP ... END LOOP; sum := ctr - 1; -- not allowed
You need not explicitly declare the loop counter because it is implicitly declared as a local variable of type INTEGER
. The next example shows that the local declaration hides any global declaration:
DECLARE ctr INTEGER; BEGIN ... FOR ctr IN 1..25 LOOP ... IF ctr > 10 THEN ... -- refers to loop counter END LOOP; END;
To reference the global variable in this example, you must use a label and dot notation, as follows:
<<main>> DECLARE ctr INTEGER; ... BEGIN ... FOR ctr IN 1..25 LOOP ... IF main.ctr > 10 THEN -- refers to global variable ... END IF; END LOOP; END main;
The same scope rules apply to nested FOR
loops. Consider the example below. Both loop counters have the same name. So, to reference the outer loop counter from the inner loop, you must use a label and dot notation, as follows:
<<outer>> FOR step IN 1..25 LOOP FOR step IN 1..10 LOOP ... IF outer.step > 15 THEN ... END LOOP; END LOOP outer;
The EXIT
statement lets a FOR
loop complete prematurely. For example, the following loop normally executes ten times, but as soon as the FETCH
statement fails to return a row, the loop completes no matter how many times it has executed:
FOR j IN 1..10 LOOP FETCH c1 INTO emp_rec; EXIT WHEN c1%NOTFOUND; ... END LOOP;
Suppose you must exit from a nested FOR
loop prematurely. You can complete not only the current loop, but any enclosing loop. Simply label the enclosing loop that you want to complete. Then, use the label in an EXIT
statement to specify which FOR
loop to exit, as follows:
<<outer>> FOR i IN 1..5 LOOP ... FOR j IN 1..10 LOOP FETCH c1 INTO emp_rec; EXIT outer WHEN c1%NOTFOUND; -- exit both FOR loops ... END LOOP; END LOOP outer; -- control passes here
Unlike the IF
and LOOP
statements, the GOTO
and NULL
statements are not crucial to PL/SQL programming. The structure of PL/SQL is such that the GOTO
statement is seldom needed. Occasionally, it can simplify logic enough to warrant its use. The NULL
statement can improve readability by making the meaning and action of conditional statements clear.
Overuse of GOTO
statements can result in complex, unstructured code (sometimes called spaghetti code) that is hard to understand and maintain. So, use GOTO
statements sparingly. For example, to branch from a deeply nested structure to an error-handling routine, raise an exception rather than use a GOTO
statement.
The GOTO
statement branches to a label unconditionally. The label must be unique within its scope and must precede an executable statement or a PL/SQL block. When executed, the GOTO
statement transfers control to the labeled statement or block. In the following example, you go to an executable statement farther down in a sequence of statements:
BEGIN ... GOTO insert_row; ... <<insert_row>> INSERT INTO emp VALUES ... END;
In the next example, you go to a PL/SQL block farther up in a sequence of statements:
BEGIN ... <<update_row>> BEGIN UPDATE emp SET ... ... END; ... GOTO update_row; ... END;
The label end_loop
in the following example is not allowed because it does not precede an executable statement:
DECLARE done BOOLEAN; BEGIN ... FOR i IN 1..50 LOOP IF done THEN GOTO end_loop; END IF; ... <<end_loop>> -- not allowed END LOOP; -- not an executable statement END;
To debug the last example, just add the NULL
statement, as follows:
FOR i IN 1..50 LOOP IF done THEN GOTO end_loop; END IF; ... <<end_loop>> NULL; -- an executable statement END LOOP;
As the following example shows, a GOTO
statement can branch to an enclosing block from the current block:
DECLARE my_ename CHAR(10); BEGIN <<get_name>> SELECT ename INTO my_ename FROM emp WHERE ... BEGIN ... GOTO get_name; -- branch to enclosing block END; END;
The GOTO
statement branches to the first enclosing block in which the referenced label appears.
Some possible destinations of a GOTO
statement are not allowed. Specifically, a GOTO
statement cannot branch into an IF
statement, CASE
statement, LOOP
statement, or sub-block. For example, the following GOTO
statement is not allowed:
BEGIN ... GOTO update_row; -- can't branch into IF statement ... IF valid THEN ... <<update_row>> UPDATE emp SET ... END IF; END;
As the example below shows, a GOTO
statement cannot branch from one IF
statement clause to another. Likewise, a GOTO
statement cannot branch from one CASE
statement WHEN
clause to another.
BEGIN ... IF valid THEN ... GOTO update_row; -- can't branch into ELSE clause ELSE ... <<update_row>> UPDATE emp SET ... END IF; END;
The next example shows that a GOTO
statement cannot branch from an enclosing block into a sub-block:
BEGIN ... IF status = 'OBSOLETE' THEN GOTO delete_part; -- can't branch into sub-block END IF; ... BEGIN ... <<delete_part>> DELETE FROM parts WHERE ... END; END;
Also, a GOTO
statement cannot branch out of a subprogram, as the following example shows:
DECLARE ... PROCEDURE compute_bonus (emp_id NUMBER) IS BEGIN ... GOTO update_row; -- can't branch out of subprogram END; BEGIN ... <<update_row>> UPDATE emp SET ... END;
Finally, a GOTO
statement cannot branch from an exception handler into the current block. For example, the following GOTO
statement is not allowed:
DECLARE ... pe_ratio REAL; BEGIN ... SELECT price / NVL(earnings, 0) INTO pe_ratio FROM ... <<insert_row>> INSERT INTO stats VALUES (pe_ratio, ...); EXCEPTION WHEN ZERO_DIVIDE THEN pe_ratio := 0; GOTO insert_row; -- can't branch into current block END;
However, a GOTO
statement can branch from an exception handler into an enclosing block.
The NULL
statement does nothing other than pass control to the next statement. In a conditional construct, the NULL
statement tells readers that a possibility has been considered, but no action is necessary. In the following example, the NULL
statement shows that no action is taken for unnamed exceptions:
EXCEPTION WHEN ZERO_DIVIDE THEN ROLLBACK; WHEN VALUE_ERROR THEN INSERT INTO errors VALUES ... COMMIT; WHEN OTHERS THEN NULL; END;
In IF
statements or other places that require at least one executable statement, the NULL
statement to satisfy the syntax. In the following example, the NULL
statement emphasizes that only top-rated employees get bonuses:
IF rating > 90 THEN compute_bonus(emp_id); ELSE NULL; END IF;
Also, the NULL
statement is a handy way to create stubs when designing applications from the top down. A stub is dummy subprogram that lets you defer the definition of a procedure or function until you test and debug the main program. In the following example, the NULL
statement meets the requirement that at least one statement must appear in the executable part of a subprogram:
PROCEDURE debit_account (acct_id INTEGER, amount REAL) IS BEGIN NULL; END debit_account;
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