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RUN STORED-PROCEDURE Statement
Runs an ORACLE stored procedure:
SYNTAX
procedure
The name of the stored procedure that you want to run or the built-in procedure name, send-sql-statement, which passes PL/SQL statements to ORACLE.
integer = PROC-HANDLE
An integer whose value uniquely identifies the stored procedure that produces the results returning from the ORACLE database.
parameter
A run-time parameter to be passed to the stored procedure. A parameter has the following syntax:
INPUT is the default. In ORACLE, OUTPUT and INPUT-OUTPUT work the same way. If you do not use the parameter name, you must supply all of the parameters in correct order. If you do use the parameter name, you must precede your assignment statement with the keyword PARAM. You must also name parameters to pass values that are different from the default values. If you do not supply a parameter, and no default is specified in the stored procedure, you receive a run-time error.
You can designate a parameter as an extent in the Progress Data Dictionary. You can also use a named ORACLE cursor as an OUTPUT parameter. If a stored procedure has multiple cursors, you must specify a cursor by name when fetching results.
NO-ERROR
Specifies that any ERROR conditions that the RUN STORED-PROC statement produces are suppressed. Before you close a stored procedure, check the ERROR-STATUS system handle for information about any errors that occurred. You receive an error when you attempt to close a stored procedure that did not start.
EXAMPLESThis procedure runs the ORACLE stored procedure pcust and writes the results of the stored procedure into the Progress-supplied buffer, proc-text-buffer. The same code works for accessing a stored procedure from an ODBC-compliant data source:
This procedure uses the send-sql-statement option of the RUN STORED-PROCEDURE statement to send SQL to ORACLE. It writes the results of the stored procedure into the Progress-supplied buffer, proc-text-buffer. The same code works for sending SQL to an ODBC-compliant data source:
This code example shows how to trap errors from the non-Progress DBMS within a procedure:
NOTE
SEE ALSO
CLOSE STORED-PROCEDURE Statement, PROC-HANDLE Function, PROC-STATUS Function
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