1

I have following query in a package

l_sql := 'SELECT  table_name.field1,
                  table_name.field2,
                  table_name.field3
            FROM table_name
            WHERE table_name.status = ''ACTIVE'' AND
                  table_name.replication_date >= SYSDATE - :l'

OPEN zequi_cur FOR l_sql USING l_days_between_start;

Ideally, it should select only those records which satisfy the condition SYSTDATE-:l. The value of l is 730492. But its still fetching ALL the records. and this table has about 30 million records, which makes this query forever to return. any ideas, what could be possible reason that its not fetching only particular records?

3 Answers 3

4

SYSDATE-730492 gives a date in the year 10 AD i.e. 2000 years ago. I can't imagine that is what you meant?

If your start date is in the year 0010 you will get 730492 as the difference:

SQL> select to_date ('22-NOV-2010 04.50.18 PM','DD-MON-YYYY HH.MI.SS AM')
  2         - to_date ('16-NOV-0010 04.59.22 PM','DD-MON-YYYY HH.MI.SS AM') as diff
  3  from dual;

      DIFF
----------
730492.994
17
  • the value of l_days_between_start is being calculated from this expression. l_days_between_start := l_now - i_start_date;' the value of l_now = 22-NOV-10 04.50.18 PM` and the value of i_start_date = 16-NOV-10 04.59.22 PM. which is giving l_days_between_start = 730492.9937037037037037037037037037037037. whats wrong here ?? :(
    – x.509
    Nov 22, 2010 at 16:53
  • 3
    I suspect that the century component of l_start_date (which you aren't displaying here) is 00 not 20. Nov 22, 2010 at 16:54
  • 1
    Your expected answer is between 5 and 6. 730492 just doesn't pass the smell test!
    – Axn
    Nov 22, 2010 at 16:58
  • 3
    UPDATE paramstable SET VALUE = to_date('16-NOV-10 17:59:22', 'DD-MON-RR hh24:mi:ss')
    – Axn
    Nov 22, 2010 at 17:04
  • 1
    Is the VALUE column in the paramstable a varchar type?
    – Axn
    Nov 22, 2010 at 17:06
2

To expand slightly on @Tony's post, when you subtract a number from a DATE value the unit-of-measure of that number is assumed to be days. Therefore, subtracting 730492 days is equivalent to subtracting about 2000 years. I suspect that's not what you wanted to do.

Share and enjoy.

2

Besides fixing your date range, is there any particular reason to use dynamic SQL? Maybe it's better to use a static cursor:

declare
  cursor c_cur(b_offset in number) is
    SELECT  table_name.field1,
            table_name.field2,
            table_name.field3
      FROM  table_name
      WHERE table_name.status = ''ACTIVE'' AND
            table_name.replication_date >= SYSDATE - b_offset
  ;
begin
  open c_cur(l_days_between_start);
  ...
end;

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