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I am new to Oracle Sql and facing an issue :

I want to create a temporary table inside procedure .

LIKE:

CREATE PROCEDURE P
  AS
  BEGIN
    CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE A(ID int);
  END P;

BUT THIS IS GIVING ME AN ERROR

How Can I Create a temporary table inside procedure.

I have seen other answers on stackoverflow but that doesn't answer my question properly Can you please help me out ?

11
  • 1
    Possible duplicate of how-to-create-and-use-temporary-table-in-oracle-stored-procedure
    – tbone
    Sep 19, 2013 at 18:28
  • 1
    I think what you want is something like placing a CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE A(ID INT) ON COMMIT DELETE ROWS outside the procedure instead. It'll be session specific, and cleared at every commit. Sep 19, 2013 at 18:36
  • 1
    @ManishSharma - So then you're just incurring the cost of creating and dropping the table every day? I don't see why you wouldn't just create the table once just like you would any other table in your system. You won't have any PL/SQL code that references the table? Sep 19, 2013 at 18:52
  • 1
    @ManishSharma - In Oracle, the definition of a temporary table is intended to be permanent. Only the data in the table is temporary. It doesn't make sense to create and drop the same table every day whether that table is temporary or permanent. Sep 19, 2013 at 19:02
  • 1
    Of course if your procedure fails half way through, then you've just left a table on the system anyway, and the next time the procedure runs it will fail because the table already exists. You'd better also add code to detect whether the table already exists, and not try to create it again if it does. That way if you get permission to create the table permanently you won't have to redeploy your code again either. Sep 19, 2013 at 22:00

3 Answers 3

8

Why do you want to create a temporary table in a stored procedure in the first place?

It is relatively common to create temporary tables in other databases (SQL Server and MySQL, for example). It is very, very rare to do the same thing in Oracle. In almost every case where you are tempted to create a temporary table in Oracle, there is a better architectural approach. There is a thread over on the DBA stack that discusses alternatives to temporary tables and why they are not commonly needed in Oracle.

Programmatically, you can create objects using dynamic SQL

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE dont_do_this
AS
BEGIN
  EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE a( id INTEGER )';
END;

If you create a temporary table dynamically, however, every reference to that table will also need to be via dynamic SQL-- you won't be able to write simple SELECT statements against the table. And the definition of a temporary table in Oracle is global so it is visible to every session. If you have two different sessions both trying to create the same table, the second session will get an error. If you expect the table to have a different definition in different sessions, you've got even more problems.

2
  • but I am able to access the table by normal select query
    – user2737223
    Sep 19, 2013 at 18:43
  • @ManishSharma - If the table exists, you can reference it in PL/SQL directly. But if it is possible that the table doesn't exist (which it must be if some other procedure is creating it), then you need to use dynamic SQL to reference the table or your PL/SQL block will fail to compile. Sep 19, 2013 at 18:45
4

You could use Dynamic SQL with EXECUTE IMMEDIATE:

CREATE OR REPLACE
PROCEDURE p
AS
BEGIN
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE A(id NUMBER)...etc';
END p;

Edit: Obviously you'll have to ensure your syntax is correct within the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement.

Hope it helps.

6
  • -1 it's not helpful to help someone shoot themselves in the foot :) Sep 20, 2013 at 0:58
  • 4
    It is if that's what they really want to do. People ask questions on here for all sorts of reasons I answered the question asked. A downvote is a reflection of your interpretation of their reason behind the question, not of the answer to the actual question asked.
    – Ollie
    Sep 21, 2013 at 18:05
  • No, a downvote is related to how helpful the answer is, nothing more or less. There is a judgement call involved - sometimes it's ok to answer literally even if the approach being taken is not quite the best way; but in other cases (like this one) you need to help the OP understand they are on entirely the wrong course. Even if it's to say "here's how you can do this, but you most probably shouldn't because..." Sep 22, 2013 at 5:44
  • We'll have to agree to disagree, you're still making the ASSUMPTION that the user doesn't know why they are wanting to do what their question asks. It's your assumption that's led to the downvote. The answer is helpful as it answers the question asked. This site is a Q&A after all. If the OP asked for anything further inc further info about the problem to be solved then more would have been proffered, but they didn't. I have to assume the OP is not stupid so I just answer the question asked.
    – Ollie
    Sep 22, 2013 at 17:27
  • 1
    This may help you Ollie: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/191205/… Sep 22, 2013 at 23:10
1

You must declare your procedure as:

create or replace PROCEDURE MYPROCEDURE AUTHID CURRENT_USER IS

script varchar(4000);

BEGIN

script:= 'CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE BNMCODIAGNOSTICASSOCIE_TEMP
ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS
as select ........';

EXECUTE IMMEDIATE script;

commit;

END;

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