13

I need write an update statement that used multiple tables to determine which rows to update, since in Oracle, multiple tables aren't allowed. The following query will return a "ORA-00971: Missing SET keyword" error

UPDATE
  TABLE1 a,
  TABLE2 b
SET
  a.COL1 = 'VALUE'
WHERE
  a.FK = b.PK
  AND b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')

Looking up the UPDATE statement syntax on oracle, I found the following link, which shows that you can use a subquery in place of a table name.

When I tried to write the query like this, I got a "ORA-01779: Cannot modify a column which maps to a non key-preserved table"

UPDATE
  (
    SELECT
      a.COL1
    FROM
      TABLE1 a,
      TABLE2 b
    WHERE
      a.FK = b.PK
      AND b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')
  ) update_tbl
SET
  update_tbl.COL1 = 'VALUE'

I did rewrite the query (show below) using an EXISTS statement instead and it works fine, but would still like to know how this is done.

UPDATE
  TABLE1 update_tbl
SET
  update_tbl.COL1 = 'VALUE'
WHERE
  EXISTS (
    SELECT
      1
    FROM
      TABLE1 a
      TABLE2 b
    WHERE
      a.FK = b.PK
      AND b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')
      AND update_tbl.PK = a.PK
  )

Thanks! -Nate

6 Answers 6

8

Another option:

UPDATE TABLE1 a
SET a.COL1 = 'VALUE'
WHERE a.FK IN
( SELECT b.PK FROM TABLE2 b
  WHERE b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')
)

Your second example would work if (a) the view included the declared PK of TABLE1:

UPDATE
  (
    SELECT
      a.COL1, a.PKCOL
    FROM
      TABLE1 a,
      TABLE2 b
    WHERE
      a.FK = b.PK
      AND b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')
  ) update_tbl
SET
  update_tbl.COL1 = 'VALUE'

... and (b) TABLE1.FK was a declared foreign key to TABLE2

(By declared I mean that a constraint exists and is enabled).

7

I find that a nice, quick, consistent way to turn a SELECT statement into an UPDATE is to make the update based on the ROWID.

UPDATE
  TABLE1
SET
  COL1 = 'VALUE'
WHERE
  ROWID in
    (
    SELECT
      a.rowid
    FROM
      TABLE1 a,
      TABLE2 b
    WHERE
      a.FK = b.PK
      AND b.COL2 IN ('SET OF VALUES')
    )

So, your inner query is defining the rows to update.

3

The syntax of your example is fine, but Oracle requires that the subquery include primary keys. That's a pretty significant limitation.

On a related note, you can also use parentheses to use 2 or more fields in an IN statement, as in:

UPDATE
  TABLE1 update_tbl
SET
  update_tbl.COL1 = 'VALUE'
WHERE
  (update_tbl.PK1, update_tbl.pk2) in(
                      select some_field1, some_field2
                      from some_table st
                      where st.some_fields = 'some conditions'
                      );
2

When you perform an update you can obviously only tell the system to update the value to a single new value -- telling it to update "X" to both "Y" and "Z" doesn't make sense. So, when you base an update on the result of an inline view Oracle performs a check that there are sufficient constraints in place to prevent a modified column being potentially updated twice.

In your case I expect that TABLE2.PK is not actually a declared primary key. If you place a primary or unique constraint on that columnthen you'd be good to go.

There is an undocumented hint to byass the update join cardinality check, used internally by Oracle, but I wouldn't advise using it.

One workaround for this is to use a MERGE statement, which is not subject to the same test.

1

I found what i needed here: Useful SQL Commands

I needed to update one table with the result of a join
I tried the above solutions without success :(

Here is an extract of the page i pointed above
Using cursors i was able to achieve the task successfully
I'm sure there's another solution but this one worked so...

DECLARE

 /* Output variables to hold the result of the query: */
 a T1.e%TYPE;
 b T2.f%TYPE;
 c T2.g%TYPE;

 /* Cursor declaration: */
 CURSOR T1Cursor IS
   SELECT T1.e, T2.f, T2.g
   FROM T1, T2
   WHERE T1.id = T2.id AND T1.e <> T2.f

 FOR UPDATE;

BEGIN

  OPEN T1Cursor;

  LOOP

    /* Retrieve each row of the result of the above query
    into PL/SQL variables: */
    FETCH T1Cursor INTO a, b;

    /* If there are no more rows to fetch, exit the loop: */
    EXIT WHEN T1Cursor%NOTFOUND;

    /* Delete the current tuple: */
    DELETE FROM T1 WHERE CURRENT OF T1Cursor;

    /* Insert the reverse tuple: */
    INSERT INTO T1 VALUES(b, a);

    /* Here is my stuff using the variables to update my table */
    UPDATE T2
    SET T2.f = a
    WHERE T2.id = c;

  END LOOP;

  /* Free cursor used by the query. */
  CLOSE T1Cursor;

END;
.
run;


Note: Don't forget to commit ;-)

0

Each row in the result set of the query in your UPDATE clause must map back to one and only one row in the table you are trying to update, and in a way that Oracle can follow automatically. Since the query is really a view, one way to think about it is that Oracle needs to be able to join the view back to the target table, in order to know what row to update.

This essentially means that you need to include the primary key of the destination table in that query. You might be able to use some other unique index field(s) too, but I can't guarantee the Oracle DBMS is smart enough to allow that.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.