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What is the proper way to split up SQL statements to send to an Oracle ADO.NET client? For instance, lets say you have the following code in a text file and want to execute these statements:

CREATE TABLE foo (bar VARCHAR2(100));
INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES('one');
INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES('two');

I believe trying to send all those in one Command will cause Oracle to complain about the ";". My first thought would be to split on ";" character, and send them one at a time.

But, Stored procedures can contain semi-colons as well, so how would I make it so the split routine would keep the whole stored proc together? Does it need to look for begin/end statements as well, or "/"?

Is there any difference in these respects between ODP.NET and the Micrsoft Oracle Provider?

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1 Answer

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Without the DDL, you could create an anonymous PL/SQL block by surrounding the statements with BEGIN and END:

BEGIN
  INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES('one');
  INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES('two');
END;

To perform DDL (like CREATE TABLE) you would need to use dynamic PL/SQL:

BEGIN
  EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE TABLE foo (bar VARCHAR2(100))';
  EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES(:v)' USING 'one';
  EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES(:v)' USING 'two';
END;

The INSERTS are also dynamic, as the table does not exist prior to running the block and so it would fail to compile.

NOTE: This would be an unusual requirement: applications should not normally be creating tables!

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I'm trying to execute user entered SQL basically and have the app slice it up correctly to send to the ADO.NET client. – Ted Elliott Nov 21 '08 at 16:12
Hmm - I wouldn't like to support user-entered SQL! May as well just give them access to SQL Plus? – Tony Andrews Nov 21 '08 at 16:33

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