I'm using OLEDB provider for ADO.Net connecting to an Oracle database. In my loop, I am doing an insert:

insert into ps_tl_compleave_tbl values('2626899', 0, TO_DATE('01/01/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 'LTKN', 'LTKN', '52', TO_DATE('01/01/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 16.000000, 24.000)insert into ps_tl_compleave_tbl values('4327142', 0, TO_DATE('03/23/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 'LTKN', 'LTKN', '51', TO_DATE('03/23/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 0.000000, 0.000)

The first insert succeeds but the second one gives an error:

ORA-00933: SQL command not properly ended

What am I doing wrong?

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74% accept rate
Are you trying to do both inserts at once? – Mark Nold Sep 16 '08 at 14:10
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9 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

To me it seems you're missing a ; between the two statements:
insert into ps_tl_compleave_tbl values('2626899', 0, TO_DATE('01/01/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 'LTKN', 'LTKN', '52', TO_DATE('01/01/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 16.000000, 24.000)
;
insert into ps_tl_compleave_tbl values('4327142', 0, TO_DATE('03/23/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 'LTKN', 'LTKN', '51', TO_DATE('03/23/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY'), 0.000000, 0.000)
;
Try adding the ; and let us know.

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semi colon after the first insert?

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Adding a semi-colon to the end of the statement gives me this error: ORA-00911: invalid character – Steve Horn Sep 16 '08 at 13:34
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Oracle SQL uses a semi-colon ; as its end of statement marker.

you will need to add the ; after bother insert statments.

NB: that also assumes ADODB will allow 2 inserts in a single call.

the alternative might be to wrap both calls in a block,

BEGIN
      insert (...) into (...);
      insert (...) into (...);
END;
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In my loop I was not re-initializing my StringBuilder ...thus the multiple insert statement I posted.

Thanks for your help anyway!!

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It's a long shot but in the first insert the sql date format is valid for both uk/us, the second insert is invalid if the Oracle DB is setup for UK date format, I realise you have used the TO_DATE function but I don't see anything else ...

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Is the semicolon needed from OLE_DB ? It's not needed from most API's ?

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The ADO.NET OLE DB provider is for generic data access where you don't have a specific provider for your database. Use OracleConnection et al in preference to OleDbConnection for an Oracle database connection.

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In addition to the semicolon problem, I strongly recommend you look into bind variables. Failing to use them can cause database performance problems down the road. The code also tends to be cleaner.

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In .net, when we try to execute a single Oracle SQL statement with a semicolon at the end. The result will be an oracle error: ora-00911: invalid character. OK, you figure that one SQL statement doesn't need the semicolon, but what about executing 2 SQL statement in one string for example:

Dim db As Database = DatabaseFactory.CreateDatabase("db")
Dim cmd As System.Data.Common.DbCommand
Dim sql As String = ""

sql = "DELETE FROM iphone_applications WHERE appid = 1; DELETE FROM iphone_applications WHERE appid = 2; "

cmd = db.GetSqlStringCommand(sql)
db.ExecuteNonQuery(cmd)

The code above will give you the same Oracle error: ora-00911: invalid character.

The solution to this problem is to wrap your 2 Oracle SQL statements with a BEGIN and END; syntax, for example:

sql = "BEGIN DELETE FROM iphone_applications WHERE appid = 1; DELETE FROM iphone_applications WHERE appid = 2; END;"

Courtesy: http://www.lazyasscoder.com/Article.aspx?id=89&title=ora-00911%3A+invalid+character+when+executing+multiple+Oracle+SQL+statements

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when you are entering code in a question/answer, it is more readable if you format it as code. The "{}" button does this for you, or you can just indent the code manually. you can also use back ticks to mark code within a sentence. – Paul W May 19 '11 at 12:44
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