0

I've been trying to run this script but all I get is this error:

Error report:
ORA-06550: line 3, column 15:

PLS-00103: Encountered the symbol "IS" when expecting one of the following:

constant exception <an identifier>
<a double-quoted delimited-identifier> table long double ref
char time timestamp interval date binary national character
nchar
The symbol "IS" was ignored.

Here's my script:

set serveroutput on

   DECLARE
   cursor depts_cur is select dname from dept;
   depts_cur_rec is depts_cur%type; 

   BEGIN
   loop
     fetch depts_cur into depts_cur_rec;
     exit when depts_cur_rec%notfound;
     dbms_output.put_line('Department: ' || depts_cur_rec);
   end loop;
   close depts_cur;
   END;

Your help will be much appreciated.

1
  • 2
    If you read the error, it told you exactly what was wrong: Line 3 is depts_cur_rec is depts_cur%type;; Column 15 is where the IS is. Mar 1, 2012 at 2:04

2 Answers 2

6

It looks like your depts_cur_rec declaration is wrong, try this (removing the "is"):

set serveroutput on

DECLARE
    cursor depts_cur is select dname from dept;
    depts_cur_rec depts_cur%type;
BEGIN
    BEGIN loop 
        fetch depts_cur 
        into depts_cur_rec; 
        exit when depts_cur_rec%notfound;
        dbms_output.put_line('Department: ' || depts_cur_rec); 
    end loop;
    close depts_cur;
END;
1

First off, when you declare a local variable like depts_cur_rec, you don't use the IS keyword. And you want the depts_cur_rec to be declared to be a %ROWTYPE, not a %TYPE. Once you get past that, your code is going to fail because you aren't opening the cursor before fetching and because you are trying to use the %NOTFOUND attribute of the record rather than the cursor. And finally, your DBMS_OUTPUT call needs to reference a particular column from the record

DECLARE
   cursor depts_cur is select dname from dept;
   depts_cur_rec depts_cur%rowtype; 
BEGIN
   open depts_cur;
   loop
     fetch depts_cur into depts_cur_rec;
     exit when depts_cur%notfound;
     dbms_output.put_line('Department: ' || depts_cur_rec.dname);
   end loop;
   close depts_cur;
END;

It is likely much easier, however, to simply use implicit cursors rather than explicit cursors for this sort of thing. That way, there is no need to manually specify the OPEN, FETCH, or CLOSE. There is no need to manually figure out when to exit the loop. There is no need to manually declare the record type. You just let Oracle handle that

BEGIN
  FOR dept_rec IN (SELECT dname 
                     FROM dept)
  LOOP
    dbms_output.put_line( 'Department: ' || dept_rec.dname );
  END LOOP;
END;

If you want to declare the cursor out-of-line, you can do that with implicit cursors as well

DECLARE
  CURSOR depts_cur 
      IS SELECT dname 
           FROM dept;
BEGIN
  FOR dept_rec IN depts_cur
  LOOP
    dbms_output.put_line( 'Department: ' || dept_rec.dname );
  END LOOP;
END;

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.