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This procedure has address_table out pkg.address_tab_type

create or replace
procedure hr.p_get_address
  (
    in_pid in number,
    address_table out pkg.address_tab_type
  )
as
  address_row pkg.address_rec_type;
  cursor address_cursor is 
    select
      addr.pid, addr.street, addr.city
    from
      hr.address addr
    where
      pid = in_pid;
begin
  row_count := 0;
  open address_cursor;
  loop
    fetch address_cursor into address_row;
    exit when address_cursor%NOTFOUND;
    row_count := row_count + 1;
    address_table(row_count) := address_row;
  end loop;
  close address_cursor;
end p_get_address;

My pkg declares custom address_rec_type and address_tab_type:

create or replace
package hr.pkg as
  type address_rec_type is
    record
    (
      pid address.pid%type,
      street address.street%type,
      city address.city%type
    );
  type address_tab_type is
    table of address_rec_type index by binary_integer;
end hr.pkg;

When I execute my stored procedure in SQL Developer everything work file. So, my proc. works. I need to call this procedure and get address_table in C# (ASP.NET). I am using odp.net. I am able to call procedure with refCursor, works fine. How do I call procedure with output parameter of a user defined type?

2

1 Answer 1

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You will not be able to use package-defined record data types as parameters with ODP.NET. You can used database-defined types (i.e., defined using a CREATE TYPE statement) but answering how to do that is outside the scope of your question.

So your options are create database-defined types (and learn how to use the Abstract Data Type API of ODP.NET or to change your procedure parameter list as a decomposition the primative data types of the package-defined record data type.

3
  • How to do that is exactly what I am asking. I know how to do it in database with package or database defined types, what I don't know is how to process an OUT parameter from a stored procedure of UDT. That's what I am hoping to get from users of this site. Oct 4, 2013 at 17:20
  • But that isn't your question above. Nov 6, 2013 at 1:04
  • @user1863635 Michael was being a little sticky about answering the question as asked, as 'Chameleon Questions' can be irritating to answer, you spend time answering only to see the original be edited to a completely different question, or you answer what you meant, and other users complain you never answered the original question. I doubt you care 8 years on, but correct behaviour would have been to re-ask the question correctly and accept this if it's correct.
    – Ryan Leach
    Jul 30, 2021 at 6:44

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