In your original code everything from the first CREATE TYPE
to the final /
is being interpreted as a single command, and taken as a whole everything after the first semicolon is invalid syntax for that first create. If you did show errors
after your solitary /
you'd see:
LINE/COL ERROR
-------- -------------------------------------------
5/1 PLS-00103: Encountered the symbol "CREATE"
The SQL*Plus documentation describes what /
does, and also says how to run PL/SQL blocks. It may not be obvious in this case but your example code has two PL/SQL blocks:
Stored procedures are PL/SQL functions, packages, or procedures. To create stored procedures, you use the following SQL CREATE commands:
Entering any of these commands places you in PL/SQL mode, where you can enter your PL/SQL subprogram. For more information, see Running PL/SQL Blocks. When you are done typing your PL/SQL subprogram, enter a period (.) on a line by itself to terminate PL/SQL mode. To run the SQL command and create the stored procedure, you must enter RUN or slash (/). A semicolon (;) will not execute these CREATE commands.
So you need a slash after each of your create commands, and don't strictly need semicolons for these examples:
CREATE TYPE schema1.ATTRIBUTES AS OBJECT (
object_name VARCHAR2(100),
object_value VARCHAR2(100))
/
CREATE TYPE schema1.ATTRIBUTETABLE AS TABLE OF schema1.ATTRIBUTES
/
COMMIT;
If you have that in a script (with a valid schema name, or omitting that for your own schema) and run the script through SQL*Plus you'll see:
SQL> @your_script.sql
Type created.
Type created.
Commit complete.
And you can check both were created:
SQL> select object_type, object_name, status from user_objects where object_name like 'ATTR%';
OBJECT_TYPE OBJECT_NAME STATUS
------------------- ------------------------------ -------
TYPE ATTRIBUTES VALID
TYPE ATTRIBUTETABLE VALID
Your commit needs either a semicolon or a slash, but not both - it will commit twice if you do, which is just extra overhead. You don't really need to commit at all though, as DDL implicitly commits anyway.
So if you have a PL/SQL block or anything that SQL*Plus views as a stored procedure you have to submit it with a slash. For everything else you can use a semicolon (which you can even change with set sqlterminator
) or a slash, but not both as that will execute it twice.
You may prefer to consistently use slashes even for plain SQL, or for all DDL. But remember the slash needs to be the first character on a new line, whereas the semicolon can immediately follow the actual command. It's really as matter of style and consistency unless you have coding standards you need to follow - either works, so use whichever makes more sense or is more readable to you.