4
create or replace procedure address_insert 
as

CREATE type colorarray is varray(10) of varchar2(10);
CREATE type cities is varray(6) of varchar2(20);
CREATE type states is varray(6) of varchar2(15);
CREATE type zipcodes is varray(6) of number(10);
CREATE type countries is varray(6) of varchar2(15);

city cities;
Colour colorarray;
zip zipcodes;
state states;
country countries;
id1 number;
x number;
ca number;
r number;

begin
x:=1;
ca:=1;
id1:=1;
r:=1;
city:=cities('Visakhapatnam','Hyderabad','Bangalore','Chennai','Kurnool','secunderabad');
colour :=colorarray('Red', 'Blue', 'green', 'Dark blue', 'yellow', 'orange', 'brown', 'black', 'white', 'purple');
state:=states('Telangana','Tamilnadu','Karnataka','Andhra Pradesh','Madya Pradesh','Kerala');
zip:=zipcodes(530081,500072,316190,981272,717999,621896);
country:=countries('India','Nepal','Pakistan','USA','Bangladesh','UK');

while x<(select count(persons_id) from person_data) loop

if ca>10 then
ca:=1;
end if;
if r>6 then
r:=1;
end if;

insert into persons_addresses(Address_id,Persons_id,flatname,flatno,house_color,contact_person,address_line1,address_line2,address_line3,
city,district,state,zipcode,country) values
(id1,(select persons_id from (select persons_id,row_number()over (order by persons_id) as rn from person_data)tmp where rn=x),
(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 15) from dual),(SELECT round(dbms_random.value(100,1000)) num FROM dual),colour(ca),
(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 5)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 7) from dual),
(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 9)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 6)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 8)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 10) 
FROM dual),(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 9)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 6)|| ' ' ||
dbms_random.string('L', 8)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 10) FROM dual),(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 9)|| ' ' ||
dbms_random.string('L', 6)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 8)|| ' ' ||dbms_random.string('L', 10) FROM dual),city(r),(SELECT dbms_random.string('L', 9) from dual),
state(r),zip(r),country(r));
commit;
id1:=id1+1;
ca:=ca+1;
r:=r+1;
x:=x+1;
end loop;
EXCEPTION  -- exception handlers begin
  WHEN OTHERS THEN  -- handles all other errors
          DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE (SQLCODE|| ' ' || SQLERRM);
end;

There is a compilation warning.

Warning: execution completed with warning procedure address_insert Compiled.

when executed:

execute address_insert

Error starting at line 1 in command: execute address_insert Error report: ORA-06550: line 1, column 7: PLS-00905: object DATAFOCUS_GROUP.ADDRESS_INSERT is invalid ORA-06550: line 1, column 7: PL/SQL: Statement ignored 06550. 00000 - "line %s, column %s:\n%s" *Cause: Usually a PL/SQL compilation error. *Action:

Is there any way we can find out the compilation errors?

SELECT *
  FROM USER_ERRORS
  WHERE NAME = 'ADDRESS_INSERT'

The above query helped retrieve the errors.

Errors:

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

begin function pragma procedure subtype type current cursor delete exists prior external language The symbol "CREATE" was ignored. " the above error have been encountered due to varray definition. Is there any alternative?

other errors:

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

( - + case mod new not null continue avg count current exists max min prior sql stddev sum variance execute forall merge time timestamp interval date pipe

, from "

2 Answers 2

6

You can get compilation errors from the DBA_ERRORS or USER_ERRORS views. In your case, try something like

SELECT *
  FROM USER_ERRORS
  WHERE NAME = 'ADDRESS_INSERT'

Remember that in Oracle table, view, procedure, package, etc names are UPPER_CASE by default, even if they're shown in lower_case in your source code.

Right off the top I can see that CREATE TYPE is not valid in a procedure. You probably want something like

TYPE COLORARRAY IS VARRAY(10) OF VARCHAR2(10)

See the PL/SQL Reference Manual section on defining collection types. for further information.

Best of luck.

1
  • Yes you are absolutely right. I got it now. Thanks Bob!
    – Darla
    Nov 4, 2016 at 11:37
4

If you're in SQL*Plus, do a 'SHOW ERRORS'. This also works in SQL Developer's SQL Worksheet.

enter image description here

If you're in a proper IDE - you'll see the errors at compile time.

enter image description here

2
  • How is 'show errors' going to work? Is it going to print (for eg. procedure)names and their errors. Do we execute it alone ?or we associate it with plsql blck?.
    – Darla
    Nov 4, 2016 at 12:54
  • 1
    @EmilySharon show errors in SQL Developer works same way it does in SQL*PLUS. Just type it after your create procedure|function|type|package|etc statement as shown in pic#1 Nov 4, 2016 at 13:00

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.