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Oracle Advanced PL/SQL Developer Professional Guide

You're reading from  Oracle Advanced PL/SQL Developer Professional Guide

Product type Book
Published in May 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849687225
Pages 440 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Saurabh K. Gupta Saurabh K. Gupta
Profile icon Saurabh K. Gupta

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Oracle Advanced PL/SQL Developer Professional Guide
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Overview of PL/SQL Programming Concepts Designing PL/SQL Code Using Collections Using Advanced Interface Methods Implementing VPD with Fine Grained Access Control Working with Large Objects Using SecureFile LOBs Compiling and Tuning to Improve Performance Caching to Improve Performance Analyzing PL/SQL Code Profiling and Tracing PL/SQL Code Safeguarding PL/SQL Code against SQL Injection Attacks Answers to Practice Questions Index

Cursor variables


Cursor variables provide a unique service to refer to different context areas in SGA as they can be associated to more than one SELECT statement in the same block. While static cursors remain stuck to a single static SELECT, cursor variables purely act like a pointer variable. At runtime, the pointer can be moved to point to different work areas having different SELECT statements and hence, different result sets.

By virtue of their behavior, a cursor variable differs from a static cursor. Static cursors have the life cycle of only one SQL processing, but cursor variables can live for many SQL statements. Once the processing under a work area is finished, they are ready to move on and point to a different work area. Cursors cannot be passed as arguments, but cursor variables can pass the result sets to other programs and even client environments. These indifferent properties make cursor variables a robust and flexible code feature in PL/SQL.

Cursor variables can be very handy...

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