Execute a Dynamic Non-select Statement
To execute a dynamic non-select statement, use either the EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement or the PREPARE and EXECUTE statements. EXECUTE IMMEDIATE is most useful if the program executes the statement only once within a transaction. If the program executes the statement many times within a transaction, for example, within a program loop, use the PREPARE and EXECUTE combination: prepare the statement once, execute it as many times as necessary.
If the program does not know whether the statement is a SELECT statement, the program can prepare and describe the statement. The results returned by the DESCRIBE statement indicate whether the statement was a select. For more information, see
Execute a Dynamic SELECT Statement.
Using EXECUTE IMMEDIATE to Execute a Non-select Statement
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE executes an SQL statement specified using a string literal or host language variable. Use this statement to execute all but a few of the SQL statements; the exceptions are listed in
EXECUTE IMMEDIATE Statement.
For non-select statements, the syntax of EXECUTE IMMEDIATE is as follows:
EXEC SQL EXECUTE IMMEDIATE statement_string;
For example, the following statement executes a DROP statement specified as a string literal:
/*
** Statement specification included
** in string literal. The string literal does
** NOT include 'exec sql' or ';'
*/
exec sql execute immediate 'drop table employee';
The following example reads SQL statements from a file into a host string variable buffer and executes the contents of the variable. If the variable includes a statement that cannot be executed by EXECUTE IMMEDIATE , or if another error occurs, the loop is broken.
exec sql begin declare section;
character buffer(100);
exec sql end declare section;
open file;
loop while not end of file and not error
read statement from file into buffer;
exec sql execute immediate :buffer;
end loop;
close file;
If only the statement parameters (such as an employee name or number) change at runtime, EXECUTE IMMEDIATE is not needed. A value can be replaced with a host language variable. For instance, the following example increases the salaries of employees whose employee numbers are read from a file:
loop while not end of file and not error
read number from file;
exec sql update employee
set sal = sal * 1.1
where eno = :number;
end loop;
Preparing and Executing a Non-select Statement
The PREPARE and EXECUTE statements can also execute dynamic non-select statements. These statements enable your program to save a statement string and execute it as many times as necessary. A prepared statement is discarded when the transaction in which it was prepared is rolled back or committed. If a statement with the same name as an existing statement is prepared, the new statement supersedes the old statement.
The following example demonstrates how a runtime user can prepare a dynamically specified SQL statement and execute it a specific number of times:
read SQL statement from terminal into buffer;
exec sql prepare s1 from :buffer;
read number in N
loop N times
exec sql execute s1;
end loop;
The following example creates a table whose name is the same as the user name, and inserts a set of rows with fixed-typed parameters (the user’s children) into the table:
get user name from terminal;
buffer = 'create table ' + user_name +
'(child char(15), age integer)';
exec sql execute immediate :buffer;
buffer = 'insert into ' + user_name +
'(child, age) values (?, ?)';
exec sql prepare s1 from :buffer;
read child's name and age from terminal;
loop until no more children
exec sql execute s1 using :child, :age;
read child's name and age from terminal;
end loop;
For a list of statements that cannot be executed using PREPARE and EXECUTE, see
PREPARE and EXECUTE Statements.
Last modified date: 08/29/2024