How You Can Use the Insert Statement
The insert statement adds new rows to a database table. The values that populate the new rows can come from any of the following places:
• Variables associated with the current frame:
– Simple variables
– Attributes of reference variables
– Columns in a dynamic array
• Global variables
• A subselect
• Constants
• Expression results
Each insert statement adds one row to the database. For example, the following statement adds a single new customer record to the customer database table:
insert into customer (acctno, cphone, cname,
addr, ccity, cstate, czip, cdistrict, cstatus,
cacctbal)
values (:acctno, :cphone, :cname, :caddr,
:ccity, :cstate, :czip, :cdistrict,
:cstatus,:cacctbal);
You may insert several rows into a table using a loop. For example:
i = 1
for i = 1 to new_customers.lastrow do
insert into customer
(acctno, cphone, cname)
values
(
:new_customers[i].acctno,
:new_customers[i].cphone,
:new_customers[i].cname
)
endfor;
For a discussion of processing arrays using the row state attribute, see
Working with Arrays, Table Fields, and Collections.
Last modified date: 12/20/2023