PSQL provides all the basic constructs of traditional structured programming languages, and also includes DML statements (SELECT
, INSERT
, UPDATE
, DELETE
, etc.), with a slight modified syntax in some cases.
7.1 Elements of PSQL
A procedural extension may contain declarations of local variables, routines and cursors, assignments, conditional statements, loops, statements for raising custom exceptions, error handling and sending messages (events) to client applications. Triggers have access to special context variables, two arrays that store, respectively, the NEW
values for all columns during insert and update activity, and the OLD
values during update and delete work.
Statements that modify metadata (DDL) are not available in PSQL.
If DML statements (SELECT
, INSERT
, UPDATE
, DELETE
, etc.) in the body of the module (procedure, function, trigger or block) use parameters, only named parameters can be used. If DML statements contain named parameters, then they must be previously declared as local variables using in the declaration section of the module, or as input or output variables in the module header.
When a DML statement with parameters is included in PSQL code, the parameter name must be prefixed by a colon (:
) in most situations. The colon is optional in statement syntax that is specific to PSQL, such as assignments and conditionals and the INTO
clause. The colon prefix on parameters is not required when calling stored procedures from within another PSQL module or in DSQL.
Stored procedures and functions (including those defined in packages) are executed in the context of the transaction in which they are called. Triggers are executed as an intrinsic part of the operation of the DML statement: thus, their execution is within the same transaction context as the statement itself. Individual transactions are launched for database event triggers.
Statements that start and end transactions are not available in PSQL, but it is possible to run a statement or a block of statements in an autonomous transaction.
PSQL code modules consist of a header and a body. The DDL statements for defining them are complex statements; that is, they consist of a single statement that encloses blocks of multiple statements. These statements begin with a verb (CREATE
, ALTER
, DROP
, RECREATE
, CREATE OR ALTER
) and end with the last END
statement of the body.
7.1.3.1 The Module Header
The header provides the module name and defines any input and output parameters or — for functions — the return type. Stored procedures and PSQL blocks may have input and output parameters. Functions may have input parameters and must have a scalar return type. Triggers do not have either input or output parameters.
The header of a trigger indicates the database event (insert, update or delete, or a combination) and the phase of operation (BEFORE
or AFTER
that event) that will cause it to fire.
7.1.3.2 The Module Body
The module body is either a PSQL module body, or an external module body.
Syntax of a Module Body
Table 7.1.3.2.1 Module Body Parameters
7.1.3.2.1 The PSQL Module Body
The PSQL body starts with an optional section that declares variables and subroutines, followed by a block of statements that run in a logical sequence, like a program. A block of statements — or compound statement — is enclosed by the BEGIN
and END
keywords, and is executed as a single unit of code. The main BEGIN…END
block may contain any number of other BEGIN…END
blocks, both embedded and sequential. Blocks can be nested to a maximum depth of 512 blocks. All statements except BEGIN
and END
are terminated by semicolons (;
). No other character is valid for use as a terminator for PSQL statements.
Switching the Terminator in isql
Here we digress a little, to explain how to switch the terminator character in the isql utility to make it possible to define PSQL modules in that environment without conflicting with isql itself, which uses the same character, semicolon (;
), as its own statement terminator.
isql Command SET TERM
Used forChanging the terminator character(s) to avoid conflict with the terminator character in PSQL statements
Available inISQL only
Syntax
Table 1.1 SET TERM
Parameters
Argument | Description |
---|---|
new_terminator | New terminator |
old_terminator | Old terminator |
When you write your triggers and stored procedures in isql — either in the interactive interface or in scripts — running a statement is needed to switch the normal isql statement terminator from the semicolon to some other character or short string, to avoid conflict with the non-changeable semicolon terminator in PSQL. The switch to an alternative terminator needs to be done before you begin defining PSQL objects or running your scripts.
The alternative terminator can be any string of characters except for a space, an apostrophe or the current terminator character(s). Any letter character(s) used will be case-sensitive.
ExampleChanging the default semicolon to ^
(caret) and using it to submit a stored procedure definition: character as an alternative terminator character:
7.1.3.2.2 The External Module Body
The external module body specifies the UDR engine used to execute the external module, and optionally specifies the name of the UDR routine to call (<extname>) and/or a string (<extbody>) with UDR-specific semantics.
Configuration of external modules and UDR engines is not covered further in this Language Reference. Consult the documentation of a specific UDR engine for details.