Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
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Each stored program contains a body that consists of an SQL statement. This statement may be a compound
statement made up of several statements separated by semicolon (;
) characters. For
example, the following stored procedure has a body made up of a BEGIN ... END
block that contains a SET
statement and a REPEAT
loop that itself contains another SET
statement:
CREATE PROCEDURE dorepeat(p1 INT)BEGIN SET @x = 0; REPEAT SET @x = @x + 1; UNTIL @x > p1 END REPEAT;END;
If you use the mysql client program to define a stored program containing semicolon characters, a problem arises. By default, mysql itself recognizes the semicolon as a statement delimiter, so you must redefine the delimiter temporarily to cause mysql to pass the entire stored program definition to the server.
To redefine the mysql delimiter, use the delimiter
command. The following example shows how to do this for the dorepeat()
procedure
just shown. The delimiter is changed to //
to enable the entire definition to be
passed to the server as a single statement, and then restored to ;
before invoking
the procedure. This enables the ;
delimiter used in the procedure body to be passed
through to the server rather than being interpreted by mysql itself.
mysql>delimiter //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE dorepeat(p1 INT)
->BEGIN
->SET @x = 0;
->REPEAT SET @x = @x + 1; UNTIL @x > p1 END REPEAT;
->END
->//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)mysql>delimiter ;
mysql>CALL dorepeat(1000);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)mysql>SELECT @x;
+------+| @x |+------+| 1001 |+------+1 row in set (0.00 sec)
You can redefine the delimiter to a string other than //
, and the delimiter can
consist of a single character or multiple characters. You should avoid the use of the backslash ("\
") character because that
is the escape character for MySQL.
The following is an example of a function that takes a parameter, performs an operation using an SQL function,
and returns the result. In this case, it is unnecessary to use delimiter
because
the function definition contains no internal ;
statement delimiters:
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION hello (s CHAR(20))
mysql>RETURNS CHAR(50) DETERMINISTIC
->RETURN CONCAT('Hello, ',s,'!');
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)mysql>SELECT hello('world');
+----------------+| hello('world') |+----------------+| Hello, world! |+----------------+1 row in set (0.00 sec)