Sie müssen dbms_output.put_line
emulieren :)
Schema:
create table Employee(
name varchar2(100),
id integer,
salary integer,
PRIMARY KEY(id)
);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('sa',94,100);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('pr',88,150);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('ji',33,900);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('na',24,880);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('po',65,770);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('ri',69,910);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('uj',12,650);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('ad',43,440);
insert into Employee(name,id,salary) values('sam',40,550);
create table dbmsoutput (
pos int,
mes varchar2(4000)
);
SQL:
DECLARE
employee_record Employee%ROWTYPE;
procedure put_line(p_mes in varchar2) is
v_pos int;
begin
select count(0) into v_pos from dbmsoutput;
insert into dbmsoutput (pos, mes) values (v_pos, p_mes);
end;
BEGIN
put_line('Hello! This code is powered by dbms_output emulator :)');
-- Your code here:
select * into employee_record from Employee where id>90;
put_line(employee_record.name||' '||employee_record.id||' '||employee_record.salary);
--
put_line('Bye!');
END;
/
SELECT mes FROM dbmsoutput order by pos
Geige