PREPARE (SQL statement)

Prepares an SQL statement for execution.

Syntax

PREPARE sid FROM sqltext
  1. sid is an identifier to handle the prepared SQL statement.
  2. sqltext is a string expression containing the SQL statement to be prepared.

Usage

The PREPARE instruction allocates resources for an SQL statement handle, in the context of the current database connection. The SQL text is sent to the database server for parsing, validation and to generate the execution plan.

Prepared SQL statements can be executed with the EXECUTE instruction, or, when the SQL statement generates a result set, the prepared statement can be used to declare cursors with the DECLARE instruction.

A statement identifier (sid) can represent only one SQL statement at a time. You can execute a new PREPARE instruction with an existing statement identifier if you wish to assign the text of a different SQL statement to the statement identifier. The scope of reference of the sid statement identifier is local to the module where it is declared. That is, the identifier of a statement that was prepared in one module cannot be referenced from another module.

The SQL statement can have parameter placeholders, identified by the question mark (?) character. You cannot directly reference a variable in the text of a prepared SQL statement. You cannot use question mark (?) placeholders for SQL identifiers such as a table name or a column name; you must specify these identifiers in the statement text when you prepare it.

Resources allocated by PREPARE can be released later by the FREE instruction.

The number of prepared statements in a single program is limited by the database server and the available memory. Make sure that you free the resources when you no longer need the prepared statement.

Some database servers support multiple SQL statement preparation in a unique PREPARE instruction, but most database servers deny multiple statements. You should only prepare one SQL statement at a time.

Example

FUNCTION deleteOrder(n)
  DEFINE n INTEGER
  PREPARE s1 FROM "DELETE FROM order WHERE key=?"
  EXECUTE s1 USING n 
  FREE s1
END FUNCTION
See EXECUTE for more code examples.