FETCH (result set cursor)
Moves a cursor to a new row in the corresponding result set and retrieves the row values into fetch buffers.
Syntax
FETCH [ direction ] cid
[ INTO fvar [,...] ]
{
NEXT
| { PREVIOUS | PRIOR }
| CURRENT
| FIRST
| LAST
| ABSOLUTE position
| RELATIVE offset
}
- cid is the identifier of the database cursor.
- fvar is a variable used as fetch buffer.
- direction options different from
NEXT
can only be used with scrollable cursors. - position is an positive integer expression.
- offset is a positive or negative integer expression.
Usage
The FETCH
instruction retrieves a row from a result set of an opened cursor. The
cursor must be opened before using the FETCH
instruction.
The INTO
clause can be used to provide the fetch buffers that receive the result
set column values.
A sequential cursor can fetch only the next row in sequence from the result set.
The NEXT
clause (the default) retrieves the next row in the result set. If the
row pointer was on the last row before executing the instruction, the SQL code is set to 100
(NOTFOUND
), and the row pointer remains on the last row. (if you issue a
FETCH PREVIOUS
at this time, you get the next-to-last row).
The PREVIOUS
clause retrieves the previous row in the result set. If the row
pointer was on the first row before executing the instruction, the SQL code is set to 100
(NOTFOUND
), and the row pointer remains on the first row. (if you issue a
FETCH NEXT
at this time, you get the second row).
The CURRENT
clause retrieves the current row in the result set.
The FIRST
clause retrieves the first row in the result set.
The LAST
clause retrieves the last row in the result set.
The ABSOLUTE
clause retrieves the row at position in the
result set. If the position is not correct, the SQL code is set to 100
(NOTFOUND
). Absolute row positions are numbered from 1.
The RELATIVE
clause moves offset rows in the result set and
returns the row at the current position. The offset can be a negative value. If the
offset is not correct, the SQL code is set to 100 (NOTFOUND
). If
offset is zero, the current row is fetched.
Fetching rows can have specific behavior when the cursor was declared FOR UPDATE
to perform a positioned update or delete.
Example
MAIN
DEFINE cust_rec RECORD
cnum INTEGER,
cname CHAR(20)
END RECORD
DATABASE stores
DECLARE c1 SCROLL CURSOR FOR SELECT customer_num, cust_name FROM customer
OPEN c1
FETCH c1 INTO cust_rec.*
FETCH LAST c1 INTO cust_rec.*
FETCH PREVIOUS c1 INTO cust_rec.*
FETCH FIRST c1 INTO cust_rec.*
FETCH LAST c1 -- INTO clause is optional
FETCH FIRST c1 -- INTO clause is optional
END MAIN