OPEN (result set cursor)
Executes the SQL statement with result set associated with the specified database cursor
Syntax
OPEN cid
[ USING pvar {IN|OUT|INOUT} [,...] ]
[ WITH REOPTIMIZATION ]
- cid is the identifier of the database cursor.
- pvar is a variable containing an input value for an SQL parameter.
Usage:
The OPEN
instruction
executes the SQL statement of a declared cursor. The result
set is produced on the server side and rows can be fetched.
The USING
clause is required to provide the
SQL parameters as program variables, if the cursor was
declared with a prepared statement that includes (?
)
question mark placeholders.
A subsequent OPEN
statement
closes the cursor and then reopens it. When the database
server reopens the cursor, it creates a new result set, based on the
current values of the variables in the USING
clause.
If the variables have changed since the previous OPEN
statement,
reopening the cursor can generate an entirely different
result set.
The IN
, OUT
or INOUT
options
can be used to call stored procedures having input / output
parameters and generating a result set. Use the IN
, OUT
or INOUT
options
to indicate if a parameter is respectively for input,
output or both.
Sometimes, query execution plans need to
be re-optimized when SQL parameter values change. Use
the WITH REOPTIMIZATION
clause to indicate that the
query execution plan has to be re-optimized on the database
server (this operation is normally done during the DECLARE
instruction).
If this option is not supported by the database server,
it is ignored.
In an IBM® Informix® database that is ANSI-compliant, you receive an error code if you try to open a cursor that is already open. Informix only!
A cursor
is closed with the CLOSE
instruction, or when the
parent connection is terminated (typically, when the program
ends). By using the CLOSE
instruction
explicitly, you release resources allocated for the result set in
the db client library and on the database server.
The database server evaluates the values that are
named in the USING
clause of the OPEN
statement only when it opens the cursor. While the cursor
is open, subsequent changes to program variables in the OPEN
clause
do not change the result set of the cursor; you must re-open
the cursor to re-execute the statement.
If you release cursor
resources with a FREE
instruction, you cannot use
the cursor unless you declare the cursor again.
The IN
, OUT
or
INOUT
options can only be used for simple variables,
you cannot specify those options for a complete record
with the record.* notation.
Example
MAIN
DEFINE k INTEGER
DEFINE n VARCHAR(50)
DATABASE stores
DECLARE c1 CURSOR FROM "SELECT cust_name FROM customer WHERE cust_id > ?"
LET k = 102
OPEN c1 USING k
FETCH c1 INTO n
LET k = 103
OPEN c1 USING k
FETCH c1 INTO n
END MAIN