I am writing a procedure to deal with user defined object which is stored in ANYDATA. The object type and the attribute name can only be known at run time, so I can't define the viarable for it in declare section. In Java, I can use reflection to deal with it, I can know the class name and fields name. Then I can access the fields through reflection. Is there any way to do it in PLSQL like that? What in my head right now is creating an sql string in the procedure dynamically and execute it. But it is not what I want exactly.
Let's say, user A defined a ADT type as create or replace type Person_type as object (fname varchar2(10), lname varchar2(10));
and create an object instance and insert it into ANYDATA.
In my procedure, somehow I know I need to deal with the first attribute of this object, which is fname. So if know the adt type at the first place, my code will be like:
declare
adobject A.Person_type; -- HERE! I don't know the type yet, so I can't define adobject!
tempAnydata anydata;
rt number;
vbuffer varchar2(10);
...
begin
select somecolumn
into tempAnydata
from sometable
where something='something' for update;
rt := tempAnydata.GetObject(adobject);
vbuffer := adobject.fname; -- HERE! I don't know the attribute name is fname!
-- deal with vbuffer here
end;
So what should I do to make it dynamically? Thanks in advance.
You need to use ANYTYPE
to describe the ANYDATA
and ensure the type is correct. Then you can access the attribute using piecewise
and getVarchar2
.
Most of the code below is for checking the type, which you don't need if you're not concerned about type safety.
Function to return value:
create or replace function get_first_attribute(
p_anydata in out anydata --note the "out" - this is required for the "piecewise"
) return varchar2 is
v_typecode pls_integer;
v_anytype anytype;
begin
--Get the typecode, and the ANYTYPE
v_typecode := p_anydata.getType(v_anytype);
--Check that it's really an object
if v_typecode = dbms_types.typecode_object then
--If it is an object, find the first item
declare
v_first_attribute_typecode pls_integer;
v_aname varchar2(32767);
v_result pls_integer;
v_varchar varchar2(32767);
--Variables we don't really care about, but need for function output
v_prec pls_integer;
v_scale pls_integer;
v_len pls_integer;
v_csid pls_integer;
v_csfrm pls_integer;
v_attr_elt_type anytype;
begin
v_first_attribute_typecode := v_anytype.getAttrElemInfo(
pos => 1, --First attribute
prec => v_prec,
scale => v_scale,
len => v_len,
csid => v_csid,
csfrm => v_csfrm,
attr_elt_type => v_attr_elt_type,
aname => v_aname);
--Check typecode of attribute
if v_first_attribute_typecode = dbms_types.typecode_varchar2 then
--Now that we've verified the type, get the actual value.
p_anydata.piecewise;
v_result := p_anydata.getVarchar2(c => v_varchar);
--DEBUG: Print the attribute name, in case you're curious
--dbms_output.put_line('v_aname: '||v_aname);
return v_varchar;
else
raise_application_error(-20000, 'Unexpected 1st Attribute Typecode: '||
v_first_attribute_typecode);
end if;
end;
else
raise_application_error(-20000, 'Unexpected Typecode: '||v_typecode);
end if;
end;
/
Types:
create or replace type Person_type as object (fname varchar2(10), lname varchar2(10));
create or replace type other_type as object (first_name varchar2(10), poetry clob);
Test Run:
declare
--Create records
v_type1 person_type := person_type('Ford', 'Prefect');
v_type2 other_type := other_type('Paula', 'blah blah...');
v_anydata anydata;
begin
--Convert to ANYDATA.
--Works as long as ANYDATA is an object with a varchar2 as the first attribute.
v_anydata := anydata.convertObject(v_type1);
dbms_output.put_line(get_first_attribute(v_anydata));
v_anydata := anydata.convertObject(v_type2);
dbms_output.put_line(get_first_attribute(v_anydata));
end;
/
Outputs:
Ford
Paula
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