According to documentation CLOB and NCLOB datatype columns, can store up to 8 terabytes of character data.
I have text, which contains 100 000 character, how can I run query like this:
UPDATE my_table SET clob_column = 'text, which contains 100 000 characters'
WHERE id = 1
?
If in text, character count is up to 32767, there is possible to use PL/SQL anonymous block:
DECLARE
myvar VARCHAR2(15000);
BEGIN
myvar := 'text, which contains 100 000 characters';
UPDATE my_table SET clob_column = myvar
WHERE id = 1;
....
END;
What is solution, where text is very large and contains for example 100 000 characters ?
update
I am trying with dbms_lob.append
:
create table t1 (c clob);
declare
c1 clob;
c2 clob;
begin
c1 := 'abc';
c2 := 'text, which contains 100 000 characters';
dbms_lob.append(c1, c2);
insert into t1 values (c1);
end;
Though, also got error: string literal too long
.
I am doing something wrong ?
You should use the dbms_lob
package, the procedure to add some string to the clob is dbms_lob.append
.
DBMS_LOB documentation
declare
c1 clob;
c2 varchar2(32000);
begin
c1 := 'abc';
c2 := 'text, which contains 32 000 characters';
dbms_lob.append(c1, c2);
c2 := 'some more text, which contains 32 000 characters';
dbms_lob.append(c1, c2);
insert into t1 values (c1);
end;
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With