RUN STORED-PROCEDURE procedure
[ integer-field = PROC-HANDLE ]
[ NO-ERROR ]
[ ( parameter [ , parameter ] ... ) ]
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Use send-sql-statement to send an SQL statement to an SQL-based data source
Suppresses ABL errors or error messages that would otherwise occur and diverts them to the
ERROR-STATUS system handle. If an error occurs, the action of the statement is not done and execution continues with the next statement. If the statement fails, any persistent side-effects of the statement are backed out. If the statement includes an expression that contains other executable elements, like methods, the work performed by these elements may or may not be done, depending on the order the AVM resolves the expression elements and the occurrence of the error.
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Check if the ERROR-STATUS:NUM-MESSAGES attribute is greater than zero to see if the AVM generated error messages. ABL handle methods used in a block without a CATCH end block treat errors as warnings and do not raise ERROR, do not set the ERROR-STATUS:ERROR attribute, but do add messages to the ERROR-STATUS system handle. Therefore, this test is the better test for code using handle methods without CATCH end blocks. ABL handle methods used in a block with a CATCH end block raise ERROR and add messages to the error object generated by the AVM. In this case, the AVM does not update the ERROR-STATUS system handle.
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A CATCH statement, which introduces a CATCH end block, is analogous to a NO-ERROR option in that it also suppresses errors, but it does so for an entire block of code. It is different in that the error messages are contained in a class-based error object (generated by the AVM or explicitly thrown), as opposed to the ERROR-STATUS system handle. Also, if errors raised in the block are not handled by a compatible CATCH block, ON ERROR phrase, or UNDO statement, then the error is not suppressed, but handled with the default error processing for that block type.
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When a statement contains the NO-ERROR option and resides in a block with a CATCH end block, the NO-ERROR option takes precedence over the CATCH block. That is, an error raised on the statement with the NO-ERROR option will not be handled by a compatible CATCH end block. The error is redirected to the ERROR-STATUS system handle as normal.
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If an error object is thrown to a statement that includes the NO-ERROR option, then the information and messages in the error object will be used to set the ERROR-STATUS system handle. This interoperability feature is important for those integrating code that uses the traditional NO-ERROR technique with the newer, structured error handling that features error objects and CATCH end blocks.
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[ INPUT | OUTPUT | INPUT-OUTPUT ]
[ PARAM parameter-name = ] expression
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An expression is a constant, field name, variable name, or expression. INPUT is the default. OUTPUT and INPUT-OUTPUT parameters must be record fields or program variables. For ORACLE, OUTPUT and INPUT-OUTPUT work the same way.
If you do not specify parameter-name (the name of a keyword parameter defined by the stored procedure), you must supply all of the parameters in correct order. If you do specify
parameter-name, you must precede your assignment statement with the keyword PARAM. If you do not supply a required parameter, and no default is specified in the stored procedure, you receive a run-time error.
This procedure uses the send-sql-statement option of the RUN STORED-PROCEDURE statement to send SQL to ORACLE. It writes the results of the stored procedure into the ABL-supplied buffer, proc-text-buffer. The same code works for sending SQL to an ODBC-compliant data source: