DELETE recordVALIDATE ( condition , msg-expression )NO-ERRORTo delete a record in a table defined for multiple databases, you must qualify the record’s table name with the database name. See the Record phrase reference entry for more information.The condition is a Boolean expression (a constant, field name, variable name, or expression) with a value of TRUE or FALSE.The msg-expression is the message you want to display if the condition is FALSE. You must enclose msg-expression in quotation marks ("").
VALIDATE(TRUE,"")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.
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.
Use ERROR-STATUS:GET-MESSAGE( message-num ) to retrieve a particular message, where message-num is 1 for the first message.The r-delet.p procedure deletes all the records in the Customer table.
FOR EACH Customer:DELETE Customer.END.The r-delet2.p procedure prompts the user for a Customer number and then displays the name of that Customer. It then prompts the user to press y to confirm the deletion of the Customer record. The user’s response is stored in the del variable. If the value of the del variable is y, the procedure deletes the Customer record.The r-delval.p procedure prompts the user for a Customer number. The procedure displays the name of the Customer and prompts the user: Do you want to delete this Customer? If the user answers no, the procedure prompts the user for another Customer number. If the user answers yes, the procedure checks whether the Customer has orders, using the VALIDATE option. If they do have orders, the procedure displays this message: This Customer has outstanding orders and cannot be deleted. If the Customer has no orders, the procedure deletes the Customer.
When you run procedures that delete large numbers of records (for example, a month-end table purge), the process runs much faster if you use the No Crash Protection (-i) parameter in single-user mode. (You must back up your database before using this option.) See OpenEdge Deployment: Startup Command and Parameter Reference for more information on startup parameters.
If you have previously retrieved record with a field list, the DELETE statement rereads the complete record before deleting it.
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