FOR statement

Starts an iterating block that reads a record from each of one or more tables at the start of each block iteration. Use an END statement to end a FOR block.

Data movement



Syntax

This is the syntax for the FOR block:

[ label: ] 
FOR [ EACH | FIRST | LAST ]record-phrase 
  [ , [ EACH | FIRST | LAST ]record-phrase ]... 
  [ query-tuning-phrase ] 
  [ BREAK ] 
  [ BY expression[ DESCENDING ] 
  | COLLATE ( string , strength[ , collation] ) [ DESCENDING ] 
  ]... 
  [ variable = expression1 TO expression2 [ BY k ]] 
  [ WHILE expression ] 
  [ TRANSACTION ] 
  [ stop-after-phrase ] 
  [ on-error-phrase ] 
  [ on-endkey-phrase ] 
  [ on-quit-phrase ] 
  [ on-stop-phrase ] 
  [ frame-phrase ] :

  <block of statements>

END.
EACH
Starts an iterating block, finding a single record on each iteration. If you do not use the EACH keyword, the record-phrase you use must identify exactly one record in the table.
FIRST

Uses the criteria in the record-phrase to find the first record in the table that meets that criteria. The AVM finds the first record before any sorting.

The following statement displays Customer 1 (CustNum is the primary index of the Customer table), not the Customer with the lowest CreditLimit:

FOR FIRST Customer NO-LOCK BY Customer.CreditLimit:
  DISPLAY Customer.
END.

The following statement displays the Customer with the lowest CreditLimit:

FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK BY Customer.CreditLimit:
  DISPLAY Customer.
  LEAVE.
END.

See the Notes section for more information on using this option.

LAST

Uses the criteria in the record-phrase to find the last record in the table that meets that criteria. The AVM finds the last record before sorting.

FOR LAST Customer BY Customer.CreditLimit:
  DISPLAY Customer.
END.

The procedure above displays the Customer with the highest Customer number (CustNum is the primary index of the Customer table), not the Customer with the highest CreditLimit.

A procedure that displays the Customer with the highest CreditLimit looks like the following:

FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK BY Customer.CreditLimit DESCENDING:
  DISPLAY Customer.
  LEAVE.
END.

See the Notes section for more information on using this option.

record-phrase

Identifies the set of records you want to retrieve. This can also be the built-in buffer name, proc-text-buffer, that you can use to return table rows from a stored procedure.

To use FOR EACH/FIRST/LAST to access a record in a table defined for multiple databases, you must qualify the record's table name with the database name.

This is the syntax for record-phrase:

record [ field-list ]
  [ constant ] [ OF table]
  [ USE-INDEX index | TABLE-SCAN ]
  [ USING [ FRAME frame ] field
       [ AND [ FRAME frame ] field ] ...]
  [ WHERE expression ]
  [ TENANT-WHERE expression [ SKIP-GROUP-DUPLICATES ]]
  [ SHARE-LOCK | EXCLUSIVE-LOCK | NO-LOCK ]
  [ NO-PREFETCH ]

Specifying multiple occurrences of record-phrase selects the tables using an inner join.

For more information on record-phrase and inner joins, see Record phrase.

query-tuning-phrase

Allows programmatic control over the execution of a DataServer query. This is the syntax for the query-tuning-phrase:

QUERY-TUNING
  (
    {[    LOOKAHEAD [ CACHE-SIZE integer ]
          | NO-LOOKAHEAD
      ]
      [ DEBUG { SQL | EXTENDED }| NO-DEBUG ]
      [ SEPARATE-CONNECTION | NO-SEPARATE-CONNECTION ]
      [ JOIN-BY-SQLDB | NO-JOIN-BY-SQLDB ]
      [ BIND-WHERE | NO-BIND-WHERE ]
      [ INDEX-HINT | NO-INDEX-HINT ]
    }
  )

For more information on the query-tuning-phrase, refer to the appropriate DataServer Guide (OpenEdge Data Management: DataServer for Oracle or OpenEdge Data Management: DataServer for Microsoft SQL Server).

BREAK

Over a series of block iterations, you might want to do some work based on whether the value of a certain field changes. This field defines a break group. For example, you might be accumulating some value, such as a total. You use the BREAK option to define State as the break group. For example:

FOR EACH Customer BREAK BY Customer.State:
  DISPLAY Customer.State Customer.Name 
    Customer.CreditLimit (TOTAL BY state).
END.

Here, the AVM accumulates the total CreditLimit for all the customers in the Customer table. Each time the value of the State field changes, the AVM displays a subtotal of the CreditLimit values for customers in that state.

You can use the BREAK option anywhere in the block header, but you must also use the BY option to name a sort field.

You can use the BREAK option in conjunction with the ACCUMULATE statement and ACCUM function. For more information, see the reference entries for those language elements.

BY expression[ DESCENDING ]

Sorts the selected records by the value of expression. If you do not use the BY option, the AVM retrieves records in the order of the index used to satisfy the record-phrase criteria, or the primary index if no criteria is given. The DESCENDING option sorts the records in descending order (not in the default ascending order).

Note: You cannot reference a BLOB or CLOB field in the BY option.

You can use multiple BY options to do multi-level sorting. For example:

FOR EACH Customer BY Customer.CreditLimit BY Customer.Name

Here, the Customers are sorted in order by CreditLimit. Within each CreditLimit value, Customers are sorted alphabetically by Name.

There is a performance benefit if an index on expression exists: BREAK BY does not have to perform the sort that is otherwise required to evaluate FIRST, LAST, FIRST-OF, and LAST-OF expressions.

COLLATE ( string , strength[ , collation] ) [ DESCENDING ]

Generates the collation value of a string after applying a particular strength, and optionally, a particular collation. The DESCENDING option sorts the records in descending order (not in default ascending order).

string
A CHARACTER expression that evaluates to the string whose collation value you want to generate.
strength

A CHARACTER expression that evaluates to an ABL comparison strength or an International Components for Unicode (ICU) comparison strength.

The ABL comparison strengths include:

  • RAW — Generates a collation value for the string based on its binary value.
  • CASE-SENSITIVE — Generates a case-sensitive collation value for the string based on a particular collation. If you specify this strength with an ICU collation, the AVM applies the ICU TERTIARY strength.
  • CASE-INSENSITIVE — Generates a case-insensitive collation value for the string based on a particular collation. If you specify this strength with an ICU collation, the AVM applies the ICU SECONDARY strength.
  • CAPS — Generates a collation value for the string based on its binary value after converting any lowercase letters in the string to uppercase letters, based on the settings of the Internal Code Page (-cpinternal) and Case Table (-cpcase) startup parameters.

The ICU comparison strengths include:

  • PRIMARY — Generates a collation value for the base characters in the string.
  • SECONDARY — Generates a collation value for the base characters and any diacritical marks in the string.
  • TERTIARY — Generates a case-sensitive collation value for the base characters and any diacritical marks in the string.
  • QUATERNARY — Generates a case-sensitive collation value for the base characters and any diacritical marks in the string, and distinguishes words with and without punctuation. ICU uses this strength to distinguish between Hiragana and Katakana when applied with the ICU-JA (Japanese) collation. Otherwise, it is the same as TERTIARY.
Note: Use ICU comparison strengths only with ICU collations.
collation

A CHARACTER expression that evaluates to the name of an ABL collation table or ICU collation. If collation does not appear, COLLATE uses the collation table of the client.

The AVM reports an error and stops execution if one of the following occurs:

  • strength does not evaluate to a valid value.
  • collation does not evaluate to a collation table residing in the convmap.cp file.
  • collation evaluates to a collation table that is not defined for the code page corresponding to the -cpinternal startup parameter.
variable = expression1 TO expression2[ BY k]

Identifies the name of a field or variable whose value you are incrementing in a loop. The expression1 is the starting value for variable on the first iteration of the loop. The k is the amount to add to variable after each iteration and must be a constant. It (k) defaults to 1. The variable, expression1, and expression2 parameters must be integers.

When variable exceeds expression2 (or is less than expression2 if k is negative) the loop ends. Since expression1 is compared to expression2 at the start of the first iteration of the block, the block can be executed 0 times. The AVM re-evaluates expression2 on each iteration of the block.

WHILE expression
Indicates the condition in which you want the FOR EACH block to continue processing the statements within it. Using the WHILE expression option causes the block to iterate as long as the condition specified by the expression is TRUE or the AVM reaches the end of the index it is scanning, whichever comes first. The expression is any combination of constants, operators, field names, and variable names that yield a logical value.
TRANSACTION
Identifies the FOR EACH block as a system transaction block. The AVM starts a system transaction for each iteration of a transaction block if there is not already an active system transaction. See OpenEdge Getting Started: ABL Essentials for more information on transactions.
stop-after-phrase

Specifies a time-out value (in seconds) for the block. This is the syntax for the STOP-AFTER phrase:

STOP-AFTER time-limit

For more information see STOP-AFTER phrase.

on-error-phrase

Describes the processing that takes place when there is an error during a block. This is the syntax for the ON ERROR phrase:

ON ERROR UNDO
  [label1 ]
  [     , LEAVE [ label2 ]
     |  , NEXT [ label2 ]
     |  , RETRY [ label1 ]
     |  , RETURN [ return-value |
               ERROR [ return-value | error-object-expression]|
               NO-APPLY ] 
     |  , THROW 
  ]

For more information, see the ON ERROR phrase.

on-endkey-phrase

Describes the processing that takes place when the ENDKEY condition occurs during a block. This is the syntax for the ON ENDKEY phrase:

ON ENDKEY UNDO
  [ label1 ]
  [     , LEAVE [ label2 ]
     |  , NEXT [ label2 ]
     |  , RETRY [ label1 ]
     |  , RETURN [ return-value |
               ERROR [ return-value | error-object-expression ]|
               NO-APPLY ]

For more information, see the ON ENDKEY phrase.

on-quit-phrase

Describes the processing that takes place when a QUIT statement is executed during a block. This is the syntax for the ON QUIT phrase:

ON QUIT
  [ UNDO [ label1 ]]
  [     , LEAVE [ label2 ]
     |  , NEXT [ label2 ]
     |  , RETRY [ label1 ]
     |  , RETURN [ return-value |
               ERROR [ return-value | error-object-expression ]|
               NO-APPLY ]
]

For more information, see the ON QUIT phrase.

on-stop-phrase

Describes the processing that takes place when the STOP condition occurs during a block. This is the syntax for the ON STOP phrase:

ON STOP UNDO
  [ label1 ]
  [     , LEAVE [ label2 ]
     |  , NEXT [ label2 ]
     |  , RETRY [ label1 ]
     |  , RETURN [ return-value |
               ERROR [ return-value |error-object-expression]|
               NO-APPLY ] 
  ]

For more information, see the ON STOP phrase.

frame-phrase

Specifies the overall layout and processing properties of a frame. This is the syntax for the frame phrase:

WITH [ ACCUM [ max-length ]]
     [ at-phrase ][ ATTR-SPACE | NO-ATTR-SPACE ]
     [ CANCEL-BUTTON button-name][ CENTERED ]
     [ color-specification]
     [ COLUMN expression][n COLUMNS ]
     [ CONTEXT-HELP ][ CONTEXT-HELP-FILE help-file-name]
     [ DEFAULT-BUTTON button-name]
     [ DROP-TARGET ]
     [[expression] DOWN ][ EXPORT ] 
     [ WIDGET-ID id-number][ FONT expression]
     [ FRAME frame] 
     [ INHERIT-BGCOLOR | NO-INHERIT-BGCOLOR ]
     [ INHERIT-FGCOLOR | NO-INHERIT-FGCOLOR ]
     [ KEEP-TAB-ORDER ][ NO-BOX ]
     [ NO-HIDE ][ NO-LABELS ][ USE-DICT-EXPS ]
     [ NO-VALIDATE ][ NO-AUTO-VALIDATE ]
     [ NO-HELP ][ NO-UNDERLINE ]
     [ OVERLAY ][ PAGE-BOTTOM | PAGE-TOP ][ RETAIN n]
     [ ROW expression][ SCREEN-IO | STREAM-IO ]
     [ SCROLL n][ SCROLLABLE ][ SIDE-LABELS ]
     [ size-phrase][ STREAM stream| STREAM-HANDLE handle][ THREE-D ]
     [ title-phrase][ TOP-ONLY ][ USE-TEXT ]
     [ V6FRAME [ USE-REVVIDEO | USE-UNDERLINE ]]
     [ VIEW-AS DIALOG-BOX ][ WIDTH n][ IN WINDOW window]

For more information on frame-phrase, see the Frame phrase.

Examples

This procedure reads Customer records that have a CustNum less than 12, sorting the records in order by State before displaying them:

r-fore.p

FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK WHERE Customer.CustNum < 12 BY Customer.State:
  DISPLAY Customer.CustNum Customer.Name Customer.City Customer.State.
END.

The next procedure gets information from four related tables (Customer, Order, OrderLine, and Item) and displays some information from each. Before displaying the information, the FOR EACH statement sorts it in order by the PromiseDate field, then, within that field, in order by CustNum. Within the CustNum field, the data is sorted by the LineNum field.

r-fore2.p

FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK, EACH Order OF Customer NO-LOCK,
  EACH OrderLine OF Order NO-LOCK, Item OF OrderLine NO-LOCK
  BY Order.PromiseDate BY Customer.CustNum BY OrderLine.LineNum:
  DISPLAY Order.PromiseDate Customer.CustNum Order.OrderNum
    OrderLine.LineNum Item.ItemNum Item.ItemName.
END.

This procedure uses the LAST option to display information on the last Order of each Customer:

r-fore3.p

FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK, LAST Order OF Customer:
  DISPLAY Customer.CustNum Customer.Name Order.OrderNum Order.OrderDate
    Order.Instructions.
  PAUSE 1 NO-MESSAGE.
  Order.Instructions = "Last order".
  DISPLAY Order.Instruction.
END.

Notes

See also

CATCH statement, FINALLY statement, FIND statement, Frame phrase, ON ENDKEY phrase, ON ERROR phrase, ON QUIT phrase, ON STOP phrase, Record phrase, STOP-AFTER phrase