3
votes
  1. Create a temporary table inside a stored procedure, say '#Temp'.
  2. Insert values into 'Temp' table using a select statement, eg. Insert Into #Temp Select * from Employees.
  3. Now extract data from this Temp table, eg. Select * from #Temp where #Temp.Id = @id & so on.

How to do this in Oracle inside a stored procedure?

2

2 Answers

15
votes

What is the business problem you are trying to solve? It is exceptionally rare that you need to use temporary tables in Oracle. Why wouldn't you simply

SELECT *
  FROM employees
 WHERE id = p_id_passed_in;

In other databases, you often create temporary tables because readers block writers so you want to create a separate copy of the data in order to avoid blocking any other sessions. In Oracle, however, readers never block writers, so there is generally no need to save off a separate copy of the data.

In other databases, you create temporary tables because you don't want to do dirty reads. Oracle, however, does not allow dirty reads. Multi-version read consistency means that Oracle will always show you the data as it existed when the query was started (or when the transaction started if you've set a transaction isolation level of serializable). So there is no need to create a temporary table to avoid dirty reads.

If you really wanted to use temporary tables in Oracle, you would not create the table dynamically. You would create a global temporary table before you created the stored procedure. The table structure would be visible to all sessions but the data would be visible only to the session that inserted it. You would populate the temporary table in the procedure and then query the table. Something like

CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE temp_emp (
  empno number,
  ename varchar2(10),
  job   varchar2(9),
  mgr   number,
  sal   number(7,2)
)
ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS;

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE populate_temp_emp
AS
BEGIN
  INSERT INTO temp_emp( empno,
                        ename,
                        job,
                        mgr,
                        sal )
    SELECT empno, 
           ename,
           job,
           mgr,
           sal
      FROM emp;
END;
/

SQL> begin
  2    populate_temp_emp;
  3  end;
  4  /

PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.

SQL> select *
  2    from temp_emp;

     EMPNO ENAME      JOB              MGR        SAL
---------- ---------- --------- ---------- ----------
      7623 PAV        Dev
      7369 smith      CLERK           7902        800
      7499 ALLEN      SALESMAN        7698       1600
      7521 WARD       SALESMAN        7698       1250
      7566 JONES      MANAGER         7839       2975
      7654 MARTIN     SALESMAN        7698       1250
      7698 BLAKE      MANAGER         7839       2850
      7782 CLARK      MANAGER         7839       2450
      7788 SCOTT      ANALYST         7566       3000
      7839 KING       PRESIDENT                  5000
      7844 TURNER     SALESMAN        7698       1500
      7876 ADAMS      CLERK           7788       1110
      7900 SM0        CLERK           7698        950
      7902 FORD       ANALYST         7566       3000
      7934 MILLER     CLERK           7782       1300
      1234 BAR

16 rows selected.

As I said, though, it would be very unusual in Oracle to actually want to use a temporary table.

2
votes

Create a global temporary table.

CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY TABLE <your_table>
ON COMMIT PRESERVE ROWS   # If needed.  Depends on your needs.
AS SELECT <your_select_query>;

You can then select from the table as needed for the duration of your procedure.

http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/8i/TemporaryTables.php

http://asktom.oracle.com/pls/asktom/f?p=100:11:0::::P11_QUESTION_ID:15826034070548