Declaring a variable and setting its value from a SELECT query in Oracle

Not entirely sure what you are after but in PL/SQL you would simply

DECLARE
  v_variable INTEGER;
BEGIN
  SELECT mycolumn
    INTO v_variable
    FROM myTable;
END;

Ollie.


SELECT INTO

DECLARE
   the_variable NUMBER;

BEGIN
   SELECT my_column INTO the_variable FROM my_table;
END;

Make sure that the query only returns a single row:

By default, a SELECT INTO statement must return only one row. Otherwise, PL/SQL raises the predefined exception TOO_MANY_ROWS and the values of the variables in the INTO clause are undefined. Make sure your WHERE clause is specific enough to only match one row

If no rows are returned, PL/SQL raises NO_DATA_FOUND. You can guard against this exception by selecting the result of an aggregate function, such as COUNT(*) or AVG(), where practical. These functions are guaranteed to return a single value, even if no rows match the condition.

A SELECT ... BULK COLLECT INTO statement can return multiple rows. You must set up collection variables to hold the results. You can declare associative arrays or nested tables that grow as needed to hold the entire result set.

The implicit cursor SQL and its attributes %NOTFOUND, %FOUND, %ROWCOUNT, and %ISOPEN provide information about the execution of a SELECT INTO statement.

Tags:

Oracle

Plsql