|
For a straight-forward SELECT yes, but if you needed/wanted to use aFilters,
dynamic SELECT, it would be nice.
Perfect example would be I'm building a SELECT statement based on
that will construct me alist
WHERE clause dynamically, and I wanted to see the record count of that
filter.
dav
David L. Mosley, Jr.
Technical Solutions Architect
Dancik International, Ltd.
2000 CentreGreen Way, Suite 250
Cary, NC 27513
www.dancik.com
Charles Wilt <charles.wilt@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent by: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
05/25/2010 10:52 AM
Please respond to
RPG programming on the IBM i / System i <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To
"RPG programming on the IBM i / System i" <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
cc
Subject
Re: Quick SQL expression evaluation
You don't need to use dynamic SQL for COUNT(*)
exec sql
Âselect count(*) into :myResult
Âfrom item;
Works fine.
Charles
On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 10:10 AM, Â<dmosley@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
That's an interesting trick. ÂI would have hoped that some like usinglist
"SELECT COUNT(*) INTO ? FROM ITEM" would work the same.
Â/Free
 ÂString = 'SELECT COUNT(*) INTO ? FROM ITEM';
 Â/Exec SQL Prepare DynSQL From Â:String;
 Â/Exec SQL Execute DynSQL using :MyResult;
 Dsply MyResult;
Â/End-Free
David L. Mosley, Jr.
Technical Solutions Architect
Dancik International, Ltd.
2000 CentreGreen Way, Suite 250
Cary, NC 27513
www.dancik.com
Luis Rodriguez <luisro58@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent by: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
05/25/2010 05:04 AM
Please respond to
RPG programming on the IBM i / System i <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To
"RPG programming on the IBM i / System i" <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
cc
Subject
Re: Quick SQL expression evaluation
Wow!! Thanks Birgitta!! ..
One can always trust that you will find the solution to almost any SQL
problem, this one will go into the archives.
Best Regards,
Luis Rodriguez
IBM Certified Systems Expert â eServer i5 iSeries
On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 8:21 AM, Birgitta Hauser
<Hauser@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote:
Try the following:(Les
D MyResult   S      11P 2
D String    S     Â256A   Varying
D Expr     S     Â256A   Varying inz('2 + 2')
Â/Free
 ÂString = 'Values(' + Expr + ') into ?';
 Â/Exec SQL Prepare DynSQL From Â:String;
 Â/Exec SQL Execute DynSQL using :MyResult;
 Dsply MyResult;
Â/End-Free
Mit freundlichen GrÃÃen / Best regards
Birgitta Hauser
"Shoot for the moon, even if you miss, you'll land among the stars."
Brown)them
"If you think education is expensive, try ignorance." (Derek Bok)
"What is worse than training your staff and losing them? Not training
and keeping them!"[mailto:rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
-----UrsprÃngliche Nachricht-----
Von: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Imthat
Auftrag von Dennis Lovelady
Gesendet: Tuesday, 25. May 2010 14:30
An: 'RPG programming on the IBM i / System i'
Betreff: Quick SQL expression evaluation
I am trying to write a procedure I thought would be extremely simple: a
short SQL evaluation program that would simply take an expression and
return
the result of SQL operating on that expression. ÂFor a silly example:
Exec sql set :myResult  = 2 + 2 ;
To minimize complexity, I am passing the '2 + 2' part as a string, so
the meat of this very short procedure is:the
Exec sql setl :myResult = :myExpression ;
But (and, yes, I know I should have expected this) SQL is seeing it as
string "2 + 2" rather than a pair of values with an operator betweenthem.
Is there an SQL verb/clause that informs the SQL processor that the"expr"
following is an expression rather than a string (such as with unix'
command)? ÂOr is this just a pipe dream, not worth the effort?list
Dennis E. Lovelady
AIM/Skype: delovelady   ÂMSN: fastcounter@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Â<http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady>
www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady --
You can't have everything. ÂWhere would you put it?
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