Skip Headers
Oracle® OLAP DML Reference
10g Release 2 (10.2)

Part Number B14346-03
Go to Documentation Home
Home
Go to Book List
Book List
Go to Table of Contents
Contents
Go to Index
Index
Go to Master Index
Master Index
Go to Feedback page
Contact Us

Go to previous page
Previous
Go to next page
Next
View PDF

RECNO

The RECNO function reports the current record number of a file opened for reading. It returns NA when Oracle OLAP has reached the end of the file.

Return Value

INTEGER

Syntax

RECNO(fileunit)

Arguments

fileunit

A file unit number assigned to a file opened for reading in a previous call to the FILEOPEN function.

Notes

Opening Files

Before you can use the RECNO function, you must open the file for reading. When the file unit number is not associated with an open file or the file has been opened for writing, RECNO returns an error.

Using RECNO with FILEGET

RECNO is usually used with FILEREAD or FILENEXT, which read whole records. When you are reading data from a file with the FILEGET function, which can read partial records, RECNO returns the number of times you have read data from the file, not the number of actual records.

LINENUM Option

See also the LINENUM option, which holds the current line number of output.

Records in Text Files

When the file is a text file, a record is delimited by a newline character. When the file is a binary file, you must set the file's LSIZE attribute to the record length with a FILESET statement. TEXT is the default file type.

Examples

Example 22-5 Using RECNO with FILEREAD

In the following example code, a FILEREAD statement maintains the INTEGER dimension, adding each record number associated with filename. The text associated with each record number becomes each value of the variable textvar.

DEFINE dim1 INTEGER DIMENSION
DEFINE textvar TEXT <dim1>
x = FILEOPEN('filename' R)
FILEREAD x APPEND dim1 = RECNO(x) W 8 TEXTVAR