The cursor FOR
LOOP
statement implicitly declares its loop index as a record variable of the row type that a specified cursor returns, and then opens a cursor. With each iteration, the cursor FOR
LOOP
statement fetches a row from the result set into the record. When there are no more rows to fetch, the cursor FOR
LOOP
statement closes the cursor. The cursor also closes if a statement inside the loop transfers control outside the loop or raises an exception.
See "statement ::=".
Name for the loop index that the cursor FOR
LOOP
statement implicitly declares as a %ROWTYPE
record variable of the type that cursor
or select_statement
returns.
record
is local to the cursor FOR
LOOP
statement. Statements inside the loop can reference record
and its fields. They can reference virtual columns only by aliases. Statements outside the loop cannot reference record
. After the cursor FOR
LOOP
statement runs, record
is undefined.
Name of an explicit cursor (not a cursor variable) that is not open when the cursor FOR
LOOP
is entered.
Actual parameter that corresponds to a formal parameter of cursor
.
SQL SELECT
statement (not PL/SQL SELECT
INTO
statement). For select_statement
, PL/SQL declares, opens, fetches from, and closes an implicit cursor. However, because select_statement
is not an independent statement, the implicit cursor is internal—you cannot reference it with the name SQL
.
Label that identifies cursor_for_loop_statement
(see "statement ::=" and "label"). CONTINUE
, EXIT
, and GOTO
statements can reference this label.
Labels improve readability, especially when LOOP
statements are nested, but only if you ensure that the label in the END
LOOP
statement matches a label at the beginning of the same LOOP
statement (the compiler does not check).