Apply SQLEXEC within a TABLE or MAP Statement
When used within a TABLE or MAP statement, SQLEXEC can pass and accept parameters. It can be used for procedures and queries, but not for database commands.
Syntax
This syntax executes a procedure within a TABLE or MAP statement.
SQLEXEC (SPNAME sp_name,
[ID logical_name,]
{PARAMS param_spec | NOPARAMS})
| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
|
Required keyword that begins a clause to execute a stored procedure. |
|
Specifies the name of the stored procedure to execute. |
|
Defines a logical name for the procedure. Use this option to execute the procedure multiple times within a |
|
Specifies whether or not the procedure accepts parameters. One of these options must be used (see Using Input and Output Parameters). |
Syntax
This syntax executes a query within a TABLE or MAP statement.
SQLEXEC (ID logical_name, QUERY ' query ',
{PARAMS param_spec | NOPARAMS})| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
|
Defines a logical name for the query. A logical name is required in order to extract values from the query results. |
|
Specifies the SQL query syntax to execute against the database. It can either return results with a |
|
Defines whether or not the query accepts parameters. One of these options must be used (see Using Input and Output Parameters). |
If you want to execute a query on a table residing on a different database than the
current database, then the different database name has to be specified with the
table. The delimiter between the database name and the tablename should be a colon
(:).
The following are some example use cases:
select col1 from db1:tab1
select col2 from db2:schema2.tab2
select col3 from tab3
select col3 from schema4.tab4