The PROCEDURE keyword indicates that in the current scope, the variable is a call to a UDR.
The DEFINE statement does not support a FUNCTION keyword. Use the PROCEDURE keyword, whether you are calling a user-defined procedure or a user-defined function.
Declaring a variable as PROCEDURE type indicates that in the current statement scope, the variable is not a call to a built-in function. For example, the following statement defines length as an SPL routine, not as the built-in LENGTH function:
DEFINE length PROCEDURE; ... LET x = length (a,b,c)
This definition disables the built-in LENGTH function within the scope of the statement block. You would use such a definition if you had already created a user-defined routine with the name length.
If you create an SPL routine with the same name as an aggregate function (SUM, MAX, MIN, AVG, COUNT) or with the name extend, you must qualify the routine name with the owner name.
Enterprise Edition Home | Express Edition Home | [ Top of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents | Index ]