Name
CREATE/ALTER FUNCTION/PROCEDURE Statements
Synopsis
The CREATE FUNCTION and CREATE PROCEDURE statements are very similar in syntax and coding (as are the respective ALTER statements).
The CREATE PROCEDURE statement creates a stored procedure, which takes input arguments and performs conditional processing against various objects in the database. According to the ANSI standard, a stored procedure returns no result set (though it may return a value in an OUTPUT parameter). For example, you might use a stored procedure to perform all the processes that close an accounting cycle.
The CREATE FUNCTION statement creates a user-defined function (UDF), which takes input arguments and returns a single value output in the same way as system-supplied functions like CAST( ) or UPPER( ). These functions, once created, can be called in queries and data-manipulation operations, such as INSERT, UPDATE, and the WHERE clause of DELETE statements. Refer to Chapter 4 for descriptions of built-in SQL functions and their individual vendor implementations.
Platform |
Command |
DB2 |
Supported, with variations |
MySQL |
Supported, with limitations |
Oracle |
Supported, with variations |
PostgreSQL |
Supported, with limitations |
SQL Server |
Supported, with variations |
SQL2003 Syntax
Use the following syntax to create a stored procedure or function:
CREATE {PROCEDURE | FUNCTION}object_name
( [{[IN | OUT | INOUT] [parameter_name
]datatype
[AS LOCATOR] [RESULT]} [,...] ] ) [ RETURNSdatatype
[AS LOCATOR] [CAST FROM ...
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