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FETCH  Syntax Diagram

Short Reference

Syntax

FETCH NEXT CURSOR dbcur {INTO|APPENDING} target.

Effect

This statement extracts the requested rows (using the addition INTO or APPENDING) from the results set of the database cursor (associated with the cursor variable dbcur) from the current cursor position and assigns these rows to the data objects specified in the results set.

The cursor variable dbcur must be a variable declared by the special predefined data type cursor, which was opened with the statement OPEN CURSOR, or to which an opened cursor was assigned. Otherwise, a handleable exception occurs.

The syntax and meaning of the addition INTO or APPENDING target are completely synonymous with the identical additions of the SELECT statement, with the exception that no LOB handles can currently be created.

If non-table-like data objects are specified after INTO, then one row is extracted. If an internal table is specified after INTO or APPENDING, then either all rows are extracted, or as many as specified in the addition PACKAGE SIZE.

The statement FETCH moves the position of the database cursor (which is associated with dbcur) by the amount of extracted rows to the next row to be extracted. If the last row of the results set was extracted in a FETCH statement, each subsequent FETCH statement in which
dbcur is associated with the same database cursor sets sy-subrc to 4, without affecting the data objects specified after INTO or APPENDING.

System Fields

The statement FETCH sets the values of the system fields sy-subrc and sy-dbcnt.

sy-subrc Meaning
0 At least one row was extracted from the results set.
4 No row was extracted.

After every row extraction, the statement FETCH sets sy-dbcnt to the amount of rows extracted so far from the relevant results set. If an overflow occurs because the number or rows is greater than 2,147,483,647, sy-dbcnt is set to -1. If no row can be extracted, then sy-dbcnt is set to 0.

Notes

Example

Reading of data from the database table SPFLI in packets of varying size using two parallel cursors. The packet size is determined by the first cursor using the aggregation functioncount( * ) and using the second cursor for access. Variable control of the addition PACKAGE SIZE is not possible within a single SELECT statement.

DATA: BEGIN OF count_line,
        carrid TYPE spfli-carrid,
        count  TYPE i,
      END OF count_line,
      spfli_tab TYPE TABLE OF spfli.

DATA: dbcur1 TYPE cursor,
      dbcur2 TYPE cursor.

OPEN CURSOR dbcur1 FOR
  SELECT carrid count(*) AS count
         FROM spfli
         GROUP BY carrid
         ORDER BY carrid.

OPEN CURSOR dbcur2 FOR
  SELECT *
         FROM spfli
         ORDER BY carrid.

DO.
  FETCH NEXT CURSOR dbcur1 INTO count_line.
  IF sy-subrc <> 0.
    EXIT.
  ENDIF.
  FETCH NEXT CURSOR dbcur2
    INTO TABLE spfli_tab PACKAGE SIZE count_line-count.
ENDDO.

CLOSE CURSOR: dbcur1,
              dbcur2.