Cursors can do more than just read result sets from a query. You can also modify data in the database while processing a cursor. These operations are commonly called positioned insert, update, and delete operations, or PUT operations if the action is an insert.
Not all query result sets allow positioned updates and deletes. If you perform a query on a non-updatable view, then no changes occur to the underlying tables. Also, if the query involves a join, then you must specify which table you want to delete from, or which columns you want to update, when you perform the operations.
Inserts through a cursor can only be executed if any non-inserted columns in the table allow NULL or have defaults.
If multiple rows are inserted into a value-sensitive (keyset driven) cursor, they appear at the end of the cursor result set.
The rows appear at the end, even if they do not match the WHERE clause of the query or if an ORDER BY clause would normally
have placed them at another location in the result set. This behavior is independent of programming interface. For example,
it applies when using the embedded SQL PUT statement or the ODBC SQLBulkOperations function. The value of an autoincrement
column for the most recent row inserted can be found by selecting the last row in the cursor. For example, in embedded SQL
the value could be obtained using FETCH ABSOLUTE -1 cursor-name
. As a result of this behavior, the first multiple-row insert for a value-sensitive cursor may be expensive.
ODBC, JDBC, embedded SQL, and Open Client permit data modification using cursors, but ADO.NET does not. With Open Client, you can delete and update rows, but you can only insert rows on a single-table query.
If you attempt a positioned delete through a cursor, the table from which rows are deleted is determined as follows:
For more information, see FROM clause.
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