This section describes how to create and call stored procedures, and how to process the results from an ODBC application.
For a full description of stored procedures and triggers, see the Adaptive Server Enterprise Reference Manual.
There are two types of procedures: those that return result sets, and those that do not. You can use SQLNumResultCols to tell the difference: The number of result columns is zero if the procedure does not return a result set. If there is a result set, you can fetch the values using SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll just like any other cursor.
Pass parameters to procedures using parameter markers (question marks). Use SQLBindParameter to assign a storage area for each parameter marker, whether it is an INPUT, OUTPUT, or INOUT parameter.
The advanced sample illustrates a stored procedure that returns an output parameter and a return value, and another stored procedure that returns multiple result sets. Error checking has been omitted to make the example easier to read.
/* Example 1: How to call a stored procedure and use input and output parameters*/ SQLBindParameter(stmt, 1, SQL_PARAM_OUTPUT, SQL_C_SLONG, SQL_INTEGER, 0, 0, &retVal, 0, SQL_NULL_HANDLE); SQLBindParameter(stmt, 2, SQL_PARAM_INPUT, SQL_C_CHAR, SQL_CHAR, 4, 0, stor_id, sizeof(stor_id), SQL_NULL_HANDLE); SQLBindParameter(stmt, 3, SQL_PARAM_OUTPUT, SQL_C_CHAR, SQL_VARCHAR, 20, 0, ord_num, sizeof(ord_num), &ordnumLen); SQLBindParameter(stmt, 4, SQL_PARAM_INPUT, SQL_C_CHAR, SQL_VARCHAR, 40, 0, date, sizeof(date), &dateLen); SQLExecDirect( stmt, "{ ? = call sp_selectsales(?,?,?) }", SQL_NTS); /* At this point retVal contains the return value as returned from the stored procedure and the ord_num contains the order number as returned from the stored procedure */ /* Example 2: How to call stored procedures returning multiple result sets */ SQLBindParameter(stmt, 1, SQL_PARAM_INPUT, SQL_C_CHAR, SQL_CHAR , 4, 0, stor_id, sizeof(stor_id), SQL_NULL_HANDLE); SQLExecDirect(stmt, "{ call sp_multipleresults(?) }", SQL_NTS); SQLBindCol( stmt, 1, SQL_C_CHAR, dbValue, sizeof(dbValue), &dbValueLen); SQLSMALLINT count = 1; while(retcode == SQL_SUCCESS || retcode == SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO) { retcode = SQLFetch( stmt ); if (retcode == SQL_NO_DATA) { /* -- End of first result set -- */ if(count == 1) { retcode = SQLMoreResults(stmt); count ++; } /* At this point dbValue contains the value in the current row of the result */ } }