Wed. May 8th, 2024

PL/SQL – Conditions

In this chapter, we will discuss conditions in PL/SQL. Decision-making structures require that the programmer specify one or more conditions to be evaluated or tested by the program, along with a statement or statements to be executed if the condition is determined to be true, and optionally, other statements to be executed if the condition is determined to be false.

Following is the general form of a typical conditional (i.e., decision making) structure found in most of the programming languages −

Decision making statements in PL/SQL

PL/SQL programming language provides following types of decision-making statements. Click the following links to check their detail.

S.NoStatement & Description
1IF – THEN statement The IF statement associates a condition with a sequence of statements enclosed by the keywords THEN and END IF. If the condition is true, the statements get executed and if the condition is false or NULL then the IF statement does nothing.
2IF-THEN-ELSE statement IF statement adds the keyword ELSE followed by an alternative sequence of statement. If the condition is false or NULL, then only the alternative sequence of statements get executed. It ensures that either of the sequence of statements is executed.
3IF-THEN-ELSIF statement It allows you to choose between several alternatives.
4Case statement Like the IF statement, the CASE statement selects one sequence of statements to execute. However, to select the sequence, the CASE statement uses a selector rather than multiple Boolean expressions. A selector is an expression whose value is used to select one of several alternatives.
5Searched CASE statement The searched CASE statement has no selector, and it’s WHEN clauses contain search conditions that yield Boolean values.
6nested IF-THEN-ELSE You can use one IF-THEN or IF-THEN-ELSIF statement inside another IF-THEN or IF-THEN-ELSIF statement(s).

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