PHP leveraging PL/SQL
Somebody wanted another example of how to leverage a true/false condition from a PL/SQL stored function in PHP. The first key is that you write the function as if you were using it in SQL not PL/SQL. That means you return a NUMBER
data type not a PL/SQL-only BOOLEAN
data type.
Here’s the schema-level PL/SQL function:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION like_boolean ( a NUMBER, b NUMBER ) RETURN NUMBER IS /* Declare default false return value. */ lv_return_value NUMBER := 0; BEGIN /* Compare numbers and return true for a match. */ IF a = b THEN lv_return_value := 1; END IF; /* Return value. */ RETURN lv_return_value; END; / |
Here’s the PHP that leverages the PL/SQL in an if-statement on line #24:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 | <?php // Capture local variables when provided. $thingOne = (isset($_GET['thingOne'])) ? $_GET['thingOne'] : 1; $thingTwo = (isset($_GET['thingTwo'])) ? $_GET['thingTwo'] : 1; // Open a connection. if(!$c = oci_connect("student","student","localhost/xe")) { die; } else { // Parse a statement. $s = oci_parse($c,"BEGIN :returnValue := LIKE_BOOLEAN(:thingOne,:thingTwo); END;"); // Bind input and output values to the statement. oci_bind_by_name($s,":returnValue",$returnValue); oci_bind_by_name($s,":thingOne",$thingOne); oci_bind_by_name($s,":thingTwo",$thingTwo); // Execute the statement. if (@oci_execute($s)) { // Print lead in string. print "[".$thingOne."] and [".$thingTwo."] "; if ($returnValue) print "are equal.<br />"; else print "aren't equal.<br />"; } // Clean up resources. oci_close($c); } ?> |
If you run into a parsing error, which is infrequent now. You can wrap the multiple row PL/SQL anonymous block call with this function. It strips tabs and line returns. Alternatively, you can put all the lines of PL/SQL on a single line.
// Strip special characters, like carriage or line returns and tabs. function strip_special_characters($str) { $out = ""; for ($i = 0;$i < strlen($str);$i++) if ((ord($str[$i]) != 9) && (ord($str[$i]) != 10) && (ord($str[$i]) != 13)) $out .= $str[$i]; // Return pre-parsed SQL statement. return $out; } |
If you run into a parsing problem on Oracle XE 10g, you can wrap the PL/SQL call like the following. Alternatively, you can place the entire anonymous PL/SQL block on a single line without embedded tabs or return keys..
10 11 12 13 | $s = oci_parse($c,strip_special_characters( "BEGIN :returnValue := LIKE_BOOLEAN(:thingOne,:thingTwo); END;")); |
Hope that answers the question and helps some folks.