Introduction to MySQL cursor
To handle a result set inside a stored procedure, you use a cursor. A cursor allows you to iterate a set of rows returned by a query and process each row accordingly.MySQL cursor is read only, non-scrollable and asensitive.
- Read only: you cannot update data in the underlying table through the cursor.
- Non-scrollable: you can only fetch rows in the order determined by the SELECT statement. You cannot fetch rows in the reversed order. In addition, you cannot skip rows or jump to a specific row in the result set.
- Asensitive: there are two kinds of cursors: asensitive cursor and insensitive cursor. An asensitive cursor points to the actual data, whereas an insensitive cursor uses a temporary copy of the data. An asensitive cursor performs faster than an insensitive cursor because it does not have to make a temporary copy of data. However, any change that made to the data from other connections will affect the data that is being used by an asensitive cursor, therefore it is safer if you don’t update the data that is being used by an asensitive cursor. MySQL cursor is asensitive.
Working with MySQL cursor
First, you have to declare a cursor by using theDECLARE statement:SELECT statement.Next, you open the cursor by using the
OPEN statement. The OPEN statement initializes the result set for the cursor therefore you must call the OPEN statement before fetching rows from the result set.FETCH statement to retrieve the next row pointed by the cursor and move the cursor to the next row in the result set.Finally, you call the
CLOSE statement to deactivate the cursor and release the memory associated with it as follows:When working with MySQL cursor, you must also declare a
NOT FOUND handler to handle the situation when the cursor could not find any row. Because each time you call the FETCH
statement, the cursor attempts to read the next row in the result set.
When the cursor reaches the end of the result set, it will not be able
to get the data, and a condition is raised. The handler is used to
handle this condition.To declare a
NOT FOUND handler, you use the following syntax:finished is
a variable to indicate that the cursor has reached the end of the
result set. Notice that the handler declaration must appear after
variable and cursor declaration inside the stored procedures.The following diagram illustrates how MySQL cursor works.
MySQL Cursor Example
We are going to develop a stored procedure that builds an email list of all employees in theemployees table in the MySQL sample database.First, we declare some variables, a cursor for looping over the emails of employees, and a
NOT FOUND handler:email_cursor by using the OPEN statement:v_finished variable to check if there is any email in the list to terminate the loop.Finally, we close the cursor using the
CLOSE statement:build_email_list stored procedure is as follows: build_email_list stored procedure using the following script:
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