Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B28286-01 |
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When you refer to an XMLTable
construct without the COLUMNS
clause, or when you use the TABLE
function to refer to a scalar nested table type, the database returns a virtual table with a single column. This name of this pseudocolumn is COLUMN_VALUE
.
In the context of XMLTable
, the value returned is of datatype XMLType
. For example, the following two statements are equivalent, and the output for both shows COLUMN_VALUE
as the name of the column being returned:
SELECT * FROM XMLTABLE('<a>123</a>'); COLUMN_VALUE --------------------------------------- <a>123</a> SELECT COLUMN_VALUE FROM (XMLTable('<a>123</a>')); COLUMN_VALUE ---------------------------------------- <a>123</a>
In the context of a TABLE
function, the value returned is the datatype of the collection element. The following statements create the two levels of nested tables illustrated in "Multi-level Collection Example" to show the uses of COLUMN_VALUE
in this context:
CREATE TYPE phone AS TABLE OF NUMBER; / CREATE TYPE phone_list AS TABLE OF phone; /
The next statement uses COLUMN_VALUE
to select from the phone
type:
SELECT t.COLUMN_VALUE from table(phone(1,2,3)) t; COLUMN_VALUE ------------ 1 2 3
In a nested type, you can use the COLUMN_VALUE
pseudocolumn in both the select list and the TABLE
function:
SELECT t.COLUMN_VALUE FROM TABLE(phone_list(phone(1,2,3))) p, TABLE(p.COLUMN_VALUE) t; COLUMN_VALUE ------------ 1 2 3
The keyword COLUMN_VALUE
is also the name that Oracle Database generates for the scalar value of an inner nested table without a column or attribute name, as shown in the example that follows. In this context, COLUMN_VALUE
is not a pseudocolumn, but an actual column name.
CREATE TABLE my_customers (
cust_id NUMBER,
name VARCHAR2(25),
phone_numbers phone_list,
credit_limit NUMBER)
NESTED TABLE phone_numbers STORE AS outer_ntab
(NESTED TABLE COLUMN_VALUE STORE AS inner_ntab);
See Also:
XMLTABLE for information on that function
table_collection_expression ::= for information on the TABLE
function
ALTER
TABLE
examples in "Nested Tables: Examples"