I´d like to SELECT a single value into a variable. I´d tried to following:
DECLARE myvar INT(4);
-- immediately returns some syntax error.
SELECT myvalue
FROM mytable
WHERE anothervalue = 1;
-- returns a single integer
SELECT myvalue
INTO myvar
FROM mytable
WHERE anothervalue = 1;
-- does not work, also tried @myvar
Is possible to use DECLARE outside of stored procedures or functions?
Maybe I just dont get the concept of user variables... I just tried:
SELECT myvalue INTO @var FROM `mytable` WHERE uid = 1;
SELECT @var;
...which worked just like it´s supposed to. But if I run each query at a time i just get @var NULL.
I ran into this same issue, but I think I know what's causing the confusion. If you use MySql Query Analyzer, you can do this just fine:
SELECT myvalue
INTO @myvar
FROM mytable
WHERE anothervalue = 1;
However, if you put that same query in MySql Workbench, it will throw a syntax error. I don't know why they would be different, but they are. To work around the problem in MySql Workbench, you can rewrite the query like this:
SELECT @myvar:=myvalue
FROM mytable
WHERE anothervalue = 1;
In the end a stored procedure was the solution for my problem. Here´s what helped:
DELIMITER //
CREATE PROCEDURE test ()
BEGIN
DECLARE myvar DOUBLE;
SELECT somevalue INTO myvar FROM mytable WHERE uid=1;
SELECT myvar;
END
//
DELIMITER ;
call test ();
These answers don't cover very well MULTIPLE variables.
Doing the inline assignment in a stored procedure causes those results to ALSO be sent back in the resultset. That can be confusing. To using the SELECT...INTO syntax with multiple variables you do:
SELECT a, b INTO @a, @b FROM mytable LIMIT 1;
The SELECT must return only 1 row, hence LIMIT 1, although that isn't always necessary.
You can also use SET instead of DECLARE
SET @myvar := (SELECT somevalue INTO myvar FROM mytable WHERE uid=1);
SELECT myvar;
Per the MySQL docs DECLARE works only at the start of a BEGIN...END block as in a stored program.
You don't need to DECLARE a variable in MySQL. A variable's type is determined automatically when it is first assigned a value. Its type can be one of: integer, decimal, floating-point, binary or nonbinary string, or NULL value. See the User-Defined Variables documentation for more information:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/user-variables.html
You can use SELECT ... INTO to assign columns to a variable:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/select-into-statement.html
Example:
mysql> SELECT 1 INTO @var;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> SELECT @var;
+------+
| @var |
+------+
| 1 |
+------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
It is worth noting that despite the fact that you can SELECT INTO
global variables like:
SELECT ... INTO @XYZ ...
You can NOT use FETCH INTO
global variables like:
FETCH ... INTO @XYZ
Looks like it's not a bug. I hope it will be helpful to someone...
I am using version 6 (MySQL Workbench Community (GPL) for Windows version 6.0.9 revision 11421 build 1170) on Windows Vista. I have no problem with the following options. Probably they fixed it since these guys got the problems three years ago.
/* first option */
SELECT ID
INTO @myvar
FROM party
WHERE Type = 'individual';
-- get the result
select @myvar;
/* second option */
SELECT @myvar:=ID
FROM party
WHERE Type = 'individual';
/* third option. The same as SQL Server does */
SELECT @myvar = ID FROM party WHERE Type = 'individual';
All option above give me a correct result.
You maybe miss the @ symbol before your value,like that select 'test' INTO @myValue
;
For those running in such issues right now, just try to put an alias for the table, this should the trick, e.g:
SELECT myvalue
INTO myvar
FROM mytable x
WHERE x.anothervalue = 1;
It worked for me.
Cheers.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3075147/select-into-variable-in-mysql-declare-causes-syntax-error