Import an excel spreadsheet to oracle using Toad - oracle

I am trying to import an excel spreadsheet into Oracle using Toad. The gotcha is that the table I am importing into has a primary key field that I use a "sequence".nextval to populate in a normal stored procedure insert.
Using the Toad import wizard, I tried putting in 'table_seq.nextval' as an expression but when I execute the wizard at the end I get the error: Could not convert variant of type (UnicodeString) into type (Double).
So is it possible to import Excel data using sequence.nextval with the Toad import wizard or is there a better way?
I also gave some thought to just letting Excel generate the key by starting the seed beyond what is currently in the table. But being new to Oracle, would this mess-up the sequence I have setup for the table? For example, if before the insert, the next available ID is say 500 and the inserts from Excel inserted rows from 500 to 5000, would the next execution of a stored procedure for that table's sequence try to use 500?
Thanks in advance!

Yes, the sequence will remain at 50, and you'll get primary key violated exception when using stored procedure.
That's because sequences are not linked to tables in any way. And cannot be linked. They are separated objects.
The best approach I see is to use a trigger on insert for each row which will set the id to nextval.
Code example:
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER trg_table_name_set_id
BEFORE INSERT
ON table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
SELECT table_seq.nextval INTO :new.id FROM DUAL; --id would be the id column in your table
--or, if you are on 11g, simply
--:new.id := table_seq.nextval;
END trg_table_name_set_id;

Related

Create procedure in Oracle to populate table from SSRS parameter

I have been running a report in Oracle for my customer where they provide a list of id numbers. I import the id numbers into a table and run a query which includes this table. However, the customer would like the ability to run this report. I can create the report in SSRS and take a few id numbers, but not the entire list. I would like to know if I can create a procedure that would check the table for data, delete if it exists, then import the data from the parameter in SSRS into the table which SSRS can then run the query which includes the newly populated table. How would such a procedure look, and can that be called in SSRS with the parameter to include the id numbers that will be imported. I had thought of creating a temp table and populating it, but was advised that Oracle does not use temp tables, and I already have the table created within the database.

Insert data into a different column when copying from one table to another in Oracle

I am using an AFTER INSERT row trigger in Oracle 11g to copy specific columns from one table to another on insert. I have the trigger and insert working ok. The problem I have is that I need to insert the new data from one column to a different column when copying it.
The trigger info reads:
BEGIN
insert into BALES_STORAGE
(CROP,
CUTTING,
DESTINATION,
BALES_MOVED,
DATE_MOVED,
PASTURE,
TARGET_LB_PER_DAY)
values
(:new.CROP,
:new.CUTTING,
:new.MOVING_LOCATION,
:new.BALES_MOVED,
:new.DATE_MOVED,
:new.PASTURE,
:new.TARGET_LB_PER_DAY);
END;
The first table is called "BALES_HARVESTED" and the 2nd table the trigger inserts the selected columns into is called "BALES_STORAGE". I need to insert the :new.MOVING_LOCATION data into the column called DESTINATION on the second table.
So my question is: when using an after insert row trigger, how to I change the column that the data is inserted into?
Thanks for any help.
Matthew
Your trigger code worked just fine for me. Not sure what the problem is. The 3rd column in your INSERT statement does the column mapping correctly.
http://sqlfiddle.com/#!4/2d2fd5/1/1
Maybe you have different structures or foreign key constraints. Could you elaborate on what error you get? Does it produce an ORA- error? or does it simply not produce the desired result, but no error?

How to create a table identical to other table in structure and constraints in Oracle?

I want to create a table (lets say table_copy) which has same columns as other table (lets call it table_original) in Oracle database, so the query will be like this :
create table table_copy as (select * from table_original where 1=0);
This will create a table, but the constraints of table_original are not copied to table_copy, so what should be done in this case?
Only NOT NULL constraints are copied using Create Table As Syntax (CTAS). Others should be created manually.
You might however query data dictionary view to see the definitions of constraints and implement them on your new table using PL/SQL.
The other tool that might be helpful is Oracle Data Pump. You could import the table using REMAP_TABLE option specifying the name for the new table.
Use a database tool to extract the DDL needed for the constraints (SQL Developer does the job). Edit the resulting script to match the name of the new class.
Execute the script.
If you need to do this programmatically you can use a statement like this:
DBMS_METADATA.GET_DDL('TABLE','PERSON') from DUAL;

ODBC with Oracle Trigger Key Column

I'm trying to update some existing code that is supposed to write data to a variety of Databases (SQL, Access, Oracle) via ODBC, but I'm having a few problems with Oracle and am looking for any suggestions.
I've set my Oracle database up using a Trigger (basic tutorial online, which I'd like to support).
CREATE TABLE TABLE1 (
RECORDID NUMBER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
ID VARCHAR(40) NULL,
COUNT NUMBER NULL
);
GO
CREATE SEQUENCE TABLE1_SEQ
GO
CREATE or REPLACE TRIGGER TABLE1_TRG
BEFORE INSERT ON TABLE1
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (new.RECORDID IS NULL)
BEGIN
SELECT TABLE1_SEQ.nextval
INTO :new.RECORDID
FROM dual;
end;
GO
I then populate a DataTable using a SELECT * FROM TABLE1. The first problem is that this DataTable doesn't know that the RecordId column is auto-generated. If I have data in my table then I can't alter it because I get a error
Cannot change AutoIncrement of a DataColumn with type 'Double' once it
has data.
If I continue, ignoring this, then I quickly get stuck. If I create a new DataRow and try to insert it, I can't set RecordID to DBNull.Value because it complains that the column has to be non-null (NoNullAllowedException). I can't however generate a value myself, because I don't know what value I should be using really, and don't want to screw up the trigger by using the next available value.
Any suggestions on how I should insert data without ODBC complaining?
It does not appear that your first problem is with an Oracle database. There is no such thing as an "Autoincrement" column in Oracle. Are you sure that message is coming from an Oracle database?
With Oracle, you should be able to provide any dummy value on insert for the primary key, and the trigger will overwrite it.
There is also nothing in your provided description that would prevent you from updating this value in Oracle (since your trigger is on insert only) unless you have foreign key references to the key.

Best way to bulk insert data into Oracle database

I am going to create a lot of data scripts such as INSERT INTO and UPDATE
There will be 100,000 plus records if not 1,000,000
What is the best way to get this data into Oracle quickly? I have already found that SQL Loader is not good for this as it does not update individual rows.
Thanks
UPDATE: I will be writing an application to do this in C#
Load the records in a stage table via SQL*Loader. Then use bulk operations:
INSERT INTO SELECT (for example "Bulk Insert into Oracle database")
mass UPDATE ("Oracle - Update statement with inner join")
or a single MERGE statement
To keep It as fast as possible I would keep it all in the database.
Use external tables (to allow Oracle to read the file contents),
and create a stored procedure to do the processing.
The update could be slow, If possible, It may be a good idea to consider creating a new table based on all the records in the old (with updates) then switch the new & old tables around.
How about using a spreadsheet program like MS Excel or LibreOffice Calc? This is how I perform bulk inserts.
Prepare your data in a tabular format.
Let's say you have three columns, A (text), B (number) & C (date). In the D column, enter the following formula. Adjust accordingly.
="INSERT INTO YOUR_TABLE (COL_A, COL_B, COL_C) VALUES ('"&A1&"', "&B1&", to_date ('"&C1&"', 'mm/dd/yy'));"

Resources