Oracle8 Error Messages
Release 8.0
A54625_01

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16
PL/SQL and FIPS Messages

This chapter lists messages issued by PL/SQL. For each message, the probable cause and corrective action are given.

To help you find and fix errors, PL/SQL inserts object names, numbers, and character strings into some error messages. These message inserts are represented by name, num, and str, respectively. For example, the error message listed as

PLS-00388: undefined column : name in subquery

might be issued as

PLS-00388: undefined column AMPNO in subquery:

This chapter also lists the warnings that can be issued by the FIPS Flagger when it is enabled in an Oracle tool.

PL/SQL Error Messages

PLS-00101: reserved for future use

PLS-00102: parser stack overflow because nesting is too deep

Cause: The parser, which checks the syntax of PL/SQL statements, uses a data structure called a stack; the number of levels of nesting in the PL/SQL block exceeded the stack capacity.

Action: Reorganize the block structure to avoid nesting at too deep a level. For example, move the lowest-level sub-block to a higher level.

PLS-00103: found str but expected one of the following: str

Cause: This error message is from the parser. It found a token (language element) that is inappropriate in this context.

Action: Check previous tokens as well as the one given in the error message. The line and column numbers given in the error message refer to the end of the faulty language construct.

PLS-00104: empty argument list in call of procedure name must be omitted

Cause: In a subprogram call, the name of the subprogram was followed by an empty parameter list. For example, procedure P was called as P(). This is not allowed.

Action: Remove the empty parameter list. In the example, change the procedure call to P.

PLS-00105: at most one forward declaration of type name is permitted

Cause: Not in Release 2.3.

PLS-00108: declarative units must be a single variable declaration

Cause: While checking a declarative unit (a top-level declare block without the BEGIN...END), PL/SQL found that there was more than one item declared or that the item was not a variable declaration. A table is a common variable declaration at the unit level. To define a TABLE, compile a DECLARE compilation unit, but only one at a time is allowed.

Action: Declare variables in separate declarative units.

PLS-00109: unknown exception name name in PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT

Cause: No declaration for the exception name referenced in an EXCEPTION_INIT pragma was found within the scope of the pragma.

Action: Make sure the pragma follows the exception declaration and is within the same scope.

PLS-00110: bind variable name not allowed in this context

Cause: A bind variable, that is, an identifier prefixed with a colon, was found in an inappropriate context.

Action: Remove the colon or replace the bind variable with the appropriate object.

PLS-00111: end-of-file in Comment

Cause: A Comment had a comment initiator (/*), but before the Comment terminator (*/) was found, an end-of-file marker was encountered.

Action: Remove the Comment initiator or add a comment terminator. The line and column numbers accompanying the error message refer to the beginning of the last legal token before the Comment initiator.

PLS-00112: end-of-line in quoted identifier

Cause: A quoted identifier had a beginning quote ("), but before the ending quote (") was found, an end-of-line marker was encountered.

Action: Remove the beginning quote or add the ending quote. The line and column numbers accompanying the error message refer to the beginning of the quoted identifier.

PLS-00113: END identifier name1 must match name2 at line num, column num

Cause: Following the keyword END, which terminates some language constructs (such as loops, blocks, functions, and procedures), you can optionally place the name of that construct. For example, at the end of the definition of loop L you might write END L.

This error occurs when the optional name does not match the name given to the language construct. It is usually caused by a misspelled identifier or by faulty block structure.

Action: Make sure the spelling of the END identifier matches the name given to the language construct and that the block structure is correct.

PLS-00114: identifier name too long

Cause: The name of a PL/SQL variable is longer than 30 characters. Legal identifiers (including quoted identifiers) have a maximum length of 30 characters. A string literal might have been mistakenly enclosed in double quotes instead of single quotes, in which case PL/SQL considers it a quoted identifier.

Action: Shorten the name to 30 characters or less. If a string literal is being used, replace the double quotes with single quotes.

PLS-00115: this PRAGMA must follow the declaration of name

Cause: The pragma refers to a PL/SQL object that was not declared or is not within the scope of the reference. Identifiers must be declared before they are used in a pragma; forward references are not allowed.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00116: duplicate WHERE clause in table expression

Cause: Two or more WHERE clauses were found in a DELETE, SELECT, or UPDATE statement. The WHERE clause specifies a condition under which rows in a table are processed. The condition can contain several logical expressions connected by AND or OR, but a statement can contain only one WHERE clause.

Action: Remove one of the WHERE clauses and, if necessary, connect logical expressions by AND or OR.

PLS-00117: duplicate CONNECT BY clause in table expression

Cause: Two or more CONNECT BY clauses were found in a SELECT statement. The CONNECT BY clause defines a relationship used to return rows in a hierarchical order. The relationship can contain two expressions separated by a relational operator (such as = or !=), but a statement can contain only one CONNECT BY clause.

Action: Remove one of the CONNECT BY clauses and, if necessary, separate expressions by a relational operator.

PLS-00118: duplicate GROUP BY clause in table expression

Cause: Two or more GROUP BY clauses were found in a SELECT statement. The GROUP BY clause lists column expressions used to form a summary row for each group of selected rows. The list can contain several column expressions separated by commas, but a statement can contain only one GROUP BY clause.

Action: Remove one of the GROUP BY clauses and, if necessary, separate column expressions by commas.

PLS-00119: duplicate HAVING clause in table expression

Cause: Two or more HAVING clauses were found in a SELECT statement. The HAVING clause specifies a condition under which groups of rows (formed by the GROUP BY clause) are included in the result. The condition can include several logical expressions connected by AND or OR, but a statement can contain only one HAVING clause.

Action: Remove one of the HAVING clauses and, if necessary, connect logical expressions by AND or OR.

PLS-00120: inappropriate argument in OPEN statement

Cause: The cursor_name parameter in an OPEN statement is misspelled or does not refer to a legally declared cursor.

Action: Check the spelling of the cursor_name parameter. Make sure the cursor was declared properly.

PLS-00121: only the set function COUNT may take * as an argument

Cause: The asterisk (*) option was used in the argument list of a SQL group function other than COUNT. For example, the code might look like

SELECT SUM(*) INTO emp_count FROM emp;  -- should be COUNT(*) 


Only COUNT permits the use of the asterisk option, which returns the number of rows in a table.

Action: Remove the asterisk option from the argument list and replace it with an expression that refers to one or more database columns.

PLS-00122: USING is not allowed on this function

Cause: The keyword USING, rather than a comma is separating function arguments, but the function is not a built-in for which this is expected.

Action: Change the argument specification or the function name.

PLS-00123: program too large

Cause: PL/SQL was designed primarily for robust transaction processing. One consequence of the special-purpose design is that the PL/SQL compiler imposes a limit on block size. The limit depends on the mix of statements in the PL/SQL block. Blocks that exceed the limit cause this error.

Action: The best solution is to modularize the program by defining subprograms, which can be stored in an Oracle database. Another solution is to break the program into two sub-blocks. Have the first block INSERT any data the second block needs into a temporary database table. Then, have the second block SELECT the data from the table.

PLS-00124: name of exception expected for first argument in EXCEPTION_INIT pragma

Cause: The first argument passed to the EXCEPTION_INIT pragma was something other than an exception name. The first argument must be the name of a legally declared exception.

Action: Replace the first argument with the name of a legally declared exception.

PLS-00125: type name expected

Cause: When a constant or variable was declared, its datatype was not specified. For example, the code might look like

pi  CONSTANT := 3.14159;  -- should be CONSTANT REAL := 3.14159 


Every constant and variable must have a datatype, which specifies a storage format, constraints, and valid range of values.

Action: Supply the missing datatype specifier.

PLS-00126: selector ALL is not allowed

Cause: The ALL shortcut for specifying system privileges or statement options was used in a SQL statement. PL/SQL does not support the ALL shortcut.

Action: Remove the ALL shortcut from the SQL statement.

PLS-00127: pragma name is not a supported pragma

Cause: The named pragma (compiler directive) is not among those supported by PL/SQL. The pragma name might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty.

Action: Check the spelling of the pragma name, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00128: illegal number of arguments for pragma name

Cause: The number of arguments (actual parameters) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) is incorrect. A required argument was omitted from the argument list, or the pragma syntax is faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Supply the missing argument, or correct the faulty syntax.

PLS-00129: pragma INTERFACE only supports C as its first argument

Cause: The first parameter passed to pragma INTERFACE specified a host language other than C. Currently, C is the only host language supported. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the first parameter, which should be C, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00130: pragma name expects 1st argument to be a procedure/function/package/ cursor

Cause: The first argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not the name of a subprogram, package, or cursor, as required. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the first parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00131: pragma name expects 2nd argument to be a procedure

Cause: The second argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not the name of a procedure, as required. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the second parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00132: pragma RESTRICT_REFERENCES does not support str

Cause: One of the parameters passed to pragma RESTRICT_REFERENCES was not among the following, as required: WNDS, WNPS, RNDS, RNPS. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of all the parameters, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00133: pragma name expects 1st argument to be an identifier or string literal

Cause: The first argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not an identifier or string literal, as required. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the first parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00134: pragma name expects 2nd argument to be an identifier

Cause: The second argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not an identifier, as required. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the second parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00135: pragma name expects 3rd argument to be an identifier or string literal

Cause: The third argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not an identifier or string literal, as required. The parameter might be misspelled, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the spelling of the third parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00136: pragma name expects 3rd argument to be an empty string

Cause: The third argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not an empty string, as required. The parameter might be coded incorrectly, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the coding of the third parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00137: pragma name expects 4th argument to be a numeric-literal

Cause: The fourth argument (actual parameter) passed to the named pragma (compiler directive) was not a numeric literal, as required. The parameter might be coded incorrectly, or the pragma syntax might be faulty (for example, a comma might be missing between two parameters).

Action: Check the coding of the fourth parameter, and make sure the proper syntax was used.

PLS-00138: precision for a binary type must be one of 8, 16, or 32

Cause: Invalid precision was specified for a signed or unsigned binary type.

Action: Specify precision as one of 8, 16, or 32.

PLS-00139: duplicate external NAME specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external NAME specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external NAME specifications.

PLS-00140: duplicate external LIBRARY specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external LIBRARY specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external LIBRARY specifications.

PLS-00141: duplicate external PARAMETER STYLE specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external PARAMETER STYLE specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external PARAMETER STYLE specifications.

PLS-00142: duplicate external PARAMETER list specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external PARAMETER STYLE specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external PARAMETER STYLE specifications.

PLS-00143: duplicate external LANGUAGE specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external LANGUAGE specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external LANGUAGE specifications.

PLS-00144: duplicate external CALLING STANDARD specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external CALLING STANDARD specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external CALLING STANDARD specifications.

PLS-00145: duplicate external WITH CONTEXT specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external WITH CONTEXT specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external WITH CONTEXT specifications.

PLS-00146: duplicate external TRUSTED/UNTRUSTED specification in subprogram expression

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two external TRUSTED/UNTRUSTED specifications.

Action: Remove one of the external TRUSTED/UNTRUSTED specifications.

PLS-00147: LIBRARY file specification string is empty

Cause: A zero-length string was found for the LIBRARY file specification.

Action: Specify a non-zero length string for the LIBRARY file specification.

PLS-00148: only 1 pragma of this type is allowed per subprogram

Cause: The subprogram was found to have two PRAGMA RESTRICT_REFERENCES.

Action: Remove one of the PRAGMA RESTRICT_REFERENCES.

PLS-00150: found: name but expected: INTEGER

Cause: This error happens in the creation of a PL/SQL external type: [SIGNED | UNSIGNED] BINARY INTEGER (<precision>). It can be referenced only in a CREATE TYPE statement. Such types are non-queryable.

Action: Use a different type and retry the operation.

PLS-00151: expression or variable is an illegal type to PLS/QL: name

Cause: A type was used which does not belong PL/SQL. This type can only be referenced in CREATE TYPE statements, and is a non-queryable data type.

Action: Use a different type and retry the operation.

PLS-00152: POINTER type may only reference an object type

Cause: A POINTER type which does not belong to PL/SQL can only refer to an object type. This type can only be referenced in CREATE TYPE statements, and is a non-queryable data type.

Action: Use a different type and retry the operation.

PLS-00153: a name type may only be used as an object type attribute

Cause: A POINTER or [SIGNED/UNSIGNED] BINARY INTEGER can only be used as attributes of object types. These types can only be referenced in CREATE TYPE statements, and are non-queryable data types. One of these external PL/SQL types outside of an object type.

Action: Use a different type and retry the operation.

PLS-00154: an object type may have only 1 MAP or 1 ORDER method

Cause

More than one map or order function was declared. An object type can have only one map function or one order function, but not both.

Action: Delete all but one of the MAP or ORDER functions on the type.

PLS-00155: only a function may be a MAP or ORDER method

Cause: A member procedure was declared as either a map or order method. Only member functions can be map or order methods.

Action: Change the procedure to a function. ORA-00156

null constraints not supported for object attributes

Cause: A null constraint was specified for an attribute in an object. This is not supported.

Action: Remove the constraint and retry the operation.

PLS-00201: identifier name must be declared

Cause: A attempt was made to reference either

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the referenced name.

  1. Verify that the declaration for the referenced item is placed correctly in the block structure.
  2. If the referenced item is declared but you do not have privileges to refer to that item, for security reasons, you will be notified only that the item is not declared.
  3. If the referenced item is declared and you believe that you have privileges to refer to that item, check the privileges; if the privileges were granted only via a role, then this is expected and documented behavior. Stored objects (packages, procedures, functions, triggers, views) run in the security domain of the object owner with no roles enabled except PUBLIC. Again, you will be notified only that the item was not declared.

PLS-00202: type name must be declared

Cause: An attempt was made to reference an undefined type. Either the type specifier was not declared or it is not within the scope of the reference.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the type specifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00203: function DECODE must be called with at least 3 non-Boolean arguments

Cause: Less than three arguments were passed to the built-in function DECODE. Though DECODE takes a variable number of (non-Boolean) arguments, at least three arguments must be passed.

Action: Call DECODE with three or more arguments.

PLS-00204: function or pseudo-column name may be used inside a SQL statement only

Cause: A pseudocolumn or proscribed function was used in a procedural statement. The SQL pseudocolumns (CURRVAL, LEVEL, NEXTVAL, ROWID, ROWNUM) can be used only in SQL statements. Likewise, certain functions such as DECODE, DUMP, and VSIZE and the SQL group functions (AVG, MIN, MAX, COUNT, SUM, STDDEV, VARIANCE) can be used only in SQL statements.

Action: Remove the pseudocolumn reference or function call from the procedural statement. Or, replace the procedural statement with a SELECT INTO statement; for example, replace

bonus := DECODE(rating, 1, 5000, 2, 2500, ...); 


with the following statement:

SELECT DECODE(rating, 1, 5000, 2, 2500, ...) INTO bonus FROM dual;

PLS-00205: aggregate not allowed here

Cause: An aggregate, that is, a parenthesized list of values such as (7788, 'SCOTT', 20), was found in an inappropriate context.

Action: Remove or relocate the aggregate.

PLS-00206: %TYPE must be applied to a variable, column, field, or attribute, not to name

Cause: The program object declared using the %TYPE datatype attribute is not of the appropriate class. It must be a variable, column, record component, subprogram formal parameter, or other object to which values can be assigned.

Action: Declare an object of the appropriate class or define the datatype in another way (for example, use %ROWTYPE).

PLS-00207: identifier name, applied to implicit cursor SQL, is not a legal cursor attribute

Cause: An identifier that is not a cursor attribute was applied to the identifier SQL. For example, this error occurs if the cursor attribute is misspelled.

Action: Check the spelling of the cursor attribute name. Make sure the attribute is one of these: %NOTFOUND, %FOUND, %ROWCOUNT, %ISOPEN.

PLS-00208: identifier name is not a legal cursor attribute

Cause: An identifier not declared as a cursor attribute was applied to an identifier declared as a cursor. For example, this error occurs if the cursor attribute is misspelled.

Action: Check the spelling of the cursor attribute name. Make sure the attribute is one of these: %NOTFOUND, %FOUND, %ROWCOUNT, %ISOPEN.

PLS-00209: table name is not in FROM clause

Cause: In a query, a table referenced by the select list is not named in the FROM clause.

Action: Check the spelling of the table names, make sure each column in the select list refers to a table in the FROM clause, then re-execute the query.

PLS-00210: an OTHERS clause is required in this CASE statement

Cause: Unless the clauses of a CASE statement mention all values of the type of the selecting expression, an OTHERS clause must be provided as the last clause of the CASE statement. It is impossible to cover all values of type INTEGER (or NUMBER), so an OTHERS clause is always required when the expression following the keyword CASE is of type INTEGER (or NUMBER).

Action: None required since CASE statement not supported in releases 1.x,2.x, or 3.x.

PLS-00211: CASE labels or ranges must not be duplicated in different WHEN clauses

Cause: In this CASE statement, a value appears in more than one WHEN clause. A value may appear in at most one WHEN clause of a CASE statement.

Action: None required since CASE statement not supported in releases 1.x,2.x, or 3.x.

PLS-00212: could not obtain enough memory to compile CASE statement

Cause: The CASE statement is too big. The compiler did not have enough storage to process it.

Action: None required since CASE statement not supported in releases 1.x,2.x,or 3.x.

PLS-00213: package STANDARD not accessible

Cause: The PL/SQL compiler could not find package STANDARD in the current Oracle database. To compile a program, PL/SQL needs package STANDARD.

Action: Make sure that package STANDARD is available in the current Oracle database, then retry the operation.

PLS-00214: BEGIN...END block nesting is too deep

Cause: The number of levels of nesting in the PL/SQL block is too large. Blocks can be nested up to 255 levels deep, depending on the availability of system resources such as memory.

Action: Reorganize the block structure to avoid nesting at too deep a level. For example, move the lowest-level sub-block to a higher level.

PLS-00215: string length constraints must be in range (1 .. 32767)

Cause: When a character variable was declared, a length outside the legal range was specified. For example, the following declarations are illegal:

flag  CHAR(0);        -- illegal; zero length 

name  VARCHAR2(-10);  -- illegal; negative length

Action: Change the length constraint, making sure that it lies in the range 1 .. 32767.

PLS-00216: NUMBER precision constraint must be in range (1 .. 38)

Cause: A NUMBER variable was declared with a precision that is outside the legal range. Declarations such as N NUMBER(800) or N NUMBER(123,10) are not supported.

Action: Change the illegal NUMBER precision constraint, making sure that it lies in the range 1 .. 38.

PLS-00217: NUMBER scale constraint must be in range (-84 .. 127)

Cause: A NUMBER variable was declared with a scale that is outside the legal range. Declarations such as N NUMBER(10,345) or N NUMBER(10,-100) are not supported.

Action: Change the illegal NUMBER scale constraint, making sure that it lies in the range -84 .. 127.

PLS-00218: a variable declared NOT NULL must have an initialization assignment

Cause: In general, variables that have no initialization clause in their declaration are automatically initialized to NULL. This is illogical for NOT NULL variables; therefore, an initialization clause is required.

Action: Add an initialization clause to the variable declaration. If the initialization is too complicated for the syntax, add a function call.

PLS-00219: label name reference is out of scope

Cause: A block or loop label was used to qualify a variable (as in outer_block.date) that was not declared or is not within the scope of the label. The variable name might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the variable name. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00220: simple name required in this context

Cause: An attempt was made to enter a qualified name such as A.B or A.B.C. A qualified name is not permitted here.

Action: Use a simple name such as A instead.

PLS-00221: name is not a procedure or is undefined

Cause: An identifier being referenced as a procedure was not declared or actually represents another object (for example, it might have been declared as a function).

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00222: no function with name name exists in this scope

Cause: An identifier being referenced as a function was not declared or actually represents another object (for example, it might have been declared as a procedure).

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00223: parameterless procedure name used as function

Cause: An identifier being referenced as a parameterless function actually represents a procedure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure. If necessary, change the declaration of the identifier or change the reference so that it does not require a return value.

PLS-00224: object name must be of type function or array to be used this way

Cause: An identifier being referenced as a function or an array actually represents an object (a number or date, for example) that cannot be referenced in this way.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00225: subprogram or cursor name reference is out of scope

Cause: A subprogram or cursor references a variable that was not declared or is not within the scope of the subprogram or cursor. The variable name might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the variable name. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00226: package name used as variable reference

Cause: A package was referenced in an expression as if it were a variable or function. Either the name of the variable or function is misspelled or the reference is not fully qualified. For example, to call the function my_function, which is stored in package my_package, dot notation must be used, as follows:

 ... my_package.my_function ...

Action: Correct the spelling of the variable or function name or use dot notation to reference the packaged variable or function.

PLS-00227: subprogram IN formal name is not yet denoteable

Cause: When the formal parameters of a subprogram were declared, one parameter was used to initialize another, as in

PROCEDURE my_proc (j NUMBER, k NUMBER := j) IS ... 


The first parameter has no value until run time, so it cannot be used to initialize another parameter.

Action: Remove the illegal formal parameter reference.

PLS-00228: illegal declaration of variable of type LONG

Cause: An attempt was made to declare a variables to be of type LONG. Only columns can be of type LONG.

Action: Remove the illegal variable definition.

PLS-00229: attribute expression within SQL expression

Cause: An attribute expression, such as SQL%NOTFOUND, was used in a SQL statement, but attribute expressions are allowed only in procedural statements.

Action: To work around this limitation, assign the value of the attribute expression to a variable, then use the variable in the SQL statement. For example, replace the statement

INSERT INTO audits VALUES (c1%ROWCOUNT, ...); 


with the following statements:

row_count := c1%ROWCOUNT;
INSERT INTO audits VALUES (row_count, ...);

PLS-00230: OUT and IN OUT formal parameters may not have default expressions

Cause: When the formal parameters of a procedure were declared, an OUT or IN OUT parameter was initialized to a default value, as in

PROCEDURE calc_bonus (bonus OUT REAL := 0, ...) IS ... 


However, only IN parameters can be initialized to default values.

Action: Remove the illegal default expression.

PLS-00231: function name may not be used in SQL

Cause: A proscribed function was used in a SQL statement. Certain functions such as SQLCODE and SQLERRM can be used only in procedural statements.

Action: Remove the function call from the SQL statement. Or, replace the function call with a local variable. For example, the following statement is illegal:

INSERT INTO errors VALUES (SQLCODE, SQLERRM); 


However, you can assign the values of SQLCODE and SQLERRM to local variables, then use the variables in the SQL statement, as follows:

err_num := SQLCODE;
err_msg := SQLERRM;
INSERT INTO errors VALUES (err_num, err_msg()

PLS-00232: nested packages not permitted

Cause: A package was declared inside another package, but package declarations are allowed only at the top level. In other words, packages cannot be nested.

Action: Move the package declaration outside the enclosing package.

PLS-00233: function name used as an exception name in WHEN clause

Cause: The WHEN clause in an exception handler contains a function call instead of an exception name. A valid exception handler consists of a WHEN clause, which must specify an exception, followed by a sequence of statements to be executed when that exception is raised.

Action: Check the spelling of the identifier in the WHEN clause, then replace the function call with an exception name.

PLS-00234: PARAMETER STYLE SQL may not be specified with a PARAMATERS list

Cause: A subprogram cannot specify both PARAMETER STYLE SQL and an explicit PARAMETERS list. Use PARAMETER STYLE GENERAL to supply default PARAMETERS list types.

Action: Change the subprogram specification.

PLS-00235: the external type is not appropriate for the parameter

Cause: An unsuccessful attempt was made to convert a parameter to the specified external parameter type.

Action: Specify a different external type or parameter type.

PLS-00236: invalid external type specification for name

Cause: The external type specified is not valid for one of the following: INDICATOR, LENGTH, MAXLEN, TDO, DURATION, CHARSETID, or CHARSETFORM.

Action: Check the manual and specify an appropriate external type.

PLS-00237: invalid BY VALUE indicator or length specification

Cause: BY VALUE was specified with an indicator or length parameter that is being passed in OUT or IN OUT mode. Only IN mode parameters can be passed by value.

Action: Remove the BY VALUE specification or change it to IN mode.

PLS-00238: external parameter name not found in formal parameter list

Cause: An external parameter name was specified that does not match one in the formal parameter list.

Action: Correct the external parameter name.

PLS-00239: invalid external type specification for SQLCODE

Cause: An inappropriate external parameter type was specified for the SQLCODE parameter.

Action: Correct the SQLCODE parameter specification.

PLS-00240: invalid type specification for RETURN indicator, LENGTH, TDO, or DURATION

Cause: An inappropriate external parameter type was specified for the RETURN indicator, LENGTH, TDO, or DURATION.

Action: Correct the RETURN parameter specification.

PLS-00241: invalid external type specification for SQLSTATE

Cause: An inappropriate external parameter type was specified for the SQLSTATE parameter.

Action: Correct the SQLSTATE parameter specification.

PLS-00242: invalid external type specification for CONTEXT

Cause: An inappropriate external parameter type was specified for the CONTEXT parameter.

Action: Correct the CONTEXT parameter specification.

PLS-00243: invalid external type specification for SQLNAME

Cause: An inappropriate external parameter type was specified for the SQLNAME parameter.

Action: Correct the SQLNAME parameter specification.

PLS-00244: multiple declarations in foreign function formal parameter list

Cause: There are multiple declarations of at least one the following: FORMAL, INDICATOR, LENGTH, MAXLENGTH, or CONTEXT. PL/SQL allows only one declaration of the above for each formal parameter in the PARAMETERS clause.

Action: Correct the PARAMETERS clause.

PLS-00245: formals used in the 'parameters' clause must appear exactly once

Cause: There are multiple declarations of the formal parameter in the PARAMETERS clause. PL/SQL allows only one declaration of the formal parameter in the PARAMETERS clause.

Action: Correct the PARAMETERS clause.

PLS-00246: PARAMETER STYLE is unsupported

Cause: A PARAMETER STYLE clause was placed in the external subprogram body.

Action: Remove the PARAMETER STYLE clause.

PLS-00247: LIBRARY name must be specified

Cause: The LIBRARY name was not specified in the external subprogram body.

Action: Add a valid LIBRARY name.

PLS-00248: invalid LIBRARY syntax

Cause: The LIBRARY syntax was entered incorrectly.

Action: Correct the LIBRARY syntax and recompile.

PLS-00249: invalid WITH CONTEXT Syntax

Cause: CONTEXT was used in a WITH CONTEXT or a PARAMETERS clause. This is invalid.

Action: Check if WITH CONTEXT is used without specifying CONTEXT in the PARAMETERS clause or vice versa. The PARAMETERS clause must be complete. Thus if WITH CONTEXT is specified, then CONTEXT must be referenced in the PARAMETERS clause (if there is one).

PLS-00250: incorrect usage of name in parameters clause

Cause: Keywords such as MAXLEN, LENGTH were used in the PARAMETERS clause. This is invalid.

Action: This error occurs if keywords like MAXLEN, LENGTH, TDO, DURATION, CHARSETID, or CHARSETFORM cannot be used with PL/SQL formal parameters or the mode of the formal parameter. For example, MAXLEN can only be declared for a CHAR or VARCHAR2 PL/SQL variable and its use is allowed only for OUT or INOUT PL/SQL variables.

PLS-00251: RETURN, for actual function return, must be last in the parameters clause

Cause: RETURN specification for the actual function return, used within the parameters clause must hold the very last position.

Example : The following will give this error since the RETURN specification for the actual function return in the PARAMETERS clause is not the last.

FUNCTION myexternalfunc (var1 BINARY_INTEGER, 

                         var2 BINARY_INTEGER) 

                         RETURN BINARY_INTEGER IS EXTERNAL

         NAME "myexternalfunc"

         LIBRARY somelib

         PARAMETERS (var1 LONG, var2 SHORT, 

                     RETURN INT, RETURN INDICATOR SHORT);

The correct syntax is the following. Note that RETURN for actual function return is the last specification in the PARAMETERS clause.

FUNCTION myexternalfunc (var1 BINARY_INTEGER, 

                         var2 BINARY_INTEGER) 

                         RETURN BINARY_INTEGER IS EXTERNAL

         NAME "myexternalfunc"

         LIBRARY somelib

         PARAMETERS (var1 LONG, var2 SHORT, 

                     RETURN INDICATOR SHORT, RETURN INT);

Action: Correct the syntax of the RETURN specification in the PARAMETERS clause.

PLS-00252: reference to the wrong copy of package STANDARD

Cause: A reference is made to the fixed package version of STANDARD when the database is open, or to the on-disk version when the database is closed.Explicit use of a SYS.X$ package name can lead to this. One might also see this from a compilation that begins while the db is closed but has the bad luck to have another session open the db before name-res is complete.

Action: Make use of on-disk versions of packages when the database is open and fixed (preloaded) versions when the database is closed. Do not attempt to use the wrong set. It should be quite hard to reference the wrong set, except by using SYS.X$ names explicitly.

PLS-00302: component name must be declared

Cause: In a reference to a component (for example, in the name A.B, B is a component of A), the component was not declared. The component might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the component. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00303: qualifier name must be declared

Cause: In a name such as A.B, A is a qualifier, and B is a component of the qualifier. This error occurs when no declaration for the qualifier is found. The qualifier might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the qualifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00304: cannot compile body of name without its specification

Cause: The compiled package specification required to compile a package body could not be found. Some possible causes follow:

    The package specification must be compiled before compiling the package body, and the compiler must have access to the compiled specification.

Action: Check the spelling of the package name. Compile the package specification before compiling the package body. Also, make sure the compiler has access to the compiled specification.

PLS-00305: previous use of name conflicts with this use

Cause: While looking for prior declarations of a cursor, procedure, function, or package, the compiler found another object with the same name in the same scope. Or, the headers of subprogram in a package specification and body do not match word for word.

Action: Check the spelling of the cursor, procedure, function, or package name. Also check the names of all constants, variables, parameters, and exceptions declared in the same scope. Then, remove or rename the object with the duplicate name. Or, change the headers of the packaged subprogram so that they match word for word.

PLS-00306: wrong number or types of arguments in call to name

Cause: This error occurs when the named subprogram call cannot be matched to any declaration for that subprogram name. The subprogram name might be misspelled, a parameter might have the wrong datatype, the declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure. For example, this error occurs if the built-in square root function SQRT is called with a misspelled name or with a parameter of the wrong datatype.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the subprogram name. Also confirm that its call is correct, its parameters are of the right datatype, and, if it is not a built-in function, that its declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00307: too many declarations of name match this call

Cause: The declaration of a subprogram name is ambiguous because there was no exact match between the declaration and the call and more than one declaration matched the call when implicit conversions of the parameter datatypes were used. The subprogram name might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the subprogram name. Also confirm that its call is correct, its parameters are of the right datatype, and, if it is not a built-in function, that its declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00308: this construct is not allowed as the origin of an assignment

Cause: The construct or expression does not designate a value that can be assigned to a variable. For example, the datatype name NUMBER cannot appear on the right hand side of an assignment statement as in X := NUMBER.

Action: Correct the illegal assignment statement.

PLS-00309: with %LAST attribute, name must be a variable of an enumerated type

Cause: The "%LAST" attribute must be applied to an enumerated type (or subtype of an enumerated type). This error occurs when "%LAST" follows some name that has not been so declared.

Action: Make sure that %LAST follows an enumerated type (or subtype of an enumerated type).

PLS-00310: with %ROWTYPE attribute, name must name a table, cursor, or cursor variable

Cause: The %ROWTYPE attribute must be applied to an identifier declared as a cursor, cursor variable, or database table. This error occurs when %ROWTYPE follows some identifier that has not been so declared.

Action: Change the declaration or do not apply the %ROWTYPE attribute to the identifier.

PLS-00311: the declaration of the type of name is incomplete or malformed

Cause: This occurrence of the identifier cannot be compiled because its datatype has not been properly defined.

Action: Correct the faulty datatype declaration.

PLS-00312: a positional parameter association may not follow a named association

Cause: When a list of parameters is passed to a subprogram or cursor, if both positional and named associations are used, all positional associations must be placed in their declared order and before all named associations, which can be in any order.

Action: Reorder the parameter list to meet the requirements or use named association only.

PLS-00313: name not declared in this scope

Cause: There is no declaration for the given identifier within the scope of reference. The identifier might be misspelled, its declaration might be faulty, or the declaration might be placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00314: TABLE declarations are not allowed as PL/SQL local variables

Cause: In a precompiled program, the DECLARE TABLE statement was mistakenly used inside an embedded PL/SQL block. If an embedded PL/SQL block refers to a database table that does not yet exist, use the DECLARE TABLE statement to tell the precompiler what the table will look like. However, DECLARE TABLE statements are allowed only in the host program.

Action: Move the DECLARE TABLE statement outside the embedded PL/SQL block. If you want a variable that can store an entire row of data selected from a database table or fetched from a cursor or cursor variable, use the %ROWTYPE attribute.

PLS-00315: PL/SQL TABLE declarations must currently use BINARY_INTEGER indexes

Cause: In the INDEX BY clause of a PL/SQL table declaration, a datatype other than BINARY_INTEGER was specified. PL/SQL tables can have one column and a primary key. The column can have any scalar type, but the primary key must have type BINARY_INTEGER.

Action: Change the datatype specifier to BINARY_INTEGER.

PLS-00316: PL/SQL tables must currently use a single BINARY_INTEGER index

Cause: In the INDEX BY clause of a PL/SQL table declaration, a composite primary key was specified. PL/SQL tables must have a simple, unnamed primary key of type BINARY_INTEGER.

Action: Change the faulty clause to INDEX BY BINARY_INTEGER.

PLS-00317: incomplete type name was not completed in its declarative region

Cause: An incomplete type declaration was not completed in the declarative region where it was declared.

Action: Complete the type appropriately.

PLS-00318: type name is malformed because it is a non-REF mutually recursive type

Cause: A type-declaration such as:

-- non-REF recursive type

type t is record (a t);


or

-- non-REF mutually dependent types
type t1;
type t2 is record (a t1);
type t1 is record (a t2);

was entered.

Action: Use another type to remove the recursion.

PLS-00319: subquery in an IN or NOT IN clause must contain exactly one column

Cause: An invalid expression such as

IN (SELECT x, y, z FROM ... ) 


was used. When a [NOT]IN clause is used with a subquery, it does not test for set membership. The number of expressions in the [NOT]IN clause and the subquery select list must match. So, in the example above, the subquery must specify at most one column.

Action: Change the subquery to select only one column.

PLS-00320: the declaration of the type of this expression is incomplete or malformed

Cause: In a declaration, the name of a variable or cursor is misspelled or the declaration makes a forward reference. Forward references are not allowed in PL/SQL. A variable or cursor must be declared before it is referenced it in other statements, including other declarative statements. For example, the following declaration of dept_rec raises this exception because it refers to a cursor not yet declared:

DECLARE

        dept_rec  dept_cur%ROWTYPE;

        CURSOR dept_cur IS SELECT ... 

           ...

Action: Check the spelling of all identifiers in the declaration. If necessary, move the declaration so that it makes no forward references.

PLS-00321: expression str is inappropriate as the left hand side of an assignment statement

Cause: The expression does not designate a variable that can have a value assigned to it. For example, the function SYSDATE cannot appear on the left hand side of an assignment statement such as

SYSDATE := '01-JAN-1990';

Action: Correct the illegal assignment statement.

PLS-00322: declaration of a constant name must contain an initialization assignment

Cause: A constant declaration lacks the assignment of an initial value. For example, in the following declaration " := 3.14159" is the initialization clause:

pi CONSTANT NUMBER := 3.14159;

Action: Correct the constant declaration by supplying the missing initialization assignment.

PLS-00323: subprogram name is declared in a package specification and must be defined in the package body

Cause: A subprogram specification was placed in a package specification, but the corresponding subprogram body was not placed in the package body. The package body implements the package specification. So, the package body must contain the definition of every subprogram declared in the package specification.

Action: Check the spelling of the subprogram name. If necessary, add the missing subprogram body to the package body.

PLS-00324: cursor attribute may not be applied to non-cursor name

Cause: This error occurs when a cursor attribute (%FOUND, %NOTFOUND, %ROWCOUNT, or %ISOPEN) appears following an identifier not declared as a cursor or cursor variable. It occurs, for example, if the variable name my_cur in my_cur%FOUND was not properly declared as a cursor or if the variable declaration was placed incorrectly in the block structure.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the identifier. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00325: non-integral numeric literal num is inappropriate in this context

Cause: A non-integer numeric literal was used in a context that requires an integer (a number with no decimal point).

Action: Replace the inappropriate literal with an integer literal.

PLS-00326: IN clause must contain same number of expressions as subquery

Cause: The number of expressions in an IN clause did not equal the number of expressions in a corresponding subquery select list. For example, the following statement is invalid because the IN clause contains two expressions, but the subquery select list contains just one:

    ... WHERE (ename, sal) IN (SELECT sal FROM emp);

Action: Check the number of expressions in each set, then revise the statement to make the numbers equal.

PLS-00327: 'name' is not in SQL scope here

Cause: In a SQL statement, a reference was made to an out-of-scope database object. The referenced object might be misspelled, or the reference might be mixed, as in the following example:

CURSOR c1 IS SELECT dept.dname FROM emp;

Action: Check the spelling of all database objects in the SQL statement, and make sure all references are to objects within the current scope.

PLS-00328: a subprogram body must be defined for the forward declaration of name

Cause: A subprogram specification was declared, but the corresponding subprogram body was not defined. Write the subprogram specification and body as a unit. An alternative solution is to separate the specification from its body, which is necessary when you want to define mutually recursive subprograms or you want to group subprograms in a package.

Action: Check the spelling of the subprogram name. If necessary, supply the missing subprogram body.

PLS-00329: schema-level type has illegal reference to name

Cause: An attempt was made to make a reference from a schema-level type to something other than a schema-level type.

Action: Replace the illegal reference with a schema type.

PLS-00330: invalid use of type name or subtype name

Cause: A datatype or subtype specifier was mistakenly used in place of a constant, variable, or expression. For example, the code might look like

IF emp_count > number THEN ... -- illegal; NUMBER is a datatype specifier

Action: Replace the datatype or subtype specifier with a valid constant, variable, or expression.

PLS-00331: illegal reference to name

Cause: An illegal reference was made to some object in user SYS. This could have happened only if:

Action: Remove the reference.

PLS-00332: name is not a valid prefix for a qualified name

Cause: You have a malformed qualified name because the prefix is not valid.

Action: Remove or change the reference.

PLS-00333: name must match an object-table alias in this context

Cause: The name, appearing in the context of a REF or VALUE, did not resolve to an object-table alias.

Action: 1) If there is no object table in the scope, then remove the REF or VALUE; or provide the missing object table reference.

2) If there is an object table in the scope, but you are not referring to it, add the reference.

PLS-00334: name matches table or view without an alias

Cause: You have a reference to a table or view name without an alias.

Action: Replace the reference with a reference to an object-table alias.

PLS-00335: a package name conflicts with an existing object

Cause: In a CREATE PACKAGE statement, a package (which is a database object that groups logically related PL/SQL types, objects, and subprograms) was given the same name as an existing database object.

Action: Give the package a unique name.

PLS-00336: non-object-table name illegal in this context

Cause: You have a REF or VALUE modifier for a non-object-table

Action: Replace the reference with a reference to an object-table alias.

PLS-00337: name matches too many object table aliases

Cause: You have an ambiguous reference to an object-table alias; there are at least two object-table aliases in the same scope.

Action: Remove all but one of the references or change the alias names of the remaining.

PLS-00338: unable to resolve name as a column or row expression

Cause: You have a reference to a name that could not be resolved as a column or row expression. This occurred in an update or insert statement involving an object-table.

Action: If this is an update statement and you intended to code this as a column reference, fix it as such. If you intended to code this as a row expression, change this to refer to an alias of an object-table.

PLS-00339: name matches object-table without a REF or VALUE modifier"

Cause: You have an object-table name appearing without a REF or VALUE modifier.

Action: If you intended to code this with a REF or VALUE modifier, add the modifier; if you intended to code this as a column reference, change the reference appropriately; otherwise, remove the reference.

PLS-00341: declaration of cursor name is incomplete or malformed

Cause: A cursor declaration is improper or an identifier referenced in the cursor declaration was not properly declared. A return type that does not refer to an existing database table or a previously declared cursor or cursor variable might have been specified. For example, the following cursor declaration is illegal because c1 is not yet fully defined:

CURSOR c1 RETURN c1%ROWTYPE IS SELECT ...  -- illegal   


In this case, a return type does not have to be specified because it is implicit.

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the cursor name and any identifiers referenced in the cursor declaration. Also confirm that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure. If a return type was specified, make sure that it refers to an existing database table or a previously declared cursor or cursor variable.

PLS-00351: not logged on to database name

Cause: An attempt was made to access an Oracle database without being logged on. Probably, an invalid username or password was entered.

Action: Log on to Oracle with a correctly spelled username and password before trying to access the database.

PLS-00352: unable to access another database name

Cause: An attempt was made to reference an object in a database other than the current local or remote Oracle database.

Action: Correct the reference and make sure the object is in the current Oracle database.

PLS-00353: name must name a user in the database

Cause: This error occurs when the username was misspelled or when the user does not exist in the database.

Action: Check the spelling of the username and make sure the user exists.

PLS-00354: username must be a simple identifier

Cause: A qualified username such as scott.accts is not permitted in this context.

Action: Specify a simple username such as scott instead.

PLS-00355: use of PL/SQL table not allowed in this context

Cause: A PL/SQL table was referenced in the wrong context (for example, with a remote link).

Action: Remove the PL/SQL table reference or change the context.

PLS-00356: name must name a table to which the user has access

Cause: The named table is not accessible to the user. This error occurs when the table name or username was misspelled, the table and/or user does not exist in the database, the user was not granted the necessary privileges, or the table name duplicates the name of a local variable or loop counter.

Action: Check the spelling of the table name and username. Also confirm that the table and user exist, the user has the necessary privileges, and the table name does not duplicate the name of a local variable or loop counter.

PLS-00357: table, view or sequence reference name not allowed in this context

Cause: A reference to database table, view, or sequence was found in an inappropriate context. Such references can appear only in SQL statements or (excluding sequences) in %TYPE and %ROWTYPE declarations. Some valid examples follow:

SELECT ename, emp.deptno, dname INTO my_ename, my_deptno, my_dept

    .FROM emp, dept WHERE emp.deptno = dept.deptno;  

DECLARE

      last_name  emp.ename%TYPE;

       dept_rec   dept%ROWTYPE;

Action: Remove or relocate the illegal reference.

PLS-00358: column name exists in more than one table; use qualifier

Cause: The statement is ambiguous because it specifies two or more tables having the same column name. For example, the following statement is ambiguous because deptno is a column in both tables:

SELECT deptno, loc INTO my_deptno, my_loc FROM emp, dept;

Action: Precede the column name with the table name (as in emp.deptno) so that the column reference is unambiguous.

PLS-00359: assignment target in str must have components

Cause: An assignment target was declared that lacks the components needed to store the assigned values. For example, this error occurs if you try to assign a row of column values to a variable instead of a record, as follows:

DECLARE

        dept_rec  dept%ROWTYPE;

        my_deptno dept.deptno%TYPE;

        ...     

BEGIN

        SELECT deptno, dname, loc INTO my_deptno  -- invalid

           FROM dept WHERE ...

Action: Check the spelling of the names of the assignment target and all its components. Make sure the assignment target is declared with the required components and that the declaration is placed correctly in the block structure.

PLS-00360: cursor declaration without body needs return type

Cause: A cursor declaration lacks either a body (SELECT statement) or a return type. If you want to separate a cursor specification from its body, a return type must be supplied, as in

CURSOR c1 RETURN emp%ROWTYPE;

Action: Add a SELECT statement or return type to the cursor declaration.

PLS-00361: a cursor variable must be IN OUT to be OPENed

Cause: A cursor variable was declared as the IN or OUT formal parameter of a subprogram that, when called, will change the state of the cursor variable. In such cases, the cursor variable must be declared as an IN OUT parameter.

Action: Change the parameter mode from IN or OUT to IN OUT.

PLS-00362: invalid cursor return type; 'name' must be a record type

Cause: In a cursor specification or REF CURSOR type definition, a non-record type such as NUMBER or TABLE was specified as the return type. This is not allowed. Only the following return types are allowed:

Action: Revise the cursor specification or REF CURSOR type definition so that it specifies one of the above return types.

PLS-00363: expression str cannot be used as an assignment target

Cause: A literal, constant, IN parameter, loop counter, or function call was mistakenly used as the target of an assignment. For example, the following statement is illegal because the assignment target, 30, is a literal:

SELECT deptno INTO 30 FROM dept WHERE ...  -- illegal

Action: Correct the statement by using a valid assignment target.

PLS-00364: loop index variable name use is invalid

Cause: A reference to a loop counter was found in an inappropriate context. For example, the following statement is illegal because the loop counter is used as the terminal value in its own range expression:

FOR j IN 1 .. j LOOP ...  -- illegal

Action: Change the loop range expression so that it does not reference the loop counter. If you want to refer in the range expression to another variable with the same name as the loop counter, change either name or qualify the variable name with a label.

PLS-00365: name is an OUT parameter and cannot be read

Cause: An attempt was made to assign the value of an OUT parameter to another parameter or variable. Inside a procedure, an OUT parameter acts like an uninitialized variable; therefore, its value cannot be read. For example, the following assignments are illegal:

PROCEDURE calc_bonus (bonus OUT REAL, ...) IS  

       rating  REAL; 

       wages   REAL;  

 BEGIN 

       ... 

       IF rating > 90 THEN

           bonus := bonus * 2;  -- illegal 

           SELECT sal + bonus INTO wages FROM emp ...  -- illegal

           ...

        END IF;

        ...   

END calc_bonus;

Action: Use an IN OUT parameter instead of the OUT parameter. Inside a procedure, an IN OUT parameter acts like an initialized variable; therefore, its value can be read.

PLS-00366: subtype of a NOT NULL type must also be NOT NULL

Cause: After a subtype was defined as NOT NULL, it was used as the base type for another subtype defined as NULL. That is not allowed. For example, the code might look like

DECLARE

        SUBTYPE Weekday IS INTEGER NOT NULL;

         SUBTYPE Weekend IS Weekday NULL;  -- illegal   


instead of

DECLARE
SUBTYPE Weekday IS INTEGER NOT NULL;
SUBTYPE Weekend IS Weekday;

Action: Revise the subtype definitions to eliminate the conflict.

PLS-00367: a RAISE statement with no exception name must be inside an exception handler

Cause: A RAISE statement not followed by an exception name was found outside an exception handler.

Action: Delete the RAISE statement, relocate it to an exception handler, or supply the missing exception name.

PLS-00368: in RAISE statement, name must be an exception name

Cause: The identifier in a RAISE statement is not a valid exception name.

Action: Make sure the identifier in the RAISE statement was declared as an exception and is correctly placed in the block structure. If you are using the name of a PL/SQL predefined exception, check its spelling.

PLS-00369: no choices may appear with choice OTHERS in an exception handler

Cause: A construct of the form

WHEN excep1 OR OTHERS => 


was encountered in the definition of an exception handler. The OTHERS handler must appear by itself as the last exception handler in a block.

Action: Remove the identifier that appears with OTHERS or write a separate exception handler for that identifier.

PLS-00370: OTHERS handler must be last among the exception handlers of a block

Cause: One or more exception handlers appear after an OTHERS handler. However, the OTHERS handler must be the last handler in a block or subprogram because it acts as the handler for all exceptions not named specifically.

Action: Move the OTHERS handler so that it follows all specific exception handlers.

PLS-00371: at most one declaration for name is permitted in the declaration section

Cause: A reference to an identifier is ambiguous because there are conflicting declarations for it in the declarative part of a block, procedure, or function. At most one declaration of the identifier is permitted in a declarative part.

Action: Check the spelling of the identifier. If necessary, remove all but one declaration of the identifier.

PLS-00372: in a procedure, RETURN statement cannot contain an expression

Cause: In a procedure, a RETURN statement contains an expression, which is not allowed. In functions, a RETURN statement must contain an expression because its value is assigned to the function identifier. However, in procedures, a RETURN statement simply lets you exit before the normal end of the procedure is reached.

Action: Remove the expression from the RETURN statement, or redefine the procedure as a function.

PLS-00373: EXIT label name must label a LOOP statement

Cause: The label in an EXIT statement does not refer to a loop. An EXIT statement need not specify a label. However, if a label is specified (as in EXIT my_label), it must refer to a loop statement.

Action: Make sure the label name is spelled correctly and that it refers to a loop statement.

PLS-00374: illegal EXIT statement; it must appear inside the loop labeled name

Cause: An EXIT statement need not specify a label. However, if a label is specified (as in EXIT my_label), the EXIT statement must be inside the loop designated by that label.

Action: Make sure the label name is spelled correctly; if necessary, move the EXIT statement inside the loop to which the label refers.

PLS-00375: illegal GOTO statement; this GOTO cannot branch to label name

Cause: The line and column numbers accompanying the error message refer to a GOTO that branches from outside a construct (a loop or exception handler, for example) that contains a sequence of statements to a label inside that sequence of statements. Such a branch is not allowed.

Action: Either move the GOTO statement inside the sequence of statements or move the labeled statement outside the sequence of statements.

PLS-00376: illegal EXIT statement; it must appear inside a loop

Cause: An EXIT statement was found outside of a loop construct. The EXIT statement is used to exit prematurely from a loop and so must always appear within a loop.

Action: Either remove the EXIT statement or place it inside a loop.

PLS-00378: invalid compilation unit for this release of PL/SQL

Cause: A compilation unit is a file containing PL/SQL source code that is passed to the compiler. Only compilation units containing blocks, declarations, statements, and subprograms are allowed. This error occurs when some other language construct is passed to the compiler.

Action: Make sure the compilation unit contains only blocks, declarations, statements, and subprograms.

PLS-00379: CASE statements are not included in this release of PL/SQL

Cause: The unit being compiled contains a CASE statement. However, the current release of PL/SQL does not support CASE statements.

Action: Remove the CASE statement from the compilation unit.

PLS-00381: type mismatch found at name between column and variable in subquery or INSERT

Cause: The datatypes of a column and a variable do not match. The variable was encountered in a subquery or INSERT statement.

Action: Change the variable datatype to match that of the column.

PLS-00382: expression is of wrong type

Cause: An expression has the wrong datatype for the context in which it was found.

Action: Change the datatype of the expression. You might want to use datatype conversion functions.

PLS-00383: type mismatch found at name inside an IN or NOT IN clause

Cause: In a test for set membership such as X NOT IN (SELECT Y ... ), the expressions X and Y do not match in datatype, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the expressions so that their datatypes match. You might want to use datatype conversion functions in the select list.

PLS-00384: type mismatch found at name in UPDATE's SET clause

Cause: The column to the left of the equal sign in the SET clause of an UPDATE statement does not match in datatype with the column, expression, or subquery to the right of the equal sign, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the expressions so that their datatypes match. You might want to use datatype conversion functions in the SET clause.

PLS-00385: type mismatch found at name in SELECT...INTO statement

Cause: The expressions to the left and right of the INTO clause in a SELECT...INTO statement do not match in datatype, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the expressions so that their datatypes match. You might want to use datatype conversion functions in the select list.

PLS-00386: type mismatch found at name between FETCH cursor and INTO variables

Cause: An assignment target in the INTO list of a FETCH statement does not match in datatype with the corresponding column in the select list of the cursor declaration, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the cursor declaration or change the datatype of the assignment target. You might want to use datatype conversion functions in the select list of the query associated with the cursor.

PLS-00387: INTO variable cannot be a database object

Cause: An item in the INTO list of a FETCH or SELECT statement was found to be a database object. INTO introduces a list of user-defined variables to which output values are assigned. Therefore, database objects cannot appear in the INTO list.

Action: Check the spelling of the INTO list item. If necessary, remove the item from the INTO list or replace it with a user-defined output variable.

PLS-00388: undefined column name in subquery

Cause: A subquery contains a column name that was not defined for the specified table.

Action: Change the expression to specify a column that was defined.

PLS-00389: table, view or alias name name not allowed in this context

Cause: A table, view or alias name name corresponding to a regular (non-object) table appeared in an inappropriate context.

Action: Remove the reference, or, if you intended to code this as a column reference, fix it as such.

PLS-00390: undefined column name in INSERT statement

Cause: An INSERT statement refers to a column not defined for the table or view into which data is being inserted.

Action: Check the spelling of the column name, then revise the statement so that it refers only to defined columns.

PLS-00391: undefined column name in UPDATE statement

Cause: An UPDATE statement refers to a column not defined for the table or view being updated.

Action: Check the spelling of the column name, then revise the statement so that it refers only to defined columns.

PLS-00392: type mismatch in arguments to BETWEEN

Cause: In a comparison such as X BETWEEN Y AND Z, the expressions X, Y, and Z do not match in datatype, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the expressions so that their datatypes match. You might want to use datatype conversion functions.

PLS-00393: wrong number of columns in SELECT...INTO statement

Cause: The number of columns selected by a SELECT...INTO statement does not match the number of variables in the INTO clause.

Action: Change the number of columns in the select list or the number of variables in the INTO clause so that the numbers match.

PLS-00394: wrong number of values in the INTO list of a FETCH statement

Cause: The number of variables in the INTO clause of a FETCH statement does not match the number of columns in the cursor declaration.

Action: Change the number of variables in the INTO clause or the number of columns in the cursor declaration so that the numbers match.

PLS-00395: wrong number of values in VALUES clause of INSERT statement

Cause: The number of columns in an INSERT statement does not match the number of values in the VALUES clause. For example, the following statement is faulty because no column is specified for the value 20:

INSERT INTO emp (empno, ename) VALUES (7788, 'SCOTT', 20);

Action: Change the number of items in the column list or the number of items in the VALUES list so that the numbers match.

PLS-00396: INSERT statement's subquery yields wrong number of columns

Cause: The number of columns in an INSERT statement does not match the number of columns in a subquery select list. For example, the following statement is faulty because no corresponding column is specified for col3:

INSERT INTO emp (ename, empno) SELECT col1, col2, col3 FROM ...

Action: Change the number of items in the column list of the INSERT statement or the number of items in the select list so that the numbers match.

PLS-00397: type mismatch in arguments to IN

Cause: In a test for set membership such as X IN (Y, Z), the expressions X, Y, and Z do not match in datatype, and it is unclear which implicit conversion is required to correct the mismatch.

Action: Change the expressions so that their datatypes match. You might want to use datatype conversion functions.

PLS-00398: wrong number of columns in UNION, INTERSECT, or MINUS expression

Cause: The SELECT clauses to the left and right of a UNION, INTERSECT, or MINUS expression do not select the same number of columns. For example, the following statement is faulty because the select lists do not contain the same number of items:

 CURSOR my_cur IS SELECT ename FROM emp

        INTERSECT SELECT ename, empno FROM emp;

Action: Change the select lists so that they contain the same number of items.

PLS-00399: different types of columns in UNION, INTERSECT, or MINUS expression

Cause: The select lists to the left and right of a UNION, INTERSECT, or MINUS expression select at least one column that is mismatched in datatype. For example, the following statement is faulty because the constant 3 has datatype NUMBER, whereas SYSDATE has datatype DATE:

CURSOR my_cur IS SELECT 3 FROM emp 

       INTERSECT SELECT SYSDATE FROM emp;

Action: Change the select lists so that they match in datatype. You might want to use datatype conversion functions in the select list of one or more queries.

PLS-00400: different number of columns between cursor SELECT statement and return value

Cause: In a cursor declaration, a return type (such as RETURN emp%ROWTYPE) was specified, but the number of returned column values does not match the number of select-list items.

Action: Change the cursor return type or the select list so that the number of returned column values matches the number of select-list items.

PLS-00401: different column types between cursor SELECT statement and return value found at name

Cause: In a cursor declaration, a return type (such as RETURN emp%ROWTYPE) was specified, but a returned column value and its corresponding select-list item have different datatypes.

Action: Change the cursor return type or the select list so that each returned column value and its corresponding select-list item have the same datatype.

PLS-00402: alias required in SELECT list of cursor to avoid duplicate column names

Cause: A cursor was declared with a SELECT statement that contains duplicate column names. Such references are ambiguous.

Action: Replace the duplicate column name in the select list with an alias.

PLS-00403: expression str cannot be used as an INTO target of a SELECT/FETCH statement

Cause: A FETCH statement was unable to assign a value to an assignment target in its INTO list because the target is not a legally formed and declared variable. For example, the following assignment is illegal because 'Jones' is a character string, not a variable:

FETCH my_cur INTO 'Jones';

Action: Check the spelling and declaration of the assignment target. Make sure that the rules for forming variable names are followed.

PLS-00404: cursor name must be declared with FOR UPDATE to use with CURRENT OF

Cause: The use of the CURRENT OF cursor_name clause is legal only if cursor_name was declared with a FOR UPDATE clause.

Action: Add a FOR UPDATE clause to the definition of the cursor or do not use the CURRENT OF cursor_name clause.

PLS-00405: subquery not allowed in this context

Cause: A subquery was used in an inappropriate context, such as:

 if (SELECT deptno FROM emp WHERE ... ) = 20 then ... 


Subqueries are allowed only in SQL statements.

Action: The same result can be obtained by using a temporary variable, as in:

SELECT deptno INTO temp_var FROM emp WHERE ...; 

IF temp_var = 20 THEN ...

PLS-00406: length of SELECT list in subquery must match number of assignment targets

Cause: A query select list is not the same length as the list of targets that will receive the returned values. For example, the following statement is faulty because the subquery returns two values for one target:

UPDATE emp SET ename =

        (SELECT ename, empno FROM emp WHERE ename = 'SMITH') ...

Action: Change one of the lists so that they contain the same number of items.

PLS-00407: '*' not allowed here; a list of columns is required

Cause: An asterisk (*) was used as an abbreviation for a list of column names. However, in this context the column names must be written out explicitly.

Action: Replace the asterisk with a list of column names.

PLS-00408: duplicate column name not permitted in INSERT or UPDATE

Cause: An UPDATE or INSERT statement has a column list that contains duplicate column names.

Action: Check the spelling of the column names, then eliminate the duplication.

PLS-00409: duplicate variable name in INTO list is not permitted

Cause: The same variable appears twice in the INTO list of a SELECT or FETCH statement.

Action: Remove one of the variables from the INTO list.

PLS-00410: duplicate fields in record or table are not permitted

Cause: When a user-defined record was declared, the same name was given to two fields. Like column names in a database table, field names in a user-defined record must be unique.

Action: Check the spelling of the field names, then remove the duplicate.

PLS-00411: number of values in aggregate and in subquery don't match

Cause: In a statement of the form aggregate = subquery, the numbers of values in the aggregate and subquery are unequal. For example, the code might look like

 ... WHERE (10,20,30) = (SELECT empno,deptno FROM emp WHERE...);

Action: Revise the aggregate or subquery so that the numbers of values match.

PLS-00412: list of values not allowed as argument to this function or procedure

Cause: A parenthesized list of values separated by commas (that is, an aggregate) was used in the wrong context. For example, the following usage is invalid:

 WHERE (col1, col2) > (SELECT col3, col4 FROM my_table ...) 


However, an equal sign can take a list of values and a subquery as left- and right-hand-side arguments, respectively. So, the following usage is valid:

WHERE (col1, col2) = (SELECT col3, col4 FROM my_table ...)

Action: Rewrite the expression. For example, the clause

WHERE (col1, col2) > (SELECT col3, col4 FROM my_table ...) 


can be rewritten as

WHERE col1 > (SELECT col3 FROM my_table ...) AND
col2 > (SELECT col4 FROM my_table ...)

PLS-00413: identifier in CURRENT OF clause is not a cursor name

Cause: The identifier in a CURRENT OF clause names an object other than a cursor.

Action: Check the spelling of the identifier. Make sure that it names the cursor in the DELETE or UPDATE statement and that it names the cursor itself, not a FOR-loop variable.

PLS-00414: no column name in table

Cause: A table name or alias was used to qualify a column reference, but the column was not found in that table. Either the column was never defined or the column name is misspelled.

Action: Confirm that the column was defined and check the spelling of the column name.

PLS-00415: name is an OUT parameter and cannot appear in a function

Cause: An OUT or IN OUT formal parameter was used in a function specification.

Action: Change the parameter to an IN parameter.

PLS-00416: The third argument of DECODE cannot be NULL

Cause: The third argument of DECODE is NULL.

Action: Enter an argument with a proper type and value.

PLS-00417: unable to resolve name as a column

Cause: A database table, view, or column was specified in a SQL statement that does not exist, or the privileges required to access the table or view were not granted.

Action: Check the spelling of the table (or view) and column names; make sure the table and columns exist. If necessary, ask the DBA to grant the privileges required to access the table.

PLS-00418: array bind type must match PL/SQL table row type

Cause: A host array was passed (by an Oracle Precompiler program, for example) to a PL/SQL subprogram for binding to a PL/SQL table parameter. However, the datatypes of the array elements and PL/SQL table rows are incompatible. So, the binding failed.

Action: Change the datatype of the array elements or PL/SQL table rows to make the datatypes compatible.

PLS-00419: reference to remote attribute not permitted

Cause: An attempt was made to reference a remote cursor attribute, which is not allowed. For example, the code might look like

IF SQL%NOTFOUND@newyork THEN ...

Action: Do not try to reference a remote cursor attribute.

PLS-00420: cannot call built-in routines remotely

Cause: An attempt was made to call a built-in PL/SQL function remotely, which is not allowed. For example, the code might look like

my_sqlerrm := SQLERRM@newyork; 


or

INSERT INTO emp VALUES (my_empno, STANDARD.RTRIM@newyork(my_ename), ...);

Action: Always call built-in functions locally; never specify a database link.

PLS-00421: synonym definitions nested too deeply; possible loop in synonyms

Cause: Directly or indirectly, a synonym was defined in terms of itself, creating a circular definition. Or, a chain of synonyms, too long for the PL/SQL compiler to handle, was defined.

Action: Redefine the synonyms to eliminate the circular definition. If necessary, shorten the chain of synonyms.

PLS-00422: no PL/SQL translation for the bind type given for this bind variable

Cause: A host variable was passed (by an Oracle Precompiler program, for example) to PL/SQL for binding. However, its datatype is not compatible with any PL/SQL datatype. So, the binding failed.

Action: Change the datatype of the host variable to make it compatible with a PL/SQL datatype.

PLS-00423: ORDER BY item must be the number of a SELECT-list expression

Cause: A column alias was used in the ORDER BY clause of a SELECT statement that uses a UNION, INTERSECT, or MINUS set operator. This is not allowed. In such cases, expressions in the ORDER BY clause must be unsigned integers that designate the ordinal positions of select-list items.

Action: Change the alias in the ORDER BY clause to an unsigned integer that designates the ordinal position of the select item in question.

PLS-00424: RPC defaults cannot include package state

Cause: An attempt was made to call a remote subprogram whose defaulted parameters depend on package state, which is not allowed. When calling remote subprograms, the actual parameters must be passed explicitly if the corresponding formal parameters depend on package state.

Action: Call the remote subprogram by passing each actual parameter explicitly.

PLS-00425: in SQL, function argument and return type must be SQL type

Cause: When a stored function was called from a SQL statement, parameters of the wrong type were passed. To be callable from SQL statements, a stored function must meet several requirements, one of which is that its arguments have SQL datatypes such as CHAR, DATE, or NUMBER. None of the arguments can have non-SQL types such as BOOLEAN, TABLE, or RECORD.

Action: Make sure all the arguments in the function call have SQL datatypes.

PLS-00426: cursor variable OUT parameter 'name' cannot be FETCH'ed or CLOSE'd

Cause: When a cursor variable was declared as the formal parameter of a subprogram that will FETCH from and/or CLOSE the cursor variable, the OUT parameter mode was specified. This is not allowed. In such cases, the IN or IN OUT mode must be specified.

Action: Change the parameter mode from OUT to IN or IN OUT.

PLS-00428: an INTO clause is expected in this SELECT statement

Cause: The INTO clause of a SELECT INTO statement was omitted. For example, the code might look like

 SELECT deptno, dname, loc FROM dept WHERE ... 


instead of

SELECT deptno, dname, loc INTO dept_rec FROM dept WHERE ...

In PL/SQL, only a subquery is written without an INTO clause.

Action: Add the required INTO clause.

PLS-00450: a variable of this private type cannot be declared here

Cause: A variable declaration uses a type that is declared PRIVATE in some other compilation unit.

Action: Do not use this type in a PRIVATE variable declaration.

PLS-00451: remote types not allowed

Cause: When a constant or variable was declared, a datatype that is defined in a remote library unit was specified. This is not allowed.

Action: Do not specify the datatype unless it is defined locally.

PLS-00452: subprogram name violates its associated pragma

Cause: A packaged function cannot be called from SQL statements unless its purity level is asserted by coding a RESTRICT_REFERENCES pragma in the package specification. The pragma, which is used to control side effects, tells the PL/SQL compiler to deny the packaged function read/write access to database tables, public packaged variables, or both. A SQL statement that violates the pragma will cause a compilation error.

Action: Raise the purity level of the function, or relax the pragma restrictions.

PLS-00483: exception name may appear in at most one exception handler in this block

Cause: An exception appears in two different WHEN clauses (that is, two different exception handlers) in the exception-handling part of a PL/SQL block or subprogram.

Action: Remove one of the references to the exception.

PLS-00484: redundant exceptions name and name must appear in same exception handler

Cause: Using the EXCEPTION_INIT pragma, different exceptions were initialized to the same Oracle error number; then, they were referenced in different exception handlers within the same exception-handling part. Such references conflict.

Action: Remove one of the exceptions or initialize it to a different Oracle error number.

PLS-00485: in exception handler, name must be an exception name

Cause: An identifier not declared as an exception appears in an exception handler WHEN clause. Only the name of an exception is valid in a WHEN clause.

Action: Check the spelling of the exception name and make sure the exception was declared properly.

PLS-00486: SELECT list cannot be enclosed in parentheses

Cause: In a SELECT statement, the select list was enclosed in parentheses, as in:

SELECT (deptno, dname, loc) FROM dept INTO ... 


This breaks the rules of SQL syntax. Parentheses are not required because the keywords SELECT and FROM delimit the select list.

Action: Remove the parentheses enclosing the select list.

PLS-00487: invalid reference to variable name

Cause: A variable was referenced in a way that is inconsistent with its datatype. For example, a scalar variable might have been mistakenly referenced as a record, as follows:

DECLARE

        CURSOR emp_cur IS SELECT empno, ename, sal FROM emp; 

       emp_rec emp_cur%ROWTYPE; 

       my_sal  NUMBER(7,2); 

BEGIN    ...    total_sal := total_sal + my_sal.sal;  -- invalid

        ...

Action: Check the spelling of the variable name. Make sure the variable was declared properly and that the declaration and reference are consistent regarding datatype.

PLS-00488: invalid variable declaration: object name must be a type or subtype

Cause: The datatype specifier in a variable declaration does not designate a legal type. For example, the %TYPE attribute might not have been added to a declaration, as in

 DECLARE

        my_sal   emp.sal%TYPE;

        my_ename emp.ename;    -- missing %TYPE

        ... 


When declaring a constant or variable, to provide the datatype of a column automatically, use the %TYPE attribute. Likewise, when declaring a record, to provide the datatypes of a row automatically, use the %ROWTYPE attribute.

Action: Make sure the datatype specifier designates a legal type. Remember to use the %TYPE and %ROWTYPE attributes when necessary.

PLS-00489: invalid table reference: name must be a column in this expression

Cause: In a query, a select-list item refers to a table in the FROM clause but not to a database column.

Action: Check the spelling of the column names, make sure each column in the select list refers to a table in the FROM clause, then re-execute the query.

PLS-00490: illegal statement

Cause: A constant, variable, function call, or incomplete statement was used where a statement was expected. For example, instead of calling a function from an expression, it might have been called as a statement (as if it were a procedure).

Action: Check the statement, making sure that its commands, identifiers, operators, delimiters, and terminator form a complete and valid PL/SQL statement.

PLS-00491: numeric literal required

Cause: A constant or variable was used where a numeric literal is required. For example, the code might look like

 my_ename  VARCHAR2(max_len);   


instead of

my_ename VARCHAR2(15);

When specifying the maximum length of a VARCHAR2 variable, an integer literal must be used.

Action: Replace the identifier with a numeric literal.

PLS-00492: variable or constant initialization may not refer to functions declared in the same package

Cause: If a package spec p declares a function f, that function may not be used in any variable declarations in that same package spec. This is because of a circular instantiation problem: in order to fully instantiate the package spec, the variable must be initialized. To initialize the variable, the function body code in the package body must be executed. That requires that the package body be instantiated. However, the package body cannot be instantiated until the package spec is fully instantiated.

Action: Remove the reference to the function from the variable initialization. A technique which often works is to move the variable initialization from the variable declaration (in the package spec) to the package body initialization block.

PLS-00493: invalid reference to a server-side object in a local context

Cause: A reference to a server-side object (such as a column) was found in a context where only PL/SQL objects may be present (such as within the parameter list of a local function or as the index of a (local) PL/SQL table.)

Action: Rewrite the offending statement; or (if a local function call is the problem context), make the function non-local (either packaged or top-level.)

PLS-00494: coercion into multiple record targets not supported

Cause: The INTO list of a SELECT or FETCH specified more than a single record-type target and the column types required coercion into a record to match the INTO list. This is type checked as correct, but not yet supported.

Action: Create a new record type to hold all of the column types or code the SELECT with an INTO target for every source column.

PLS-00495: too many columns in SELECT...INTO statement after bursting record targets

Cause: Type checking indicated the columns in a SELECT or FETCH were being collected into a record in the INTO list. The record was burst into its fields. There were not enough fields in the record for each of the columns.

Action: Change the number of columns or the record variable(s) in the INTO clause so that they match.

PLS-00496: too few columns in SELECT...INTO statement after bursting record targets

Cause: Type checking indicated the columns in a SELECT or FETCH were being collected into a record in the INTO list. The record was burst into its fields. There were not enough columns to fill all of the fields in the record.

Action: Change the number of columns or the record variable(s) in the INTO clause so that they match.

PLS-00497: cannot mix single row and multi-row (bulk) SELECT

Cause: A SELECT or FETCH had an INTO list for which some variables were of the same type as the corresponding column and other variables were of a type that was a collection of the type of the corresponding column. This is ambiguous for whether the intention was to fetch one row or bulk fetch multiple rows.

Action: Change the INTO list so that all variables are of the same (convertible) type as the columns or so that all INTO variables are collections of the same type as the corresponding columns.

PLS-00498: illegal use of a type before its declaration

Cause: A variable or constant was declared to be of a type whose declaration appears later in the compilation unit; or, a type or subtype was declared in terms of another type whose declaration appears later in the compilation unit.

Action: Ensure that the type declaration precedes its use in the variable/ constant/type declaration.

PLS-499: coercion into collection of records not supported

Cause: A SELECT or FETCH may specify a column list to be coerced into a variable which is a collection of records. This is type checked as correct, but not yet supported because of the implicit layout change required.

Action: Express the SELECT with an object constructor around the columns and use a collection of objects as an INTO variable.

PLS-00503: RETURN <value> statement required for this return from function

Cause: In a function body, a RETURN statement was used that contains no expression. In procedures, a RETURN statement contains no expression because the statement simply returns control to the caller. However, in functions, a RETURN statement must contain an expression because its value is assigned to the function identifier.

Action: Add an expression to the RETURN statement.

PLS-00504: type name_BASE may not be used outside of package STANDARD

Cause: In a declaration, the datatype NUMBER_BASE (for example) was mistakenly specified. The datatypes CHAR_BASE, DATE_BASE, and NUMBER_BASE are for internal use only.

Action: Specify (for example) the datatype NUMBER instead of NUMBER_BASE.

PLS-00505: user-defined types may only be defined as PL/SQL tables or records

Cause: An attempt was made to define a type other than a COLLECTION, OBJECT, or RECORD. These are the only user-defined types allowed in this release of PL/SQL. For example, the following type definition is illegal:

TYPE Byte IS INTEGER(2);  -- illegal

Action: Remove the type definition, or revise it to specify a COLLECTION, OBJECT, or RECORD type.

PLS-00506: user-defined constrained subtypes are disallowed

Cause: An attempt was made to define a constrained subtype, but only unconstrained subtypes are allowed in this release of PL/SQL. For example, the following type definition is illegal:

SUBTYPE Acronym IS VARCHAR2(5);  -- illegal

Action: Remove the illegal type constraint.

PLS-00507: a PL/SQL table may not contain a table or record with composite fields

Cause: In a TABLE type definition, a nested record type was specified as the element type. This is not allowed. All fields in the record must be scalars.

Action: Remove the TABLE type definition, or replace the nested record type with a simple record type.

PLS-00508: the expression in a RETURN statement cannot be a type

Cause: A datatype specifier was used instead of an expression in the RETURN statement of a user-defined function, as shown in the example below. Do not confuse the RETURN statement, which sets the function identifier to the result value, with the RETURN clause, which specifies the datatype of the result value.

FUNCTION credit-rating (acct_no NUMBER) RETURN BOOLEAN IS

          BEGIN

             ... 

             RETURN NUMBER;  -- should be an expression    

END;

Action: Replace the datatype specifier in the RETURN statement with an appropriate expression.

PLS-00509: implementation restriction: pass a returned record to a temporary identifier before selecting a field

Cause: Illegal syntax was used to call a parameter-less function that returns a record or a PL/SQL table of records. When calling a function that takes parameters and returns a record, you use the following syntax to reference fields in the record:

function_name(parameters).field_name   


However, you cannot use the syntax above to call a parameter-less function because PL/SQL does not allow empty parameter lists. That is, the following syntax is illegal:

function_name().field_name -- illegal; empty parameter list

You cannot just drop the empty parameter list because the following syntax is also illegal: function_name.field_name -- illegal; no parameter list.

Action: Declare a local record or PL/SQL table of records to which you can assign the function result, then reference its fields directly.

PLS-00510: FLOAT cannot have scale

Cause: When a FLOAT variable was declared, its precision and scale were specified, as shown in the following example:

DECLARE

        Salary FLOAT(7,2);   


However, a scale for FLOAT variables cannot be specified; only a precision can be specified, as in

Salary FLOAT(7);

Action: Remove the scale specifier from the declaration, or declare a NUMBER variable instead.

PLS-00511: a record may not contain a PL/SQL table of records

Cause: In a RECORD definition, one of the fields was declared as a PL/SQL table of records. This is not allowed. A record can be the component of another record (that is, records can be nested), but a PL/SQL table of records cannot be the component of a record.

Action: Remove the field declaration, or revise it to specify a simple record type.

PLS-00512: implementation restriction: 'name' cannot directly access remote package variable or cursor

Cause: An attempt was made to reference a remote packaged variable or cursor. This is not allowed. Instead, add to the remote package a function that returns the value of the variable or cursor.

Action: Remove the illegal reference.

PLS-00513: PL/SQL function called from SQL must return value of legal SQL type

Cause: In a SQL statement, do not call a PL/SQL function having a return type that can not be handled by SQL. For example, type BOOLIAN, records and indexed-tables are not supported by SQL and functions returning such values cannot be called from SQL.

Action: Change the returned type and retry the operation.

PLS-00514: INSERT statement with REF INTO clause requires a typed table

Cause: INSERT statement with REF INTO clause is illegal if the table specified in the INTO clause is not an object table.

Action: Remove REF INTO clause and retry the operation.

PLS-00515: the type of the REF INTO variable 'name' must be REF to the table's type

Cause: In INSERT statement with REF INTO clause, the type of the variable or column used onto the REF INTO clause must be a REF <T>, where <T> is the type of the table from the INTO clause.

Action: Use variable or column of appropriate type.

PLS-00516: type mismatch between object table and value 'name' in INSERT statement

Cause: In the INSERT statement operating on typed tables (tables of objects), the type of a non-aggregate value did not match the object type of the table.

Action: Provide a value of appropriate type.

PLS-00517: type mismatch between a select list element 'name' and corresponding table column in INSERT statement with a subquery

Cause: In an INSERT statement with subquery, at lease one of the elements of the select list was not type-compatible with the corresponding column of the table in the INTO clause. This error indicates that the subquery should be rewritten to match the structure of the target table.

Action: Provide a select list element of compatible type.

PLS-00518: this INSERT statement requires VALUES clause containing a parenthesized list of values

Cause: A VALUES clause was entered without a list of SQL data items in parentheses. In all INSERT statements with an explicit column list, the VALUES clause must contain a list of SQL data items in parentheses. For example:

INSERT INTO my_tab (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,my_variable);

Action: Rewrite the statement to include a list of SQL data items in parentheses.

PLS-00519: this INSERT statement requires a VALUES clause containing an object type expression, not a list of values

Cause: In an INSERT statement with typed tables, an aggregate was used when an object type item was expected.

Action: Replace the aggregate with an object constructor or other object type expression.

PLS-00520: MAP methods must be declared without any parameters other than (optional) SELF

Cause: A MAP member function was declared with a parameter. MAP member functions can have only one parameter: the default SELF parameter. MAP methods must be declared without any parameters. The compiler adds the SELF parameter.

Action: Remove the parameter from the MAP member function.

PLS-00521: ORDER methods must be declared with 1 (one) parameter in addition to (optional) SELF

Cause: An ORDER member function was declared without the user-specified parameter. ORDER member functions have two parameters, one is the default SELF parameter which is added by the compiler. the second parameter is added by the user and must declare an order method which must be the same type as the containing object type.

Action: Check and correct the way the parameter is specified.

PLS-00522: MAP methods must return a scalar type

Cause: The MAP member function was written such that it returns something other than a scalar type.

Action: Rewrite the MAP function such that it returns a scalar type.

PLS-00523: ORDER methods must return an INTEGER

Cause: An ORDER member function was written such that it returns something other than an integer type.

Action: Rewrite the ORDER method such that it returns an integer type.

PLS-00524: The parameter type in an ORDER method must be the containing object type

Cause: An ORDER member function was declared without the user-specified parameter. ORDER member functions have two parameters, one is the default SELF parameter which is added by the compiler. the second parameter is added by the user and must declare an ORDER method which must be the same type as the containing object type.

Action: Check and correct the way the parameter is specified.

PLS-00525: within SQL statements, only equality comparisons of objects are allowed without a map or order function

Cause: A MAP or ORDER function was not provided for a relational comparison. Only equality comparisons may be used when a map or order function is not supplied.

Action: Supply either a MAP or ORDER function for the object. Otherwise change the program to use only equality comparisons.

PLS-00526: a MAP or ORDER function is required for comparing objects in PL/SQL

Cause: Within stand alone PL/SQL, an attempt was made to compare objects without a MAP or ORDER function.

Action: Provide a MAP or ORDER function and retry the operation.

PLS-00527: MAP or ORDER functions require a PRAGMA RESTRICT_REFERENCES specifying:WNDS, WNPS, RNPS, RNDS

Cause: Either a PRAGMA RESTRICT_REFERENCES was not specified or it was specified without one of the following: WNDS, WNPS, RNPS, or RNDS.

Action: Add or correct the PRAGMA and retry the operation.

PLS-00528: the parameters to an ORDER function must have IN mode

Cause: You declared parameter to an ORDER function to have OUT or IN OUT mode.

Action: Correct the parameter to use IN mode only.

PLS-00529: bad column name name in INSERT statement (must be an identifier)

Cause: In an INSERT statement, an attempt was made to use a column name that is not an identifier. In any INSERT statement with explicit column list a column name must be a simple identifier.

Action: Rewrite the INSERT statement, using a simple identifier for the column name.

PLS-00530: illegal type used for object type attribute: name

Cause: An attempt was made to use an invalid type for an object type attribute.

Action: Use only supported types for the object type attribute.

PLS-00531: unsupported type in a VARRAY or TABLE type: name

Cause: An attempt was made to use an unsupported type in a VARRAY or TABLE type.

Action: Use only supported types in a VARRAY or TABLE type.

PLS-00532: target of REF must be a complete or incomplete object type

Cause: An attempt was made to specify a REF target that was neither a complete nor an incomplete object type. A potential REF target can be one of the following:

    Action: If a REF must be used, rewrite it such that its target is is either a complete or an incomplete object type. Otherwise, remove the REF.

    PLS-00533: tables of non_queryable types are not supported

    Cause: An attempt was made to create a table of a type which cannot be queried. Tables of such types are not supported.

    Action: Create an object type containing the non-queryable type. Then create a table of the object type.

    PLS-00534: a Table type may not contain a nested table type or VARRAY

    Cause: An attempt was made to do one of the following: define a table type which contained nested collection types. or define an object table that has (perhaps nested) another table type or VARRAY type.

    Action: Check the table definitions to be sure that they do not contain nested tables or VARRAYs.

    PLS-00535: a VARRAY type may not contain a NESTED TABLE, VARRAY or LOB

    Cause: An attempt was made to do one of the following: define a VARRAY type containing a nested collection type or LOB or define a VARRAY type of an object type that has a nested attribute which is one of NESTED TABLE, VARRAY or LOB type.

    Action: Check the VARRAY definitions to be sure that they do not contain nested collection types, LOBs or nested attributes.

    PLS-00536: navigation through REF variables is not supported in PL/SQL

    Cause: The expression of the form refvar.field was entered. This is not supported in this version of PL/SQL.

    Action: This navigation is only supported for database objects. The REF variable can be used to insert into a database column of the same type, or select from it. However, you will not be able to navigate through it. You will have to remove the navigation.

    PLS-00537: a VARRAY must have a positive limit

    Cause: A VARRAY type was declared with a non-positive limit, for example VARRAY(0).

    Action: Declare the VARRAY with a positive limit and retry the operation.

    PLS-00538: subprogram or cursor name is declared in an object type specification and must be defined in the object type body

    Cause: The specified subprogram is declared in an object type's specification, but is not defined in the object type body.

    Action: Define the subprogram in the object type body, or remove the declaration from the specification.

    PLS-00539: subprogram name is declared in an object type body and must be defined in the object type specification

    Cause: The specified subprogram is declared in an object type's body, but is not defined in the object type's specification. Notice cursor bodies can exist without a specification.

    Action: Define the subprogram in the object type's specification, or remove the declaration from the body.

    PLS-00540: object not supported in this context

    Cause: An object was declared inside a local scope (Function, Procedure, or anonymous block), or in a package scope which is not supported.

    Action: Declare the type in a global or data base scope.

    PLS-00541: size or length specified is too large

    Cause: A length or size that is too large was specified for a data item.

    Action: Specify a smaller value and retry the operation.

    PLS-00542: CLOB and NCLOB cannot use varying-width character sets in the server

    Cause: A server type is being created with an embedded CLOB or NCLOB attribute which uses a varying-width character set.

    Action: Use VARCHAR2 instead of CLOB, or use a fixed-width character set.

    PLS-00543: a PLSQL Table may not contain a nested table type or VARRAY

    Cause: You defined a PLSQL table that contains a (possibly deeply) nested table type or VARRAY. Nested collection types are not supported.

    Action: Remove the nested table type or VARRAY and retry the operation.

    PLS-00546: SELF may not be declared as a REF parameter

    Cause: SELF was declared as a REF parameter to a member function or procedure. SELF is not supported as a REF.

    Action: Re-declare SELF as a value parameter.

    PLS-00550: character set specification is not allowed for this type

    Cause: A character set specification was made on a type that does not require one.

    Action: Remove the character set specification, or change the type.

    PLS-00551: character set ANY_CS is only allowed on a subprogram parameter

    Cause: The character set ANY_CS was specified when it is not allowed.

    Action: Change or remove the character set specification.

    PLS-00552: flexible character set is not allowed on component element

    Cause: ANY_CS or %CHARSET was used to reference an ANY_CS parameter which is not a CHAR, VARCHAR2, or CLOB type. ANY_CS or %CHARSET is not allowed for fields of a record, object, elements of a collection, etc.

    Action: Change or remove the character set specification.

    PLS-00553: character set name is not recognized

    Cause: An unrecognized name appears in a character set specification.

    Action: Change or remove the character set specification.

    PLS-00554: character set has already been determined

    Cause: A redundant or conflicting character set was specified.

    Action: Remove the CHARACTER SET specification, or change the character set specified.

    PLS-00560: character set mismatch

    Cause: An expression was used that has the wrong character set.

    Action: Change the expression using TRANSLATE(... USING ...) or change the character set.

    PLS-00561: character set mismatch on value for parameter name

    Cause: An expression was used that has the wrong character set.

    Action: Change the expression using TRANSLATE(... USING ...) or change the character set.

    PLS-00562: a function must return a type

    Cause: The current function was defined to return something other than a data type.

    Action: Make sure the function is returning a data_type.

    PLS-00563: illegal use of CAST expression

    Cause: CAST (in PLSQL) was used outside of a DML scope.

    Action: Do not use CAST outside DML statements.

    PLS-00564: LOB arguments are not permitted in remote calls

    Cause: Use of LOB argument in remote call is not allowed. Note this also includes composite types including LOBs.

    Action: Remove LOB argument from the remote call.

    PLS-00565: name must be completed as a potential REF target (object type)

    Cause: Incomplete library units that are potential targets of REF dependencies must be completed so that they continue to remain potential targets of REF dependencies (since there might be library units with REF dependencies on this library unit. Potential REF targets include complete and incomplete object types. This error occured because an attempt was made to complete a potential REF target as something other than a potential REF target.

    Action: Use another name for this library unit, or drop the original incomplete library unit.

    PLS-00700: PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT of name must follow declaration of its exception in same block

    Cause: An EXCEPTION_INIT pragma was not declared in the same block as its exception. They must be declared in the proper order in the same block, with the pragma declaration following the exception declaration.

    Action: Place the EXCEPTION_INIT pragma directly after the exception declaration referenced by the pragma.

    PLS-00701: illegal Oracle error number num for PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT

    Cause: The error number passed to an EXCEPTION_INIT pragma was out of range. The error number must be in the range -9999 .. -1 (excluding -100) for Oracle errors or in the range -20000 .. -20999 for user-defined errors.

    Action: Use a valid error number.

    PLS-00702: second argument to PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT must be a numeric literal

    Cause: The second argument passed to an EXCEPTION_INIT pragma was something other than a numeric literal (a variable, for example). The second argument must be a numeric literal in the range -9999 .. -1 (excluding -100) for Oracle errors or in the range -20000 .. -20999 for user-defined errors.

    Action: Replace the second argument with a valid error number.

    PLS-00703: multiple instances of named argument in list

    Cause: Two or more actual parameters in a subprogram call refer to the same formal parameter.

    Action: Remove the duplicate actual parameter.

    PLS-00704: name must be declared as an exception

    Cause: The exception_name parameter passed to an EXCEPTION_INIT pragma is misspelled or does not refer to a legally declared exception. Or, the pragma is misplaced; it must appear in the same declarative section, somewhere after the exception declaration.

    Action: Check the spelling of the exception_name parameter. Then, check the exception declaration, making sure the exception name and the keyword EXCEPTION are spelled correctly. Also make sure the pragma appears in the same declarative section somewhere after the exception declaration.

    PLS-00705: exception name used in expression requiring return type

    Cause: An exception was referred to in an expression. Exceptions have names but not values and therefore cannot contribute values to an expression. For example, the following RETURN statement is illegal:

    FUNCTION credit_limit (cust_no INTEGER) RETURN NUMBER IS
    
        limit       NUMBER;
    
        over_limit  EXCEPTION;
    
            ...   
    
    BEGIN
    
        ...
    
        RETURN over_limit;  -- illegal   
    
    END;
    

    Action: Check the spelling of the identifiers in the expression, then rewrite the expression so that it does not refer to an exception.

    PLS-00706: exception name cannot be used as prefix of a selected component

    Cause: An exception name was mistakenly used to qualify a reference to a component. For example, when dot notation was used to specify fields within a record, an exception name might have been coded instead of the record name.

    Action: Rewrite the component reference using a valid prefix (for example, the name of a package, record, or schema).

    PLS-00707: unsupported construct or internal error [num]

    Cause: At run time, this is an internal error. At compile time, it indicates one of the following problems:

    Action: Either report the internal error to your Customer Support representative or, depending on the problem, take one of the following actions:

    PLS-00708: pragma name must be declared in a package specification

    Cause: The named pragma was not declared in a package specification, as required. For example, the pragma RESTRICT_REFERENCES must be declared in a package specification.

    Action: Remove or relocate the misplaced pragma.

    PLS-00709: pragma name must be declared in package specification and body

    Cause: The named pragma was declared in a package specification but not in the corresponding package body or vice-versa, as well as the package body.

    Action: Add the pragma to that part of the package declaration that does not have the pragma.

    PLS-00801: internal error [num]

    Cause: This is a generic internal error that might occur during compilation or execution. The first parameter is the internal error number.

    Action: Report this error as a bug to your Customer Support representative.

    PLS-00900: can't find body of unit name

    Cause: At run time, the body of a program unit could not be found. This can happen for one of two reasons.

    Action: If caused by the first reason, create a body for the object that is being referenced. If caused by the second reason, move the sequence into a SQL statement. For example,

    i := seq.nextval;
    
    
    

    can be replaced by:

    select seq.nextval into temp from dual;
    i := temp;

    PLS-00901: the datatype of column name of table name is not supported

    Cause: A column in a database table belongs to a datatype that is not supported by the current release of PL/SQL.

    Action: Remove the offending column from the table or copy the desired columns to another table.

    PLS-00902: a read-only bind variable used in OUT or IN OUT context

    Cause: A host variable that is protected from update was used in a context that allows an update.

    Action: Check the context and change the use of the host variable, or assign the value of the host variable to a PL/SQL local variable, then use the local variable instead.

    PLS-00904: insufficient privilege to access object name

    Cause: An attempt was made to operate on a database object without the required privilege. This error occurs, for example, if an attempt was made to UPDATE a table for which only SELECT privileges were granted.

    Action: Ask the DBA to perform the operation or to grant you the required privilege.

    PLS-00905: object name is invalid

    Cause: An invalid package specification or stored subprogram was referenced. A package specification or stored subprogram is invalid if its source code or any database object it references has been DROPped, REPLACEd, or ALTERed since it was last compiled.

    Action: Find out what invalidated the package specification or stored subprogram, then make sure that Oracle can recompile it without errors.

    PLS-00906: compilation is not possible

    Cause: The PL/SQL compiler cannot run properly because its operating environment is corrupted. For example, its error message file might be inaccessible.

    Action: Check the PL/SQL operating environment, making sure that all files required by the compiler are accessible.

    PLS-00907: unable to find library unit name

    Cause: PL/SQL was unable to find and load a library unit which had previously been available. Typically this can happen when loading a library unit from backing storage, but other library units on which that unit depends are not in the backing store.

    Action: Provide the needed library unit.

    PLS-00908: the stored format of name is not supported by this release

    Cause: PL/SQL cannot understand the stored format of a library unit. It has been compiled or shrink-wrapped with a version of PL/SQL incompatible with this version.

    Action: Recompile the library unit for this version of PL/SQL.

    PLS-00950: in this version, PL/SQL tables cannot be used in this SQL statement

    Cause: In a SQL statement, a PL/SQL table was referenced incorrectly. For example, the following reference might have been made, but PL/SQL table attributes can only be used in procedural statements:

    SELECT ename_tab.COUNT INTO name_count WHERE ...
    

    Action: Remove the incorrect reference from the SQL statement.

    PLS-00951: name Feature is not supported by this release

    Cause: PL/SQL cannot understand something in an imported library unit. It uses some feature either too new or too old for this version to understand it.

    Action: Recompile the imported library unit with this version of PL/SQL, to discover more precisely what feature is not supported.

    PLS-00989: cursor variable in record, object, or collection is not supported by this release

    Cause: A cursor variable was entered in a record, object, or collection. This is not supported in this PL/SQL release.

    Action: Rewrite your application using stand-alone cursor variables and/or parameters, or, for usage in records, consider a downgrade to PL/SQL 2.3.

    PLS-00990: index tables of cursor variables are disallowed

    Cause: An attempt was made to build an index table using cursor variables.

    Action: Rewrite your application, using stand-alone cursor variables and procedure parameters, index tables of records and loops.

    PLS-00992: cursor variables cannot be FETCH'ed from

    Cause: An attempt was made to perform a FETCH from a cursor variable.

    Action: Consider an upgrade to PL/SQL 2.3, where this restriction is not present, or rewrite your application using OCI or precompiler for FETCH.

    PLS-00993: cursor variables cannot be passed as RPC arguments or results

    Cause: An attempt was made to pass a cursor variable to or from a remote subprogram, which is not allowed. For example, a remote procedure cannot be used to open a cursor variable because remote subprograms cannot return the values of cursor variables.

    Action: Change the subprogram call to reference a local database. Or consider an upgrade to PL/SQL 2.3, where this restriction is not present, or rewrite your application using OCI or precompiler.

    PLS-00994: cursor variables cannot be declared as part of a package

    Cause: An attempt was made to declare a cursor variable in a package specification, which is not allowed. Although REF CURSOR types can be defined in a PL/SQL block, subprogram, or package, cursor variables can be declared only in a block or subprogram.

    Action: Move the cursor variable declaration into a PL/SQL block or subprogram or rewrite your application using local cursor variables and/or cursor variable procedure parameters.

    PLS-00995: unhandled exception # num

    Cause: An exception was raised for which no handler was found. If it cannot find a handler for a raised exception, PL/SQL returns an unhandled exception to the host environment. The number embedded in the message is an Oracle error code listed in this manual.

    Action: Fix the condition that raised the exception, write an appropriate exception handler, or use the OTHERS handler. If there is an appropriate handler in the current block, the exception was raised in a declaration or exception handler, and therefore propagated immediately to the enclosing block.

    PLS-00996: out of memory

    Cause: A request from PL/SQL for more memory failed.

    Action: Make sure that you are not referencing the wrong row in a PL/SQL table and that the program is not recursing too deeply.

    01400-01799: FIPS Warnings

    This section lists the warnings that can be issued by the FIPS Flagger when it is enabled in an Oracle tool (such as Server Manager, SQL*Plus, or an Oracle Precompiler) and either

    FIPS warning messages are listed for completeness. The causes and actions are described in ANSI document ANSI X3.135-1992.

    PLS-01400: use of ||' token

    PLS-01401: identifier over 18 characters long

    PLS-01402: use of quoted identifier

    PLS-01403: Comment delimiters /* */

    PLS-01404: ANSI Identifiers can only consist of letters, digits, and the underscore character

    PLS-01405: under ANSI's grammar, numeric data represented in exponent notation must use an uppercase E

    PLS-01406: an identifier has been found that is considered a keyword in ANSI's grammar but not in PL/SQL's

    PLS-01407: one of the identifiers CHAR, CHARACTER, or INTEGER has been redefined by the programmer

    PLS-01408: use of & token

    PLS-01409: use of PRIOR_ token

    PLS-01410: use of MOD token

    PLS-01411: use of REM token

    PLS-01412: use of EXP token

    PLS-01413: use of NULL an expression

    PLS-01414: use of qualified expression here

    PLS-01415: use of aggregate value here

    PLS-01416: use of <id> (<value>...) here

    PLS-01417: use of %attribute

    PLS-01418: subquery cannot include set operators in ANSI's grammar

    PLS-01419: subquery must have either *' or exactly one column in its select list

    PLS-01420: INTERSECT and MINUS set operators are not ANSI

    PLS-01421: FOR UPDATE clause

    PLS-01422: aliases

    PLS-01423: subquery on right-hand-side in set clause

    PLS-01424: non-ANSI order of clauses

    PLS-01425: connect-by clause

    PLS-01450: this <value expression> contains a nonconforming datatype

    PLS-01451: the datatypes of these <value expressions> must be comparable

    PLS-01452: this function is not part of the ANSI standard

    PLS-01453: this procedure is not part of the ANSI standard

    PLS-01454: no operator may be used with values of datatype CHAR

    PLS-01455: the predicates IS NULL and IS NOT NULL are defined only for column specifications

    PLS-01456: name length cannot exceed 3.

    PLS-01458: the set clause in an UPDATE statement requires a column name of length 1

    PLS-01460: cannot access object on a remote host

    PLS-01463: STDDEV is not a standard set function

    PLS-01464: VARIANCE is not a standard set function

    PLS-01466: null strings are not allowed

    PLS-01467: the value list of the IN predicate, if not a subquery, must contain only value_specifications

    PLS-01468: the first argument of the like-predicate must be a column of type character string

    PLS-01469: ANSI standard does not permit records

    PLS-01470: the escape character in the like-predicate must be a literal or a variable of type CHAR

    PLS-01471: the keyword DISTINCT must be present in a COUNT(DISTINCT sim_expr)

    PLS-01472: in a set_function_specification, if DISTINCT is present, the expression must be a column_specification

    PLS-01473: use <> instead of != or ~=

    PLS-01474: use of ANY is non_ANSI

    PLS-01500: unions are not allowed in the definition of a view

    PLS-01501: options in CREATE TABLE statement is non-ANSI.

    PLS-01502: constraint name and constraint status are non-ANSI.

    PLS-01503: the expression in a SET clause must not include a set function

    PLS-01504: use of AS phase in CREATE TABLE statement is non_ANSI

    PLS-01505: ALTER is non-ANSI

    PLS-01506: CREATE INDEX is non-ANSI

    PLS-01507: DROP is non-ANSI

    PLS-01701: illegal syntax in ROLLBACK WORK statement

    PLS-01702: illegal syntax in COMMIT WORK statement

    PLS-01703: cursor name in CLOSE statement must be of length 1

    PLS-01704: the expressions in a sort clause must be column specs or unsigned integers, with optional ASC or DESC

    PLS-01705: table specified by a cursor not updatable if cursor specification has a UNION or ORDER_BY

    PLS-01707: in positioned DELETE or UPDATE statement, table must be identified in specification of cursor

    PLS-01708: in searched DELETE, UPDATE or INSERT, table must not appear in FROM clause of subqueries in search condition

    PLS-01709: value list of INSERT statement, if specified with value list rather than subquery, must be value specification

    PLS-01710: in a positioned DELETE or UPDATE statement, the cursor name must be of length 1

    PLS-01711: a SELECT statement may not contain ORDER_BY, HAVING, or GROUP_BY clause

    PLS-01712: ANSI does not allow bind variables as INDICATORS

    PLS-01713: the constraints on these types do not match

    PLS-01714: ANSI expects a column name not a literal value here

    PLS-01715: ANSI does not accept SAVEPOINTs




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