Stored procedures with output parameters

Since Oracle® MySQL C API (version 5.0) does not support an output parameter specification, the IN/OUT/INOUT technique cannot be used.

In order to return values from a MySQL stored procedure or stored function, you must use SQL variables. There are three steps to execute the procedure or function:

  1. With the SET SQL statement, create and assign an SQL variables for each parameter.
  2. CALL the stored procedure or stored function with the created SQL variables.
  3. Perform a SELECT statement to return the SQL variables to the application.

In order to retrieve returning values into program variables, you must use an INTO clause in the EXECUTE instruction.

The following example shows how to call a stored procedure with output parameters:

MySQL version 5.0 does not allow you to prepare the CREATE PROCEDURE statement; you may need to execute this statement from the mysql command line tool.

MySQL version 5.0 cannot execute "SELECT @variable" with server-side cursors. Since the MySQL driver uses server-side cursors to support multiple active result sets, it is not possible to execute the SELECT statement to return output parameter values.

MySQL version >=5.0 evaluates "@variable" user variables assigned with a string as large text (CLOB) expressions. That type of values must normally be fetched into TEXT variable. To workaround this behavior, you can use the substring(@var,1,255) function to return a VARCHAR() expression from MySQL and fetch into a VARCHAR() variable.
MAIN
   DEFINE n INTEGER
   DEFINE d DECIMAL(6,2)
   DEFINE c VARCHAR(200)
   DATABASE test1
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 
                   "create procedure proc1("
                || "   p1 integer,"
                || "   out p2 numeric(6,2),"
                || "   out p3 varchar(200)
                || " )"
                || " no sql begin"
                || "    set p2 = p1 + 0.23;"
                || "    set p3 = concat( 'Value = ', p1 );"
                || "  end;"
   LET n = 111
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE "set @p1 = ", n
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE "set @p2 = NULL"
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE "set @p3 = NULL"
   EXECUTE IMMEDIATE "call proc1(@p1, @p2, @p3)"
   PREPARE stmt FROM "select @p2, substring(@p3,1,200)"
   EXECUTE stmt INTO d, c
   DISPLAY d
   DISPLAY c
END MAIN