3.83 ALL_ARGUMENTS
ALL_ARGUMENTS
lists the arguments of the functions and procedures that are accessible to the current user.
Note:
The following changes have been made to this view:
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Starting with Oracle Database 12c release 1 (12.1.0.2), this view omits procedures with no arguments. Prior to Oracle Database 12c release 1 (12.1.0.2), a procedure with no arguments was presented as a single row in this view.
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Starting with Oracle Database 18c, this view displays only one row for an argument that is a composite type. Prior to Oracle Database 18c, this view displayed multiple rows for composite types.
To obtain information about composite type arguments, use the value of the
TYPE_NAME
column in this view to query theALL_PLSQL_TYPES
,ALL_PLSQL_TYPE_ATTRS
, andALL_PLSQL_COLL_TYPES
views, which fully describe composite types.
See Oracle Database Upgrade Guide for more information about these changes.
Related Views
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DBA_ARGUMENTS
lists the arguments of the functions and procedures that are available in the database. -
USER_ARGUMENTS
lists the arguments of the functions and procedures that are owned by the current user. This view does not display theOWNER
column.
Column | Datatype | NULL | Description |
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Owner of the object |
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Name of the procedure or function |
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Name of the package |
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Object number of the object |
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Indicates the |
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Unique subprogram identifier |
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Name of the argument A null argument name is used to denote a function return. |
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This column holds the position of this item in the argument list, or |
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Defines the sequential order of the argument. Argument sequence starts from 1. Return type comes first, and each argument will follow. |
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Nesting depth of the argument for composite types Note: Starting with Oracle Database 18c, the value of this columns is always |
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Datatype of the argument |
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Specifies whether or not the argument is defaulted |
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Reserved for future use |
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Reserved for future use |
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Direction of the argument:
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Length of the column (in bytes) |
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Length in decimal digits ( |
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Digits to the right of the decimal point in a number |
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Argument radix for a number |
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Character set name for the argument |
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Owner of the type of the argument |
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Name of the type of the argument. If the type is a package local type (that is, it is declared in a package specification), then this column displays the name of the package. |
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Relevant only for package local types. Displays the name of the type declared in the package identified in the |
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Relevant only for package local types when the package identified in the |
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Displays the type of the type described by the
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For numeric arguments, the name of the PL/SQL type of the argument. Null otherwise. |
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Character limit for string datatypes |
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Indicates whether the byte limit ( |
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The ID of the container where the data originates. Possible values include:
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Note:
To list the procedure names in a package, use the ALL_PROCEDURES
view.
See Also:
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"ALL_PROCEDURES" for information about the functions and procedures that are accessible to the current user