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:

  • 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.

  • 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 the ALL_PLSQL_TYPES, ALL_PLSQL_TYPE_ATTRS, and ALL_PLSQL_COLL_TYPES views, which fully describe composite types.

See Oracle Database Upgrade Guide for more information about these changes.

Related Views

  • 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 the OWNER column.

Column Datatype NULL Description

OWNER

VARCHAR2(128)

NOT NULL

Owner of the object

OBJECT_NAME

VARCHAR2(128)

Name of the procedure or function

PACKAGE_NAME

VARCHAR2(128)

Name of the package

OBJECT_ID

NUMBER

NOT NULL

Object number of the object

OVERLOAD

VARCHAR2(40)

Indicates the nth overloading ordered by its appearance in the source; otherwise, it is NULL.

SUBPROGRAM_ID

NUMBER

Unique subprogram identifier

ARGUMENT_NAME

VARCHAR2(128)

Name of the argument

A null argument name is used to denote a function return.

POSITION

NUMBER

NOT NULL

This column holds the position of this item in the argument list, or 0 for a function return value.

SEQUENCE

NUMBER

NOT NULL

Defines the sequential order of the argument. Argument sequence starts from 1. Return type comes first, and each argument will follow.

DATA_LEVEL

NUMBER

NOT NULL

Nesting depth of the argument for composite types

Note: Starting with Oracle Database 18c, the value of this columns is always 0, because this view displays only one row for each argument. This view no longer displays multiple rows for composite type arguments.

DATA_TYPE

VARCHAR2(30)

Datatype of the argument

DEFAULTED

VARCHAR2(1)

Specifies whether or not the argument is defaulted

DEFAULT_VALUE

LONG

Reserved for future use

DEFAULT_LENGTH

NUMBER

Reserved for future use

IN_OUT

VARCHAR2(9)

Direction of the argument:

  • IN

  • OUT

  • IN/OUT

DATA_LENGTH

NUMBER

Length of the column (in bytes)

DATA_PRECISION

NUMBER

Length in decimal digits (NUMBER) or binary digits (FLOAT)

DATA_SCALE

NUMBER

Digits to the right of the decimal point in a number

RADIX

NUMBER

Argument radix for a number

CHARACTER_SET_NAME

VARCHAR2(44)

Character set name for the argument

TYPE_OWNER

VARCHAR2(128)

Owner of the type of the argument

TYPE_NAME

VARCHAR2(128)

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.

TYPE_SUBNAME

VARCHAR2(128)

Relevant only for package local types. Displays the name of the type declared in the package identified in the TYPE_NAME column.

TYPE_LINK

VARCHAR2(128)

Relevant only for package local types when the package identified in the TYPE_NAME column is a remote package. This column displays the database link used to refer to the remote package.

TYPE_OBJECT_TYPE

VARCHAR2(7)

Displays the type of the type described by the TYPE_OWNER, TYPE_NAME, and TYPE_SUBNAME columns. Possible values are:

  • TABLE

  • VIEW

  • PACKAGE

  • TYPE

PLS_TYPE

VARCHAR2(128)

For numeric arguments, the name of the PL/SQL type of the argument. Null otherwise.

CHAR_LENGTH

NUMBER

Character limit for string datatypes

CHAR_USED

VARCHAR2(1)

Indicates whether the byte limit (B) or char limit (C) is official for the string

ORIGIN_CON_ID

VARCHAR2(256)

The ID of the container where the data originates. Possible values include:

  • 0: This value is used for rows in non-CDBs. This value is not used for CDBs.

  • n: This value is used for rows containing data that originate in the container with container ID n (n = 1 if the row originates in root)

Note:

To list the procedure names in a package, use the ALL_PROCEDURES view.

See Also: