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Is it possible to create user-defined exceptions and be able to change the SQLERRM?

For example:

DECLARE
    ex_custom       EXCEPTION;
BEGIN
    RAISE ex_custom;
EXCEPTION
    WHEN ex_custom THEN
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(SQLERRM);
END;
/

The output is "User-Defined Exception". Is it possible to change that message?

EDIT: Here is some more detail.

I hope this one illustrates what I'm trying to do better.

DECLARE
    l_table_status      VARCHAR2(8);
    l_index_status      VARCHAR2(8);
    l_table_name        VARCHAR2(30) := 'TEST';
    l_index_name        VARCHAR2(30) := 'IDX_TEST';
    ex_no_metadata      EXCEPTION;
BEGIN

    BEGIN
        SELECT  STATUS
        INTO    l_table_status
        FROM    USER_TABLES
        WHERE   TABLE_NAME      = l_table_name;
    EXCEPTION
        WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
            -- raise exception here with message saying
            -- "Table metadata does not exist."
            RAISE ex_no_metadata;
    END;

    BEGIN
        SELECT  STATUS
        INTO    l_index_status
        FROM    USER_INDEXES
        WHERE   INDEX_NAME      = l_index_name;
    EXCEPTION
        WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
            -- raise exception here with message saying
            -- "Index metadata does not exist."
            RAISE ex_no_metadata;
    END;

EXCEPTION
    WHEN ex_no_metadata THEN
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Exception will be handled by handle_no_metadata_exception(SQLERRM) procedure here.');
        DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(SQLERRM);
END;
/

In reality, there are dozens of those sub-blocks. I'm wondering if there's a way to have a single user-defined exception for each of those sub-blocks to raise, but have it give a different message, instead of creating a separate user-defined exception for each sub-block.

In .NET, it would be sort of like having a custom exception like this:

    public class ColorException : Exception
    {
        public ColorException(string message)
            : base(message)
        {
        }
    }

And then, a method would have something like this:

        if (isRed)
        {
            throw new ColorException("Red is not allowed!");
        }

        if (isBlack)
        {
            throw new ColorException("Red is not allowed!");
        }

        if (isBlue)
        {
            throw new ColorException("Blue is not allowed!");
        }
share|improve this question
Sorry if I wasn't clear. I will add another example. – tgxiii May 16 '11 at 16:50

3 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

Yes. You just have to use the RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR function. If you also want to name your exception, you'll need to use the EXCEPTION_INIT pragma in order to associate the error number to the named exception. Something like

SQL> ed
Wrote file afiedt.buf

  1  declare
  2    ex_custom EXCEPTION;
  3    PRAGMA EXCEPTION_INIT( ex_custom, -20001 );
  4  begin
  5    raise_application_error( -20001, 'This is a custom error' );
  6  exception
  7    when ex_custom
  8    then
  9      dbms_output.put_line( sqlerrm );
 10* end;
SQL> /
ORA-20001: This is a custom error

PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
share|improve this answer
1  
Precisely what I need! I guess I made my edit while you had already answered my question. Thank you very much. – tgxiii May 16 '11 at 17:18

You could use RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR like this:

DECLARE
    ex_custom       EXCEPTION;
BEGIN
    RAISE ex_custom;
EXCEPTION
    WHEN ex_custom THEN
        RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR(-20001,'My exception was raised');
END;
/

That will raise an exception that looks like:

ORA-20001: My exception was raised

The error number can be anything between -20001 and -20999.

share|improve this answer
declare
   z exception;

begin
   if to_char(sysdate,'day')='sunday' then
     raise z;
   end if;

   exception 
     when z then
        dbms_output.put_line('to day is sunday');
end;
share|improve this answer
Please edit your post and format the code to make it readable – kleopatra Nov 11 '12 at 13:57

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