I ran into the above mentioned error.
Here's my query:
WITH periods(Thanks Tom!) Pretty simple right? That's what I thought.
AS
(
SELECT datefrom, datethru
FROM vw_periods
WHERE periodtypeid = 'WEEK'
AND TRUNC( SYSDATE - datefrom ) BETWEEN 0 AND 56
)
SELECT *
FROM periods;
FROM vw_periodsHmmm...what's that? Since I can't get to the docs right now, I'll point you here.
*
ERROR at line 6:
ORA-32031: illegal reference of a query name in WITH clause
Cause:That's not very helpful.
forward or recursive reference of a query name in WITH clause is not allowed.
Action:
Correct query statement, then retry.
What's the definition of the view?
CREATE OR REPLACENothing there...wait, what's the name of the table? Periods? Couldn't be that simple (and yet so obvious) could it?
VIEW vw_periods
AS
SELECT
periodid,
periodtypeid,
datefrom,
datethru
FROM periods;
SQL>WITH perOf course it can!
2 AS
3 (
4 SELECT datefrom, datethru
5 FROM vw_periods
6 WHERE periodtypeid = 'WEEK'
7 AND TRUNC( SYSDATE - datefrom ) BETWEEN 0 AND 56
8 )
9 SELECT *
10 FROM per;
DATEFROM DATETHRU
--------- ---------
08-DEC-08 14-DEC-08
15-DEC-08 21-DEC-08
22-DEC-08 28-DEC-08
29-DEC-08 04-JAN-09
05-JAN-09 11-JAN-09
12-JAN-09 18-JAN-09
19-JAN-09 25-JAN-09
26-JAN-09 01-FEB-09
8 rows selected.
Lesson? Don't try to name your subquery with the same name as the base table.
2 comments:
Yuck. Even worse, the query names in a with clause cause name capture inside of views. Just name a query the same as a table used in a view and then use that view in another another named query. The view will actually hit your named query instead of the table.
Bonus lunacy points: "select * from view" can now fail with a column not found error.
Ah, this is a simple fix, but helped me get through a similar error. Thanks for the post.
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