SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK
Determining current block in Oracle Forms Using SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK system variable. The value that the SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK system variable represents depends on the current
navigation unit:
If the current navigation unit is the block, record, or item (as in the Pre- and Post- Item, Record, and Block triggers), the value of SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK is the name of the block where the cursor is located. The value is always a character string. If the current navigation unit is the form (as in the Pre- and Post-Form triggers), the value of SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK is NULL.
If the current navigation unit is the block, record, or item (as in the Pre- and Post- Item, Record, and Block triggers), the value of SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK is the name of the block where the cursor is located. The value is always a character string. If the current navigation unit is the form (as in the Pre- and Post-Form triggers), the value of SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK is NULL.
SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK examples
Assume that you want to create a Key-NXTBLK trigger at the form level that navigates depending on what the current block is. The following trigger performs this function, using :SYSTEM.CURSOR_BLOCK stored in a local variable.
DECLARE
curblk VARCHAR2(30);
BEGIN
curblk := :System.Cursor_Block;
IF curblk = ’ORDERS’
THEN Go_Block(’ITEMS’);
ELSIF curblk = ’ITEMS’
THEN Go_Block(’CUSTOMERS’);
ELSIF curblk = ’CUSTOMERS’
THEN Go_Block(’ORDERS’);
END IF;
END;
SYSTEM.CURSOR_ITEM
Determining current item using System.Cursor_Item in Oracle Forms. SYSTEM.CURSOR_ITEM represents the name of the block and item, block.item, where the input focus (cursor) is located.The value is always a character string.
Usage Notes
Within a given trigger, the value of SYSTEM.CURSOR_ITEM changes when navigation takes place. This differs from SYSTEM.TRIGGER_ITEM, which remains the same from the beginning to the end of single trigger.
SYSTEM.CURSOR_ITEM examples
Assume that you want to create a user-defined procedure that takes the value of the item where the cursor is located (represented by SYSTEM.CURSOR_VALUE), then multiplies the value by a constant, and then reads the modified value into the same item. The following user-defined procedure uses the COPY built-in to perform this function.
new_value NUMBER;
BEGIN
new_value := TO_NUMBER(:System.Cursor_Value) * .06;
Copy(TO_CHAR(new_value), :System.Cursor_Item);
END;
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