Comments

Inline documentation, otherwise known as comments, is an important element of a good program. While this book offers many suggestions on how to make your program self-documenting through good naming practices and modularization, such techniques are seldom enough by themselves to communicate a thorough understanding of a complex program.

PL/SQL offers two different styles for comments: single-line and multiline block comments.

Single-Line Comment Syntax

The single-line comment is initiated with two hyphens (--), which cannot be separated by a space or any other characters. All text after the double hyphen to the end of the physical line is considered commentary and is ignored by the compiler. If the double hyphen appears at the beginning of the line, the whole line is a comment.

Remember: the double hyphen comments out the remainder of a physical line, not a logical PL/SQL statement. In the following IF statement, I use a single-line comment to clarify the logic of the Boolean expression:

IF salary < min_salary (2003) -- Function returns min salary for year.
THEN
   salary := salary + salary*.25;
END IF;

Multiline Comment Syntax

While single-line comments are useful for documenting brief bits of code or ignoring a line that you do not want executed at the moment, the multiline comment is superior for including longer blocks of commentary.

Multiline comments start with a slash-asterisk (/*) and end with an asterisk-slash (*/). PL/SQL considers all characters found between these two ...

Get Oracle PL/SQL Programming, 5th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.